SPORTS: The FBI confirms the World Trade Center explosion was caused by a bomb. Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102,NO.110
MONDAY, MARCH 1, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Election issues voiced
Commission candidates address long-range plans for community programs
By Todd Selfert
Kansan staff writer
In a public forum Feb. 22, some candidates for the Lawrence City Commission were given the opportunity to list the first three issues they would address if elected.
Tomorrow's primary will harrow the field of 12 candidates to six. The general election will take place April 6. A majority of the issues the candidates listed dealt with
"Horizon 2020 deals with a lot of things," she said. "That's probably why it is an issue in the election. It not only deals with land-use, but also with other issues like economic development in both the city and out in the county. It's basically a blueprint of where the city and county want to go in the future."
long-range planning for a new issue discussed was Horizon 2020, a core plan for land-use in Douglas County.
Sheila Stogssill, a planner for the city and county, said Horizon 2020 was important because it would provide the county with a list of goals to accomplish by the year 2020.
County Stogdill said the document was supposed to be finished in September 1993, but would probably not be completed until sometime in spring 1994 because of attempts by the planning staff to incorporate citizens' opinions in the process.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
MADRID
John Nalbandian, vice mayor, said another issue candidates were considering was public transportation.
"It's a big issue because there is so much money involved and because it would serve so few people," he said. "The city hired a firm to do a major study on the possibility of public transportation in Lawrence earlier this year. I don't remember what the expense of installing that system was exactly, but I remember that it would have forced a raise in taxes plus cost one-dollar per ride."
Chava Martens, Buhler sophomore, dances at the Brazilian Carnival, sponsored by the Spanish and Portuguese Club. The carnival was held in Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., on Saturday evening. Martens was one of 75 people who danced at the celebration.
Masked Dance
See related story, Page 3.
NEWS:864-4810
Work begins on financial aid office
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Joe Ramirez, facilities operations employee, tears down air ducts Friday at the new financial aid office in the east wing in the basement of Strong Hall. The entire project is expected to be finished in about four months. Construction began two weeks ago.
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
The start of the construction of a new financial aid office ended a long wait for both staff and students.
offector of which he began two weeks ago. Del Buono said that no one was sure when the new office would be completed, but that she hoped it would be done by the fall semester.
it seems like we've been talking about a new office for nine years," said Diane Del Buono, director of financial aid.
age room.
The old office has only one problem: It is too small. But that problem was enough to make students uncomfortable and to make it difficult for staff members to communicate. Del Buono said.
One said that when the office was busy, students would have to wait in the hallway, and as many as 10 students would try to stand in an office that could only hold four or five students
The new office will be in the east wing basement of Strong Hall, east of the current financial aid office.
Facilities operations is building the new office, and is in the process of clearing the way for the construction. The room being converted to the new office formerly was used as a storage room.
comfortably.
The crowded conditions made it hard for students who just wanted one question answered, she said. In addition, staff must ask some students questions about sensitive issues, such as their parents' divorces.
then parents to avoid. "Students got really uncomfortable answering those questions with other students breathing down their necks," Del Buono said.
New furnishings to the office during the last three years included seats outside the office so students could sit down while waiting, but they were just temporary solutions, Del Buono said.
clauses6proom.
Julie Cooper, associate director of financial data, said she cannot sure if the noise of the construction would affect any of the people working in offices in Strong Hall. She said she had been bothered by noise from construction improvements in the enrollment office.
"Students shouldn't have to wait outside the office at all," she said.
wrote with a real hassle. "Becks said, 'I'm not clothed a harbish, but I felt uncomfortable.'
office at ah, she said.
Jackie Becks, Parsons freshman, said she remembered the beginning of the fall semester when the office was overcrowded.
"Sometimes you hear these noises and you don't know where they're coming from," she said. "But with the good stuff that comes out of it, you just deal with it."
Oread residents propose strict parking ordinance
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
An ordinance drafted by the Oread Neighborhood Association that would restrict some parking northeast of campus to residents of the area could cause relief for some people and grief for others.
"These streets are very close to campus and are very congested," said Olga Torres, a Colombia graduate student who helped draft the proposal.
KU students and faculty who park in the area make it difficult for residents in the area to find a parking space near their homes.
The draft ordinance lists several advantages of having controlled parking, including reducing hazardous traffic conditions, facilitating accessibility to a parking space and promoting traffic safety and the safety of pedestrians.
"It seems like it's going to be a good thing for the neighborhood." Torres said.
Because the terms of the ordinance have not been finalized, residents should voice their concerns at the association's meeting at 7:30 p.m. March 10 at the Lawrence Public Library, said Jennifer Brown, coordinator of the association. A final draft then will be submitted to the Lawrence City Commission.
"At this point, we want to have a neighborhood meeting on it to get more discussion about it," Brown said. "Our perception is that people are parking on neighborhood streets. There's not much on-street parking for residents."
issuing new parking permits that would be required from 2 to 10 a.m. is the key to solving the problem, according to the draft ordinance.
the draft ordinance.
The permits would cost $20 and could be purchased by any tenant or owner of real estate in the area. Each living unit would only be allowed to purchase two permits. Guest permits could be requested through the Lawrence city clerk's office.
The permit system has been effective at other university towns, Brown said.
towns, brown sad.
The draft ordinance would not allow residents of scholarship halls to park in the area. The halls' residents park on the streets when their designated lots are full
the streets wherein Pat Cox, president of Stephenson Hall and Funningdon, Pa. sophomore, said the scholarship hall parking situation would be worsened if the halls were not included.
"Where else would we park?" Cox asked. "There's already overflow in the lots."
overflow in the lots."
Brown said she hoped this concern would be voiced at the
meeting.
"If that's a concern, we'd sure like to hear from students who have that concern," she said.
Many area residents are fed up with spending time hunting for a space.
she had to plan her day around it.
ing for its space. Kris McCusker, San Francisco graduate student, said parking was so bad around her home at 1212 Louisiana that she had to plan her
You won't leave the house between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m., Mr. McCusker said. "I have to restructure my entire day in order to do anything."
Although she does not mind walking, she said she should have a place to park.
it's a drag that this is my house, I pay the rent here and I don't have a place to park," she said.
Anne Wax,
Omaha, Neb..
junior, lives at 1235
Tennessee and said
that parking was
not a big enough
problem to require
a permit.
"You already pay enough in rent," Wax said. "It seems kind of ridiculous that you'd have to pay for parking, too."
Parking proposal
The Oread Neighborhood Association is proposing to limit parking in these streets to these streets to residents of the area only.
9th St.
9th St.
N
10th St.
St.
11th St.
St.
Indiana St.
Louisiana St.
Ohio St.
Mississippi St.
Tennessee St.
12th St.
Oread Ave.
13th St.
14th St.
Source: Oread Neighborhood Association
INSIDE
Jayhawks win state showdown
Recognizing women's history
The Kansas women's basketball team defeated Kansas State yesterday, and moved into third place in the Big Eight Conference.
BU
Page 7.
By Frank McCleary
Michaela Hayes, representative of Women's Student Union, said that when she was growing up, there was little emphasis placed on women's roles in U.S. history in classes and in text books.
Kansan staff writer
The month of March is designated as Women's History Month, a time to recognize some of those accomplishments that may have been missed.
"If the history wasn't about a man," Hayes said, "it was in a little blue box in the history book."
According to a 1988 Congressional resolution giving March of that year the title, the crucial roles women have played in economic, cultural and social aspects of U.S. society have often been overlooked.
And although they often have been leaders in movements for social change, their contributions have been undervalued, the resolution said.
resolution sale
Hayes, Dallas junior, said this month's activities would serve as a supplement to what was taught in the classroom.
Sandra Albrecht, director of KU's Women's Studies Program, also said women's history had not been as recognized as much as white male history in the U.S. educational system.
"Much of what women have done has been invisible," Albrecht said.
She said she hoped that this month would help make people aware of women's contributions to history
related to women's history this month.
Barbara Clark, manager of Teresa Nova Books, 920 Massachusetts St., said the store would sponsor several activities
atted to women's history this month. "The store is going to help provide women with information," Clark said.
Ballard is on leave this semester to serve as a state legislator.
"Hopefully, one day there will be no need for a Women's History Month," she said.
honor, but lay her
Albrecht agreed, saying that women's
history needs to be integrated with all history.
Hays said that although it is important to have a month dedicated to women's history, recognition should not be just one month, but all year.
The Emily Taylor's Women's Resource Center also will sponsor three workshops for the month. Barbara Ballard, director of the center, said that the theme of its activities was "Discovering a New World: Women's History."
Women's history month
♂
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor three workshops in March in observance of Women's History Month:
Thursday — "Power: Are Women Afraid of it ... Or Beyond It?" from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
march 10 — Women's Leadership Styles," from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
March 16 "Discovering a New World: KU through the Eyes of International Women Students," from 7 to 9 p.a. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. The Office of International Student Services is co-sponsoring.
2
Monday, March 1, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College. Eriteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator, and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of
offered or an clause outside the College Office.
the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office.
864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to one single-spaced page.
Send your nominations to Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045. Deadline is March 26, 1993
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| :--- | :--- | :--- |
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| 2 Consolata Chicken (Hon, Benoit Bidani, Pan pepper) | 229 | 379 crescent |
| 3 Penny Club Chicken (Hon, Benoit Bidani, Pan pepper) | 290 | 495 crescent |
| 4 Indian Cimbo Chicken (Hon, Benoit Bidani, Pan pepper) | 290 | 495 crescent |
| 5 Indian Cimbo Chicken (Hon, Benoit Bidani, Pan pepper) | 290 | 495 crescent |
| 6 Ham & Cheese Chicken | 290 | 419 crescent |
| 7 Pepperoni & Cheese Chicken | 290 | 419 crescent |
| 8 Steel Rib Chicken | 290 | 435 crescent |
| 9 Rib Steak Chicken | 290 | 435 crescent |
| 10 Tusafal Chicken | 290 | 435 crescent |
| 11 Tusafal Chicken | 290 | 440 crescent |
| 12 Mr. Gloucester Steak & Cheese Chicken | 290 | 359 crescent |
| 13 Mr. Gloucester Steak & Cheese Chicken | 290 | 359 crescent |
| 14 Sausage Chicken & sausage | 318 | 449 crescent |
| 15 Chicken Salad Chicken | 290 | 440 crescent |
| 16 Seafood Chicken | 390 | 539 crescent |
| Total | 15 | 28 |
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Spaghetti (Pasta, Drink & Cooke) 150
w.Whisked 100
w.Ensure 100
SALADS & SIDES
Paste 120 cres
Mantilla (2) 99 (4) 189 (6) 269 cres
Sauage (2) 149 (4) 129 (6) 399 cres
Garlic Bread (2) 60 (4) 129 (6) 189 cres
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Pasta Salad 190 grams
Potato Salad 75 grams
Cheese 73 grams
Cookies 73 grams
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Seafood Salad 239 cemis
Chef Salad 239 cemis
Chicken Salad 239 cemis
Garden Salad 190 cemis
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Iced Tea french 79
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CAMPUS BRIEFS
The Office of Minority Affairs will hold a Step Program Seminar at 4 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, will present the seminar.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an information station, "It's not too late to apply," from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Jeanne Brennan at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an information session at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 3040 Wescoe Hall for students interested in studying in Spanish-speaking countries.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will hold its business meeting tonight. For more information, call the GLSKO office at 864-3001.
International studies and programs will hold the WorldView Lecture Series from noon to 1 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Joan Poertner, associate professor of social welfare, will speak on "Democracy and Social Welfare in Paraguay." Bring your lunch. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-1414.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Association will hold a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomor
Association of the United States Army will hold an open forum at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow on the second floor of the Military Science Building, Lieutenant Colonel Esen of the Turkish general staff will speak on Turkey's future role in NATO and related topics. For more information, call Capt. Charles Miller at 864-3311.
WEATHER
Omaha: 44°/24'
LAWRENCE: 42'/34'
Kansas City: 42'/33'
St. Louis: 48'/32'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 64'/36'
Chicago: 41'/21'
Houston: 68'/50'
Miami: 76'/55'
Minneapolis: 43'/22'
Phoenix: 65'/48'
Salt Lake City: 40'/16'
Seattle: 52'/37'
Wichita: 45'/36'
Tulsa: 51'/39'
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
30 percent chance for rain.
High: 42'
Low: 34'
Moderate rain.
High: 40'
Low: 32'
Morning rain.
High: 43'
Low: 30'
BRIEFS
Man pleads not guilty in shootings at Henry T's
Stephen B. Percle pleaded not guilty Friday to two charges of first-degree murder in Douglas County District Court.
The case will go to trial by jury on April 12.
The host case is gone, but a police officer was in Perdue is accused of shooting two men Nov. 27 outside Henry T's Bar and Grill, 3520 W. Sixth St. Jimmy Buswell and Jerry Thompson, both of Topeka, were killed in the shooting.
According to police reports, the shootings came after an altercation involving Perdue, Buswell, Thompson and two other men at Henry T's.
Police said the dispute arose about what turn it was to use a p.o.r.t.aboiler. The manager of Henry T's asked the men to leave the bar after the fight. The shootings took place in the parking lot. Police arrested Perdue at the scene.
Perdue has been in the Douglas County jail since the incident. His lawyers made a motion to reduce the $300,000 bond in his Jan. 7 preliminary hearing, but the motion was denied.
First-degree murder is a Class A felony in Kansas. If convicted on both counts, the earliest Perdue would be eligible for parole would be in 30 years.
KU police arrest freshman for making fake IDs
---
KU police Wednesday arrested Robert Martin, West Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, after receiving a call on the KU Crimestoppers hotline that said a student in Oliver Hall had been making fake Iowa driver's licenses.
released Thursday after posting the $18,000 bond.
Martin's roommate, Clint Reiss, Plains freeman, was given a notice to
report his identity on false identification.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that approximately 25 people had purchased licenses from Martin and that most of those people were Oliver residents. He said Friday that police had talked with about 15 of them.
Mullens said police found and confiscated several items that could have been used to make the licenses. Among those items were a computer, Polaroid camera, colored board and other documents.
Make false licenses is a Class E Felony, punishable by a minimum sentence of one year in prison with an optional fine of up to $5,000.
Possession of a false driver's license is a Class B misdemeanor punishable by a term of up to six months in the county jail with an optional fine of up to $1,000.
Mullens said students convicted of having fake licenses also could lose their real driver's licenses for a period of three months to a year.
Spring Instrumental Jazz Concert in Murphy tonight
The Spring Instrumental Jazz Concert at the University of Kansas will be presented at 7:30 tonight in the Crafton-Preyer Theater in Murphy Hall.
The performance will be presented by the KU department of music and dance Richard F. Wright, associate professor of music history, will be master of ceremonies for the concert, which features Jazz Ensemble I, directed by Daniel J. Gailay, assistant professor and head of KU's jazz studies program; Jazz Ensemble II, directed by Steve Molloy, St. Cloud, Minn., graduate student; and Jazz Ensemble III, directed by Todd Wilkinson, Overland Park graduate student.
Galley said the programs of the three ensembles would range form classic jazz to contemporary works including arrangements by himself and KU students.
General admission tickets for the concert are on sale at the KU Band Office, 214 Murphy Hall, and will be sold at the door. Tickets are $5 for the public and $3 for students.
President to discuss youth service plan on MTV
Clinton will be interviewed as part of a 30-minute MTV News special, "Bill Clinton: Your Future. His Plan."
LOS ANGELES — President Bill Clinton will make a return appearance to MTV tonight to discuss his proposal for national-youth service, the network said Friday.
Clinton will be interviewed by MTV News' Tabitha Soren on the Rutgers campus.
The special will include highlights of the president's planned speech at Rutgers University outlining his proposal and students' reactions to the plan.
During last year's presidential campaign, Clinton attracted young voters with MTV appearances.
Wife of KU alumnus donates money for library books
The gift, from the late Virginia Taylor Gleason of Horseheads, N.Y., will establish a library fund at the endowment association in the name of her husband. Herbert Gleason.
Herbert Gleason, a Wichita native, graduated from the University in 1940 with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering.
A gift of nearly $31,000 to the KU Endowment Association has established a fund to buy physics and mathematics reference books, said William Crowe, dean of libraries, in a news release Friday.
Virginia Gleason, who died in 1988, was a graduate of Centenary College in Hockettstown, N.J.
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The University Daily Kansan (USP5 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stupper-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Jo "Jolene" Andersen
K. U. students are important members of the Lawrence Community
Jo will address the issues of "The Hill"
Jo will work to establish a strong and vital relationship with The University of Kansas by:
- Better access to Lawrence with realistic mass transit system
- Bridging K.U. and Lawrence by including students on task forces
- Protecting our environment, air, water and natural green spaces
大桥
Jo Andersen
for City Commission "Building Bridges"
Pol. Adv. Paid for by Jo Andersen for City Commission, Anne Yesman, Treasurer
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 1, 1993
3
CANDIDATES FOR
KANSAN
Q&A
FORUM
Lawrence City Commission
The Kansan conducted interviews with each of the 12 remaining candidates for the Lawrence City Commission. Dolly Gasser's name will appear on the ballot despite her withdrawal from the election in January. Each of the candidates was asked the following questions: ■ How should the relation ship between the city of Lawrence and the University of Kansas be changed? ■ Why should a KU student vote for you in the March 2 primary election?
Jolene Anderson
1
local economy."
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
"I don't think we use the relationship we have now to its furthest potential. I think we could use the research capabilities at the University to draw more business to the area to help out the
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"I'm a graduate of KU and my daughter goes to KU. Students' concerns are very important to me. What's good for the students is good for the community.
P. K. M. N.
Chander Jayaraman
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
the city and KU:
"A representative from Student Senate has no voting power on the city commission. We need to take that a step further. More people would be able to provide information and it would help build a better
relationship between the city and the University."
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"When there are so many students who are a part of Lawrence, I think they need a representative on the city commission. I've been involved in student government at KU. I think I can be the link between the city commission and the students.
BROOKLYN
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
"I've found that student relations have been good for the city and I believe that it has been good for the students.
At the same time, I think things can always get better and I would be open to any answer."
Bob Schumm
suggestions on that issue.
- Why should a KU student vote for you? *
I have a definite interest in the University, both financially and indirectly. I have a son and a daughter who go there and a lot of friends involved there. I realize that it is not us versus them. I know we have to work together."
PETER CABOT
Roger Browning
- On the relationship between the city and KU: "I think the relationship between the city and the University ought to be a bit closer. I think the city and the University could set up a panel where ideas could be shared so that problems like
traffic could be handled."
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"I've lived in the Oread neighborhood and I have shared a lot of their problems. It's important for students to realize that the city's choices also affect them."
WILLIAM B. HARRIS
Frederick Markham
- Why should a KU student vote for you? *
* KU students have no representation on the commission right now. They have a lot to offer. I think I could voice their concerns."
"Too many people have the idea that Lawrence needs to have an identity separate from KU. It's not that we can't work with us. We need separate ideas that can work together."
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
1967
Milton Scott
the different boards and task forces the city has."
- Why should a KU student vote for you? I think I can bring a new perspective to the city commission, I think I can provide some different input on some of the issues faced by the city.*
Doug Compton
1
joint effort.'
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
"*KU is a huge part of Lawrence. The city needs to show as much support as possible for the University. The University also needs to move toward the city in some aspects. It needs to be a
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"I have close ties to KU. A lot of students work for me. I'm aware of the economic impact the University has on this economy. I know students have the same concerns and rights as other citizens."
YOUR NAME
Bob Moody
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
"I'd like to see more interaction. The University is a great asset for the entire city, if it weren't for the University, the city would not be what it is today."
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"KU students are no different from other citizens.
They want experience and someone who will listen to them and make decisions that are best for the community. I think I can do that."
Sam Shepley
Dale Browne
- On the relationship between the city and KU: "We just need to be more sensitive to each other's needs. I don't think there is any real problem. Anything could be improved, though."
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"I think students want someone with good management skills. I think I've proven I have those skills. I've spent 28 years in business management and 20 of those years with Wal Mart. In that job I managed a budget larger than the city's."
M. GUNTHER
Scott Dalton
- On the relationship between the city and KU: "The city commission needs to pay more attention to the students' needs. A lot of students stay here after they get out of school. I don't think the city commission cares one way or the
other about them."
YANG JIAO
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"One big reason is that I'm one of the younger candidates running. If students want someone who understands their wants and needs, I think they want someone from their age group who understands what they are faced with."
Richard Payton
"There are some changes that could be made. The University has a lot of resources it could provide for the city. One example of that is its busing system."
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
- Why should a KU student vote for you?
"I feel that I am the best candidate based on the issues. I think students want a candidate that would provide students and other citizens a nice community to live in."
Ken Wilson
- On the relationship between the city and KU:
"As citizens, we all do a lot of complaining. The fact is, the University of Kansas provides our community with a lot of advantages. We should all go to bed at night very thankful that that place."
- Why should a KU student vote for you? *Many students live in what I call at-risk neighborhoods. Property values in those areas are declining rapidly. I'll fight to protect those types of neighborhoods.
is up there on that hill.
Festival honors Asian Americans
Group hopes that two-week program raises awareness
By Jess DeHaven Kansan staff writer
Raising student awareness of the Asian-American community and its achievements will be the focus of a two-week program that begins tonight and continues through March 13.
A reception tonight will kick off the Asian-American Festival, sponsored by the Asian-American Student Union, Student Senate, the Office of Minority Affairs and the Society of Professional Journalists. The reception, which will run from 7 to 9 at the Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St, is free.
Lori-Lin Robinson, president of the Asian-American Student Union, said the festival was the result of the population growth of the Asian-American community.
"There is an African-American history month and several celebrations for Native Americans," Robinson said. "The Asian-American population is steadily growing, and we have needs that should be addressed."
"If you look at urban minorities, the principle focus is on African-Americans, but it is important to realize that there are other groups."
Helen Gee, last year's faculty adviser to the Asian-American Student Union, said the focus of the festival primarily was to promote the Asian-American community on campus.
"We want people to be more aware of Asian Americans and the contributions that they've made," Gee said. "The point of the festival is more for exposure rather than a focus on a specific issue. It's more of a cultural experience."
The Asian-American Student Union chose three speakers who were successful representatives of the Asian-American community to highlight the
festival. Robinson said.
"We tried to get a diverse group of people that really represented the community," she said. "Instead of having one focus like so many conferences do, we wanted representatives of different backgrounds to get several perspectives."
Gee said she would like to see others at KU be involved in the festival.
Robinson said this was the first festival sponsored by the Asian-American Student Union, but two KU professors organized a smaller celebration last year.
"We've only been in existence for a year and a half, and we always wanted to do something like this," she said. "The festival last year was basically the work of faculty members, and we wanted student involvement this year, so we inherited it from them."
at KU become involved in the festival.
"The Asian Americans are a growing force on campus, and it's important that they are recognized."
---
Asian American festival
This week's events
Commencement reception, 7-9 tonight, the Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St. Free.
■ Keynote speaker Ken Kashiwaha, "ABC World News Tonight" correspondent. Topic: "Experience as an Asian American in journalism." 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas Union Ballroom. Free.
- Keynote speaker Christine Takada, aide for American Relations to Illinois Governor Jim Edgar. Topic: "Asian-American Empowerment." 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dyche Auditorium. Free.
Kansan staff writer
By Kathleen Stolle
New yard-waste collection begins today in Lawrence
Patricia Marvin hopes Lawrence's new yard-waste collection service is a success. She also hopes it is used sparingly. For Marvin, recycling coordinator for the city of Lawrence, less is best.
"I mshooting for a lower percentage every year," she said.
Starting today, Lawrence residents with curb-side service by the city's sanitation division may bag yard waste for pickup as part of their regular service. Lawrence City Commission approved the new service in August 1992 and reduced trash collection times from twice a week to once a week, starting in January.
Marvin said the new service not only would divert yard waste from the Jefferson-Douglas County Sanitary Landfill, but also would help enlighten the community about alternatives.
"We need to educate and help people figure out how to produce less yard waste," Marvin said. "The yardwaste collection helps us to target those people and encourage them to use the service less and less."
According to a study from the Sanitation Division of the Public Works Department, Lawrence generated
11,000 tons of yard waste in 1991. At that time, only about 10 percent of the yard waste was being recycled. Overall, the study found, yard waste accounted for 25 percent of all municipal solid waste, making it a prime target for recycling.
Marvin said she hoped to see more residents recycling grass clippings and creating compost at home, eventually weaning themselves from the new collection service.
"It's amazing that your most successful program is one that's not used." Marvin said.
In addition to saving landfill space, collecting yard waste will result in an estimated savings of $137,000 in landfill fees. Marvin said. The city will recycle the collected waste at a site on East Eighth Street and use the compost materials as mulch in parks and various beautification projects.
Tricia Sears, president of ENVIROS and Burlington, Iowa, senior, said she thought the new service was a good idea, but did not foresee the service affecting most students.
"I think students who are interested and have access to land would do it, but that's a very small population," she said. "Most students live in apartments and aren't going to have access to land."
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Monday, March 1, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Students need to take notice of local issues
The recent presidential election demonstrated that students can make a difference when it comes to the government. Tomorrow, students can invoke that same power in the Lawrence city commission primary elections.
It is an ironic but too often true fact that people are more likely to vote in a national election, where their vote has less impact. On a local level, 10 or 15 extra votes are all that is needed to affect change.
The majority of KU students owns no real estate in Lawrence. Many spend summers and vacations elsewhere. If asked where home is most will give their parents home town, even if they reside there three months out of 12.
But city commission decisions involve all Lawrence residents, no matter where they call home. In the past, decisions banning alcoholic beverages on the Hill, increasing bar checks, creating a noise ordinance and raising the sales tax have been approved by the commission with students taking little notice.
Students put a considerable amount of money into the Lawrence economy. If a student spends monthly $275 for rent, $150 on food and entertainment, $25 on clothes and accessories, $10 on gas, that student would spend $4,140 in nine months. This semester there are 23,683 students enrolled on campus.
On Tuesday, an informed vote is only the first step. Weekly commission meetings are open and televised live on cable Channel 6. For those who find them tedious, both the Kansan and the Lawrence Journal World run commission highlights on Wednesday. Student representatives also are invited to take part in commission meeting discussions. Lawrence High School and Haskell Indian Junior College have sent student representatives to the Tuesday night meetings. KU has no such representative.
VAL HUBER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
It's time KU students start putting their mouths where their money is.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
New policy on abortion intolerable
I think Ms. Jurcky was right on the mark with what she insinuated about Clinton. Only a few things were omitted: 1. A major part of his pro-abortion policy lifted the ban on fetal tissue experimentation. This tissue is taken while the baby is still alive. Regardless of whether you call it a fetus or a baby, it is alive--why else the need for an abortion? This entity still has a brain stem and therefore feels the painful process that sucks out her or her brain tissue.
2. Clinton re-established aid to agencies in Third World countries that purport to do abortion counseling. Some would not call this counseling at all, but coercion. Many of these so-called "underdeveloped countries" do not share the popular western view that demeans life below a certain povertyline.
3. And, of course, the Freedom of Choice Act was mentioned. But it was not explained that this would allow for abortions during all nine months of pregnancy for any reason. No limits on abortions whatsoever. In fact, it is even suggested that such a measure would
mandate private hospitals to provide abortions, even if they are ethically opposed to it. So much for freedom.
Juryck is headed in the right direction, but the question is not whether Clinton a feminazi, but rather, can we as a nation of conscience let him continue?
Patricia McGowan St Mary's Kan.
Letter reveals arrogance of University
First there were the comments of the KU Law School dean about the Washburn Law School.
Then there was the letter to the editor by T.S. David stating that Washburn should be kept around to provide underpaid public defenders.
It is amazing how arrogant one university can be over such a mediocre program on the national level as the KU Law School.
Snob Hill lives!
Scott Feldhausen Lawrence graduate student
GREG FARMER
KANSAN STAFF
STEVE PERRY
GAYLE OSTERBERG Managing editor
Editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
MELISSATERLIP
TOM EBLEN
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Assist Managing Justin Knapp
News Monique Gulalan
David Mitchell
Editorial Stephen Martino
Campus KC Trauner
Sports David Martino
Photo Mark Rowland
Festivals Lynne McAdoo
Graphics Dan S*
Editor
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Business manage
Campus sales mgr ..Brad Broun
Regional sales mgr...Wade Baxter
National sales mgr...Jennifer Perrier
Co-op sales mgr...Ashley Hessel
Production mgrs ...Ashley Lengford
Marketing director...Angel Cleverdon
Creative director...Holly Perry
Loretta Cameron
Ad Director...Dave Habler
Retail sales manager
**letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number (or email address) with the (inverse) order of city or city staff position.
**Guest column** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed, so the right is in respect or edit letters document and cartoons. They can also be used to send a resume to the office.
photographed.
The Rancho deserves the right to reprint or re版 letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can also be sent to the Kavanah newsroom, 113 Stanfield Fell Hall.
SURF'S UP!
SPECIAL INTERESTS
THEN AGAIN,
SURF'S ALWAYS UP!
Enough would be for all of us to remember that a single beam of white light, when shown through a prism, breaks up into a rainbow of colors. And that when equal parts of these colors are mixed together you still get nothing but gray. My point being that we have to respect our differences and celebrate our similarities to avoid the grazing effect of confusion.
enough would be all of us making a personal commitment to the realization
Enough would be for the University to stop treating diversity like a sensitivity workshop and more like the way of life it deserves to be.
African-American events deserve better coverage
Last month the world paused to celebrate the life's work of one of this country's most admired and looked-to leaders, Punxusutawney Phil, that Pennsylvania rodent who promised us six more weeks of winter. Thanks, Phil
And while I appreciate the forewarning, I have to wonder why Phil got more accurate coverage than the Martin Luther King Jr. celebration. Black Student Union, Lawrence High School and other local organizations played host to several events to commemorate Dr. King's legacy. All but one of these events came and went without any news coverage by the Kansan, including a speech by Susan Taylor, editor-in-chief of Essence magazine. And the one article to appear in the Kansan was written by a reporter who was nowhere near the event. Granted, she did make some phone calls to people who were in attendance, and I hesitate to call that accurate coverage. And, considering the impact that Dr. King had on all of our lives, I would say that it borders on the disrespectful.
STAFF COLUMNIST
KIM BASKETT
After the King incident the country and the Kansan chanced upon another opportunity to pause for the cause: Black American History month. The entire month of February, the shortest month of the calendar year, is dedicated to acknowledging the achievements and contributions of African-Americans in our society. The Kansan's coverage of some well-done profiles of African-American campus and per campus events. But it almost completely disregarded the 16th annual Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government; the conference that took more than two years and 75,000 to plan; the conference that offered student government workshops and world-renowned lecturers including Leonard Jeffries,
Enough would be a mutual respect and finding a means to break through the communication barriers that so solidly still exist.
Sonia Sanchez, and Marcia Ann Gilliespoon, editor-in-chief of *Ms. magazine*. I cannot stress enough the significance of the Big Eight conference, the impact that it had on me and its participants or the impact that it will have on all of our lives, because those in attendance are our country's future leaders. This year's conference was the biggest and best that BSU has ever hosted, but many people weren't given the opportunity to know that.
Kim Baskett is an Olathe senior majoring in Journalism.
The conference offered students an opportunity to realize the importance of Black contributions. But you would not get that from the Kansan coverage. But you did get another opportunity to see Black people dancing and singing in a stereotypical manner. The lack of high-quality coverage was a disservice to the entire University community. And the fact that it received less than adequate coverage is a classic example of University disregard for minority contributions to this campus. It is my opinion this is the primary responsibility of a university paper.
But responsibility does not get checked at the Kansan's door. As a minority I have an obligation to voice my concerns and put myself in a position to make the necessary changes.
The Kansan has a responsibility to further the education of students outside of the classroom.
The Kansan has a responsibility to cover news relevant to all of its readers and, in my opinion, this obligation has often gone unmet.
I know for a fact that the Kansan has made some effort to get minorities on the editorial board. I know for a fact that Greg Farmer, editor of the Kansan, has personally made phone calls and asked for volunteers to be a representative voice of the minority community. I know, too, that James Baucom, BSU president, specifically requested group coverage of the conference but did not get it. I know that minority students have, in the past, gone through diplomatic channels to affect a change.
And I know that it has not been enough. Had it been enough, the conference would have gotten the coverage it deserved. Had it been enough, that reporter might have actually been present, in more than spirit, at the Dr. King celebration.
Enough would be minority students becoming involved and, in effect, empowering themselves to make the changes we all know are necessary.
Then what would be enough?
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
New fighter not justified in light of cuts
Gen. Colin L. Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is likely to receive kudos for his plan to consolidate some U.S. military aviation operations.
With the Cold War over, there is no need to maintain an army capable of massive mobilization. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, noted last July that the Pentagon could save $1.5 billion annually by doing away with five duplicative wings.
The Navy is pursuing a new version of the F-18 jfighter in a program that cost more than $80 billion.
Against whom is this new version to fly? Are we developing new, better weapons for the sake of better weapons?
wings.
But, wait. What's this?
Who does this benefit?
Is this technology for the sake of technology or for
the sake of defense contractors?
Against the context of downsizing to save $1.5 billion, this proposed $80 billion expense for a new fighter raises enormous costs and taxes, taxpayers should demand answers. What justifies this expense?
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Unstable job market upsets engineering candidate
What does the world need? Certainly a question with many answers.
SPRING BREAK IS IN
3 WEEKS, AND IT'S
STILL COLD, WHICH
IN KANSAS IS VERY
RARE...
For my own part, I've always been partial to tar — something about the way it oozes into a crack to seal a roof or repair a street.
Unfortunately, many of us about to graduate are finding that the world doesn't need us. At least not in the profession we chose to pursue.
Yes, after busting our butts for the last four years, we're faced with the burning question: "Should I apply at McDonald's or burger King?"
Although it hasn't come to that yet, the current trend in my job search indicates that it will. For those of you who have yet to begin a job search, allow me to give you an example of what it's like.
I'm sure you're all familiar with what is known as a career fair — where several employers gather at a university to meet with prospective employees. Well, the last career fair that I attended was back in the fall semester. Out of the approximately 40 employers attending, a grand total of three were there to recruit aerospace engineers. This may not seem unusual, but consider the fact that this was an "engineering" career fair held here at the University of Kansas (which, the last I've heard, is ranked second in the nation for undergraduate studies in aerospace engineering.).
Note the word "recruit." That's what those who promoted the career fair called it. It was a strange usage of the word because none of the three was actually looking for employees. From what I could tell, they were basically there to comfort job-seeking students. Using some sort of twisted psychological belief that those in a bad position feel better knowing they're not alone, this was done by informing us that thousands of employees are currently unemployed. Also, they are temporarily inclined to prevent us from getting our hopes up about recruiting a job by saying, "We'll have to rehire all those people we've already laid off before we consider hiring an inexperienced student." I guess they don't want us to be disappointed.
so, it we return to my initial question, the answer would be one less aerospace engineer and one more airplane. Of course it's something each one of us has to answer according to our own special circumstances, and I'll allow you to fill in the blanks. This leaves the final question: What is to be done with us "extras of society"? To this question, there is no simple answer. It's something that has to be determined by the extras themselves. Just keep in mind, everything happens for a reason.
Now, this is not to say that the job search problem is unique to aerospace engineers — I'm only speaking from my own experiences. After all, only a small percentage of the 27,000 Boeing employees fired aerospace engineers.
As for me, I'm going to look at the time I've spent in engineering school as a valuable learning experience — something I can take with me as I pursue my career as an actor. Who knows, maybe I'll make enough money to open a shelter for homeless aerospace engineers.
The truth is that finding a job has become difficult. And, if you're in my position, it's not a matter of competition, but a matter of finding a job to compete for.
Marvin McBett is a Hutchinson senior
malering in aerospace engineering.
by Moses Smith
THE REASON I'M TALKING SO MUCH IS BECAUSE I CAN'T FIND ANY OF MY MUSIC, BUT THURSDAY WE'LL BE BACK ON THE AIR.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Monday, March 1, 1993
FBI says bomb is cause
Associated Press
NEW YORK — The FBI confirmed yesterday that a bomb caused the explosion at the World Trade Center but was unable to say which place it. The investigation could take months.
Fox said agency explosives experts had concluded that a bomb caused Friday's lunch-hour blast that wrecked four underground floors and rattled the 110-story twin towers with earthquakelike force.
"We aren't going to complete this crime scene investigation for some time," said James Fox, head of the FBI's New York office. "A lot of people have been laid off recently. You've got some drug dealers upset with the U.S. government. It could be terrorists upset for other causes."
Officials said the twin wwers would be closed for at least one week until crews could repair vital communications and emergency services.
No structural damage occurred in the towers above ground, but all essential systems were lost in the explosion. The repair work is expected to take more than a week.
Yesterday, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said at a news conference that there had been 40 telephone calls claiming responsibility for the blast, which killed five people and injured more than 1,000 others. Two people are still missing.
The explosion occurred two floors underground in a strategic location that destroyed communications, security systems and primary and backup power.
underneath the World Trade Center.
1 Explosion in seven-level underground complex collapses train station ceiling
Vesey St.
New York City subway lines
Church St.
One World Trade Center
WEST ST.
PATH train to N.J.
Two World Trade Center
Liberty St.
What happened at World Trade Center
New York City's tallest buildings were evacuated Friday after an explosion caused a ceiling collapse and fires underneath the World Trade Center.
1 Explosion in seven-level underground complex collapses train station ceiling
Vesey St.
New York City subway lines
Church St.
Path train to N.J.
Two World Trade Center
Liberty St.
2 Multiple fires, including a five-alarm blaze, start below Trade Center
Commodity Exchange Closes early
World Trade Center facts
100,000 people work in the seven-building complex
At 1,350 feet tall, the twin towers are the world's second and third tallest
Each tower has 104 elevators, 21,800 windows.
N.J.
Manhattan
World Trade Ctr.
Queens
New York City
Brooklyn
SOURCES: Emery Roth and Sons; Kirk Montgomery, Philadelphus Inquirer; Chicago Tribune; NYC Access; news reports. Research by JYU TREBLE, PAT CARR, WALERS ALBERT
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Federal agents killed during cult shootout
The Associated Press
WACO, Texas — A fierce gun battle erupted yesterday as more than 100 law officers tried to arrest the leader of a heavily armed religious cult. At least four federal agents and two cult members were killed.
At least 15 agents were injured in the 45-minute shootout.
Authorities had a warrant to search the Branch Davidians' compound for guns and explosives and an arrest warrant for its leader, Vernon Howell, said Les Stanford of the Bureau of
The federal bureau estimated that 75 people were in the group, about a third of them children.
Howell, who claims to be Jesus Christ, has led the cult since the mid-1980s.
Two agents were pronounced dead upon arrival at Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center in Waco, while another died at the hospital and a fourth died at Providence Hospital, officials at the two hospitals said.
The assault came one day after the Waco Tribune-Herald began publishing a series on the cult, quoting former members as saying the 33-year-old Howell may have abused children of group members and claimed Howell has at least 15 wives.
Yesterday's shootout was the second at the compound. Howell and seven cut members were accused of shooting a police officer in 1987 gun battle with a former leader.
Charges against Howell were dismissed after his trial ended with a mistrial.
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Commerce in Ancient Mesopotamia
Look at any map, and you'll easily identify the areas between the Tigers, and the Nile river. The ancient Mesopotamia was a fertile region with an abundance of agricultural land and military structures. It was known as Mesopotamia, three places of major importance in the world today.
This region's early prosperity was based on its location near the Nile River. This river provided access to markets and trade routes, which helped make it easier to export goods from the region to other parts of the world.
The Nile River also allowed for transportation of people and goods. As the Tigers were known for their skillful fishing, they also built canals and boats to transport their catch.
These rivers were important for commerce and trade. They were also used for trading of goods, which had little impact on daily life.
Commerce in Ancient Mesopotamia
Like the war in which Lord Kushan briefly defeated the great emperor Tigris, and Babylonian cities as modern-day Iraq had before that area being besieged for its permanent capital city during the late Bronze Age, the Mesopotamian economy has been divided into three main sectors. As the upper sector, the capital city of Assyria, served as a central hub for international trade and communication.
The lower sector includes numerous private networks that connected the Mesopotamian one of the world's oldest cities to other regions. The capital city of Babylon was also a major center for trading and investment plans. These conditions enabled early traders and investors to build and expand their businesses and influence.
They were also able to build the first extensive network of ports, which included cities,
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Monday, March 1, 1993
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Programs stress equal education
By Brett Riggs Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas celebrated its efforts to ensure equal educational opportunities for all students by observing National TRIO Day on Friday.
The University's TRIO programs, Student Support Services, Talent Search, McNair Scholars Program and Upward Bound, celebrated the event Friday by providing information about their services in the rotunda of Strong Hall.
Ngoni Kamatuka, director of Upward Bound and Talent Search at the University, said the event helped promote awareness of the programs at KU.
"We are getting people to realize that we have less fortunate students in our society," Kanatuka said.
Kamatuka said that TRIO assisted disadvantaged students in completing their secondary and college education. TRIO was a nickname for the three original programs, Upward Bound, Talent Search and Student Support Services, he said. The McNair Program was added to the national program in 1986.
said
The four KU services in TRIO provide assistance for about 3,000 University and high school students, he
Karen Seals, director of Student Support Services, said the TRIO programs helped students by offering tutoring, writing skill development programs, diagnostic assessments and academic and personal counseling.
"We provide assistance with anything that affects their academic success here," Seals said.
Students can qualify for TRIO programs if they are first-generation college students, learning-disabled students, minority students or are from low-income families, she said.
The McNair Program was named after Ronald E. McNair, the African-American astronaut killed in the 1986 Challenger disaster. The program attempts to encourage disadvantaged undergraduate students to seek graduate degrees.
Chico Herbison, director of the McNair Program, said he thought the program was a logical extension of the TRIO service.
"It is the final piece of the puzzle," Herbison said. "We want more of our students on University faculties."
Upward Bound, Talent Search and the McNair Program are sponsored by the School of Education. Student Support Services is sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Former professor of government dies
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansan staff writer
Marvin A. "Mike" Harder, former professor of government at the University of Kansas, died Friday of lymphoma. He was 71.
Harder taught for 44 years, including 16 years at KU, from 1974 to 1990, and 27 years at the University of Wichita, now Wichita State University. He taught as visiting professor of government at Connecticut College in New London, Conn., from 1991 to 1992.
J. Kelley Sowards, a professor at WSU and a friend of Harder's since their undergraduate years at WSU, said Harder was one of the best teachers he had known.
"He was absolutely straightforward and honorable, and it showed up in everything he did." Sowards said.
Harder served in the administrations of two Kansas governors. He was special assistant of policy review and coordination for Governor Robert Docking from 1967 to 1973. He served as secretary of administration in the John Carlin administration from 1982 to 1984.
Harder also was the founding director of the KU Capitol Center in Topeka. The Capitol Center
makes graduate study available to full-time state and local govern m en t employees.
V.K. SENGAM
Sowards said Harder was most proud of his work with the Capitol Center because it was an opportunity for the political community to interact with the University community.
Marvin Harder
Harder was the Democratic state chairman for Kansas in 1954 and served as an adviser to the Democratic National Committee that same year. He was a delegate to the convention of the Democratic Conventions in 1956 and 1954.
Survivors include his wife, Marlys, a daughter, Heide Harder. Connolly; four grandchildren, Tina, John Michael, Amy and two sisters, Lois Hiebster and an old man, and a brother, Leland Harder.
A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. March 13 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Lieutenant colonel in Turkish army will speak tomorrow
Kansan staff write
By Ben Grove
A Turkish army officer will explain tomorrow how his country's army compares with the U.S. military.
Lt. Col. Husamettin Esen said yesterday that the United States and Turkey had similar military structures, though the U.S. military was much larger.
"We use the same field manuals," he said. "We are very familiar with your army."
Even so, Esen said the two military
forces had different missions. He said Turkey had no marine corps and no history of intervening in foreign countries.
" our armed forces are designed to protect our country," he said. "We don't have any policy to shape the world as a superpower."
Esen will speak at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at room 209 in the Military Science Building.
Esen said he also would discuss Kurds in the Middle East and Turkey's improving relationship with the new
republics. He said that as the republics became adjusted to independence, they were rediscovering their connections with Turkey. People of the republics are returning to the Islamic faith, the dominant religion in Turkey, he said.
Esen said Turkey's role in NATO also was changing because of the country's geographical position and heightened military and religious struggles in Eastern Europe.
*Turkey* in role in NATO is more important than ever because
of the uncertainties around Turkey in Iran, in Iraq, in the CIS countries," he said. "No one can predict what will happen in these countries. Turkey is in the middle of them, and it is a NATO country."
Esen came to the United States eight months ago for an officer training program at Fort Leavenworth and will return to Turkey in June.
The Association of the United States Army, a non-military lobbying organization for the armed services, is sponsoring Esen's speech.
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Monday, March 1, 1993
7
Aycock scores 26 on 20th birthday
Better field goal percentage helps Hawks beat Cats
By Jay Williams Kansan sportswriter
Angela Aycock celebrated her birthday yesterday, but she was the one giving.
The sophomore forward gave the Kansas women's basketball team 26 points and nine rebounds in the Jayhawks' 77-45 home victory against Kansas State.
The Jayhawks, 18-8 overall and 9-5 in the Big Eight Conference, used a strong second half to rush past the Lady Cats, 10-16 and 1-13. The game was the final regular-season game for both teams.
Aycock shot 12 of 14 from the field and made both of her free throw attempts — all on two hours of sleep. Aycock said she did not sleep last night because she was excited about her 20th birthday.
"I was waiting to see if I got any gifts," she said. What she got was the
"This was a perfect way to celebrate my birthday," she said of the Jayhawks' victory.
Aycock was not the only hot-shooting Jayhawk. The team shot 55 percent for the game.
Jayhawks' seventh victory in eight games.
Aycock said the week of practice leading up to yesterday's game helped the Jawhaws' shooting.
K-State stayed close in the first half, but the Jayhawks came out on fire in the second half, scoring the first 10 points and holding K-State without a field goal for the first 6:04 of the second half.
"I was glad to see the ball go inside the second half," Kansas coach Marian Washington said.
"We've been having intense practices," she said "Eventually, we knew that our shots would start to fall."
Kansas also dominated K-State on the defensive end, holding the Lady Cats to 27 percent shooting and only six field goals in the second half. Tate led the Jayhawks' defensive dominance with six blocked shots.
The Jayhawks took the shots they wanted in the second half Kansas hit 23 of its 32 second half goal场 attempts inside the free-throw lane
Junior center Lisa Tate and freshman guard Charisse Sampson were the other Jayhawks to finish in double-figures. Tate had 12 points, and Sampson scored 11. The trio of Aycock, Tate and Sampson shot 21 of 30.
Kansas will have five days to prepare for the Big Eight Tournament in Salina. The Jahayhwill be the No. 4 seed and will play No. 5 seed Missouri at noon Saturday at the Bicentennial Center. Missouri upset No. 22 Oklahoma State 64-63 in overtime yesterday.
"Our momentum right now is pretty high," Aycock said. "We've learned from our mistakes, and things are finally happening for us."
The Jayhawks are hitting their stride heading into the tournament, Avcock said.
NOTE:
26 from the floor for the game.
Senior guards Shannon Kite and Jo Io Witherspoon played their final game in Allen Field House yesterday. The two were honored in a brief pregame ceremony, and both started for the Jayhawks. Kite finished with seven points. Witherspoon did not score but contributed four assists and had two steals.
KANSAS 77. KANSAS STATE 45
Player tgm/fga ftm/ta tp
Stires 1.1-10 7-10 9
Honeycutt 6-18 0-0 12
Grattan 2-4 0-0 4
Moylan 3-10 0-0 9
Bertrand 2-7 4-4 7
Ostrofa 1-3 0-0 9
O'Neal 1-7 0-0 2
Pollock 0-0 0-0 0
Neal 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 16-60 11-14 45
| 12-8-0 | |
| :--- | :--- |
| Aycock | 12-14 | 2-2 | 26 |
| Shirin | 2-7 | 1-1 | 5 |
| Tate | 6-7 | 0-1 | 12 |
| Witherspons | 6-3 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Kite | 0-5 | 1-2 | 7 |
| Thompson | 3-5 | 3-4 | 11 |
| Leathers | 3-5 | 1-2 | 8 |
| Slatter | 2-6 | 0-0 | 4 |
| Muncy | 2-6 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Holmes | 1-4 | 0-0 | 2 |
| Totals | 31-56 | 20-12 | 77 |
Halftime K, 32, KState 24, 3-point
goals Kansas State 21, 2-(Honeycutt O-1,
Moylan 1, 6-Bentham 1, O'Neal O-3),
Kansas State 17, 2-(Honeycutt O-1,
Leathers 1, 2) *Bobcaws* Kansas State
(Honeycutt O-9), Kansas 34 (Aycock)
*Assists* Kansas State 9 (Stres, O'Neal,
Kansas 4, N(Wisherpoon) 4) Total foul
scores Kansas State 3, Kansas 14,
Finance 2,100
LUIS
2
KU
KANSAS
42
KANSAS
Kansas sophomore guard Alycock cocks伤 over Kansas State sophomore forward Shanele Stires during the Jayhawks' 74-45 victory yesterday.
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Jayhawks sneak past Buffaloes 72-68
Woodberry leads Kansas with 18 points
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
After the Colorado men's basketball team overtook No. 7 Kansas 53-52 with 7:54 remaining, Kansas coach Roy Williams brought his team together during a timeout and challenged it.
"I told our team it was gut-check time," Williams said after Saturday's game. "We could either be a good basketball team, or fold our tents and hope people went home feeling sorry for us."
Williams said he was pleased with the way his team responded. The Jayhawks returned to the court, immediately took back the lead, then rolled to a 72-68 victory.
Colorado fell to 10-16 overall and 2-10 in the Big Eight Conference. Kansas, 22-5 and 9-3, made 48 percent of its shots from the floor and 40 percent of its three-pointers.
Junior guard/forward Steve Woodberry led the Jayhawks with 18 points, four assists and four steals. Woodberry had to contend with Colorado sophomore guard Donnie Boyce for most of the game. Although Boyce scored a game-high 30 points, Williams praised Woodberry's defensive work.
for a total game, Steve Woodberry is the best defensive player I've coached here," Williams said. "It's hard to imagine Steve playing a better game. If Steve isn't on our team, we lose this game."
With 7 seconds left, the Jayhawks led 70-65. Boyce had the ball in the right corner and attempted a three-pointer. Woodberry blocked it.
KANSAS 72, COLORADO 68
On the Jayhawks' final possession, Woodberry fired a cross-court pass to junior forward Patrick Richey, who capped the game for Kansas with a dunk.
Boyce launched a three-pointer from halfcourt that went in at the buzzer, but Kansas already had secured the victory.
COLORADO(10-16,2-10)
Player lgm/fga tfm/fta tp 6
Robinson 1-7 3-4 6
Allen 2-5 3-4 7
Hodges 3-8 5-9 11
Terrell 3-8 0-0 7
Boyce 13-23 2-4 30
Pulliam 1-2 0-0 3
Golart 1-2 0-0 2
Schulte 1-1 0-0 2
Totals 25-56 13-21 68
KANSAS (22-5, 9-3)
Hancock 1-3 0-0 2
Scott 3-4 0-1 6
Ostergart 3-6 0-1 6
Watters 4-7 4-4 16
Jordan 7-7 3-1 11
Pauley 2-3 5-7 7
Bawtry 7-11 2-2 18
Rayford 0-0 0-0 0
Gurley 0-1 0-0 0
Richey 2-7 0-0 4
Pearson 1-3 0-0 2
Totals 25-52 14-18 72
Halftime 35, Missouri 28,期望
golden State 5-4.2 (Robinson 1-3, Terrell
1-3, Beuye 2-4, Pullman 1-1, Goliant 0-1,
Kansas 8-20) Walters 4-6, Jordan 27, Wood-
bery 2-4, Gurley 0, Iriche 1, Pearson 0-
2, Rebounds Colorado (hodges 10),
Kansas 33 (scott 6) Asahara 7 Colorado
(ogurt 3), Kansas 15 (Woodbury, Rayford)
4 Total Fouls Colorado 18, Kansas 19
Attendance 1,5/70
Sophomore center Greg Ostertag started for the first time this season. He finished with six points and five rebounds in 15 minutes of play. Ostertag made his presence known, however, on the defensive end. He blocked a career-high five shots.
"I wasn't as nervous today as I was during the Iowa State game." Ostertag said. "It worked out well. I had fun, and I was able to block some important shots."
Senior center Eric Pauley, who injured his left knee during pregame warmups Monday at Iowa State, played 20 minutes, scored seven points and had five rebounds. Pauley, normally a starter, said he did not expect to play a lot until Ostertag got into foul trouble.
"I was in the mental state of playing about 12 minutes that game," Pauley said. "I felt pretty good until the last five minutes."
Story continues on Page 10.
KANSAS
20
Daron J. Bennett/KANSAN
On a solo breakaway, Kansas junior guard/forward Steve Woodbury heads for two of his 18 points against Colorado. Woodbury also had four steals and five rebounds in Kansas' victory.
Colorado guard hits game, career marks in defeat
By Brady Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
us.115. Cobain said, "He really showed what he was made of," Harrington said. "Donnie was in a zone. He was in his own world. It was the Donnie Boyce show today."
Colorado guard Donnie Boyce scored the Buffaloes first basket, their last basket and nearly every other one that mattered during their loss Saturday to No. 7 Kansas.
The sophomore guard scored a game- and career-high 30 points on a variety of shots during Colorado's 72-68 loss. But more importantly, Boyce was the catalyst that helped Colorado claw away at and eventually surpass Kansas' second-half lead.
More than 6 minutes had elapsed in the opening half when Boyce scored Colorado's first basket to counter 10 unanswered Kansas points. But he made up for lost time in the second half.
giving the Damascus ball. With 7-54 remaining in the game, Boyce stole the ball, drove the length of the court and dunked to put Colorado ahead 53-52, its first and only lead of the game.
Kansas rebuilt its lead to four points with less than 1 minute to play when Boyce hit a jump shot to cut the lead to two.
Boyce scored 24 of his points in that half, four times bringing Colorado within two points of Kansas and once giving the Buffalooes the lead.
"I just knew my shots were going in," Boyce said. "It was like one of those days where my release, follow through and everything was feeling good."
Senior guard Adonis Jordan hit three free throws late in the game to seal the victory for Kansas and spoil any satisfaction Boyce might have felt about his performance.
"We did it win, so it really doesn't matter. Boyce said Kansas is no stranger to big games by Boyce, who is the second-leading scoring in the Big Eight Conference behind Oklahoma State center Bryant Reeves. Boyce scored 26 points against the Jayhawks in Boulder earlier this season, and 27 against Kansas there last season.
haction Boyce might have said. "We didn't win, so it really doesn't matter," Boyce said.
He got his points Saturday, even though he was sidelined briefly in the first half after being elbowed in the eye. "I knew this game that he worked for the 30 points," said junior Steve Woolberry, who guarded Bovice.
Kansas senior guard Rex Walters said Colorado's offense allowed Boyce to have many scoring opportunities.
"He's got an awful lot of freedom," Walters said. "He does not have to worry about the wrath of Joe Harrington if he takes a bad shot, so he plays very, very loose. When you play against a guy like that, sometimes bad shots go in."
'Hawks' singles play falls short in victories
By Mark Button
The Kansas men's tennis team posted decisive scores against both Southwest Missouri State and South Illinois Edwardsville this weekend.
Kansan sportswriter
Senior Carlos Fleming, who sat out of singles play due to bronchitis, said that the team took its opponents too lightly. He said if that continued, the Jayhawks could have problems down the stretch.
In the SIU-Edwardville match, four of the seven singles matches went to the third set.
The Jayhawks beat MSU 6-1 and SIU-Edwardville 7-0. However, the matches were much closer than the scores.
Tennis ku
"We were physically ready, but I think we weren't mentally prepared," he said. "If you aren't ready to give 100 percent both physically and mentally every time you step on the court, you're going to have problems."
that with Fleming's absence, the youngerplayers needed to pick up the slack. Junior Kevin Herke and freshmen Jeremy Sutter and Martin Echanki, who have played sparingly, all took part in the Jahwaks' victories.
Kansas coach Michael Center said
Echand's Friday night match with SMSU's Michael Akel was his first collegiate action. Echand beat Akel 6-4, 6-2. He remained unbeaten as he defeated SIU-Edwardsville's Brad Mossman 6-3, 6-2 on Saturday.
"I think giving the other players a chance to play really helped their confidence," Center said. "As with any sport, anyone can get sick or hurt at any time. These guys need to feel able to step up and win."
Fleming and sophomore Manny Ortiz, the Jayhawks' number one doubles team, lost to SIU-Edwardsville's Hughes Laverdiere and Kyler Updyke 8-5.
ever, another streak was broken in the process.
The two victories pushed Kassaa winningstreak to four matches. How-
The Kansas duo had won all six matches this season before Saturday's loss.
"They were flat," Center said. "They did not prepare for the match, and they lost."
Fleming and Center said that one aspect that the team needed to improve on was its competitive edge.
"From here on out, our all matches are going to be tough." Center said.
Kansas travels to play regional gival Drake on Saturday. Center said Drake was one of the most highly-toued teams in the region.
"This match against Drake is big." Fleming said. "They are a very solid team, and it's a match we need to win."
Women'stennisteam improves record to 6-3
Kansanstaffreport
BRIEFS
The Jayhawks posted a record of 1-2 overall for the tournament, losing to both 7th-ranked Georgia and 10th-ranked Indiana by the same tally. 4-5.
The Kansas women's tennis team, ranked 20th in the nation, improved its record to 6-3 Saturday by defeating Virginia 5-0 in the National Team Indoors tournament in Madison, Wis.
Golf team places 11th in Florida invitational
Three of the 'Hawks were undefeated for the tournament in singles play. Sophomore Rebecca Jensen, ranked 16th in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll, was victorious in all three of her matches. Her record is 16-1. Sophomore Nora Koves, 13-3, and junior Kim Rogers, 10-6, also won all three of their matches.
Kansan staffreport
G Georgia won the team title with a score of 886, 17 strokes ahead of second place finisher and host South Florida.
Junior Matt Gogel topped the Jayhawks with an 12-over-par three-round total of 228, which was good for a tie for 21st. Gogel fired three consecutive rounds of 76.
The Kansas men's golf team finished 11th with a score of 933 at the University of South Florida Invitational in Tampa, Fla. The tournament, which lasted three days, concluded yesterday.
Senior Brad Bruno finished in a tie for 25th with a score of 229. Junior Jeff Moeller tied for 48th at 237, and junior John Hess and sophomore Tom Sims tied for 75th at 246.
The Associated Press
Missouri women beat Oklahoma State, 64-63
STILWATER, Okla. — Stacy WILLATER, hit a 21-foot shot in overtime to give Missouri a 64-63 victory against Oklahoma State yesterday.
The game was close throughout, with the lead changing hands 16 times and Missouri never leading by more than seven.
Williams had 15 points, while Vantrece Williams led the Tigers, 18-7 overall and 8-6 in the Big Eight Conference, with 18 points and five rebounds.
Stacy Coffey of Oklahoma State, 21-7 and 9-5, contributed 22 points, while setting a big Eight record by stealing the ball eight times.
Coffey shot 53.8 percent from the field, including hitting four from three-point range.
8
Monday, March 1, 1993
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KU Connection
Gene Ramp came to KU 24 years ago as a graduate student. He earned a Ph.D in developmental and child psychology, and has been an adjunct faculty member at KU since 1972. Gene is also the director of Educational Systems.
For 25 years he has worked with schools across the U.S. to help them define and achieve educational excellence. He is also president of a national coalition of universities and school systems working to reform education.
Gene believes that KU and our local schools should be working together. Having him on the school board would be good for our schools, and good for KU.
national education research group based at KU.
GeneRamp LAWRENCE SCHOOL BOARD
Women finish fourth at conference meet; Nebraska takes first
Men take seventh at Big Eight
Junior Michael Cox accounted for more than half of the Kansas men's total team points by winning the mile run at last weekend's Big Eight Conference Indoors track meet at Ames, Iowa.
Cox's victory was worth 10 points for the men's team, which placed seventh with a total of 19.5 points. The women's team finished fourth with
Nebraska won the women's side for the 14th consecutive year with 160 points, and Iowa State won the men's with 145.
By Blake Spurney
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that he and the team were disappointed with where the Jayhawks placed. He said he had hoped that the women would finish in the top three, and that the men would place fifth.
Schwartz said that the competition was much stronger this year. For example, Dan Waters won the 800-meter run last year in 1:53.72. On Saturday he ran it in 1:51.53 and placed sixth.
"We're a much better team than we showed on both sides," he said. "The women's team came closer to realizing the potential they have."
Cox, in running a career-best time of 4:01.39, blew by the lead pack in the last 400 meters of the mile as he held off Iowa State's Steve Green by .94 of a second. It was the best time by a Kansas miler since Jim Ryman's 3:57.5 in 1968 and five seconds better than Cox's previous personal best.
Track & Field
He said he went into the race with the hope of staying close to the lead pack for the first few laps.
"The pace was just screaming." Cox said.
His time was quick enough to provisionaly qualify him for the NCAA Indoor Championships March 12 and 13 in Indianapolis. If there are not enough athletes who meet the NCAA automatic bids for an event, the athletes with the top provisional marks will go to nationals.
Two athletes on the women's side also became conference champions; senior high jumper MaryBeth Labosky and junior distance runner Julia Saul.
Labosky set the Iowa State Recreation-Athletic Facility record and qualified automatically for nationals with a jump of 6-1/2 feet. After clearing the bar on her first attempt, she enjoyed a brief celebration, jumping enthusiastically on the mat with her arms raised.
In Friday night's pentathlon, Wentland had jumped 6-2 in the high jump, which is a collegiate national record for the pentathlon. She had jumped 6-2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ earlier this season, tops in the nation.
However, she had to sit and watch the nation's No. 1 highjumper, Kansas State's Gwen Wentland and Missouri's Hanne Anderson take their final three attempts, which they missed.
Labosky said that clearing the height first put pressure on the other two jumpers.
"I was very happy I did it on my first attempt because I knew what Gwen was capable of," she said.
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was tied for sixth with Colorado. However, Labosky and junior Keely Harding lifted the Jahawks to a solo fourth-place finish, a half point ahead of Missouri. Harding garnered half a point for her sixth-place tie.
Kansas junior Michael Cox sprints down the straightway during the men's 3,000-meter run. Cox won the mile run with a time of 4:01.39.
On Friday night, Saul won the 5000-meter run in 17:13.92, 14 seconds ahead of Oklahoma's Rosa Reyes. Junior Ashley Ace placed third with 17:29.92.
DURHAM, N.C. — Senior Bobby Hurley gave the home crowd what it wanted on the day his No. 11 jersey was retired, scoring 19 points and handing out 15 assists as No. 9 Duke beat UCLA 78-67 yesterday.
KANSAS
141
2
Before the high jump, which was the final event for the women, Kansas
The Associated Press
BRIEFS
Hurley nears record as Duke beats UCLA
Hurley's assist total moved him within five of the career NCAA mark of 1,039, held North Carolina State's Chris Corchiani, against whom Hurley played two seasons.
Hurley, the seventh player in Duke history to have his number retired, has 46 assists in his last three games.
Sophomores lead Michigan to victory
The Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Sophronim Jimmy King hit two looping jumpers to give fifth-ranked Michigan a five-point lead, and sophomore Jalen Rose kept them ahead with three free throws in the final 29 seconds as the Wolverines beat Ohio State 66-43 yesterday.
Sophomore Juwan Howard scored 18 points and had 16 rebounds for Michigan, 22-4 overall and 11-3 in the Big Ten Conference. Rose added 17 points, and King had 10.
The victory gave the Wolverons sole possession of second place in the Big Ten, two games behind front-running Indiana and a half-game ahead of Illinois.
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843-3826
We buy back books daily KU Bookstores -Kansas and Burge Unions
CHANCELLOR'S STUDENT AWARD NOMINATION FORMS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN THE ORGANIZATIONS & ACTIVITIES CENTER, 400 KANSAS UNION. COMPLETED FORMS MUST BE RETURNED TO OAC BY
RETURNED TO OAC BY
5:00 P.M., MONDAY, MARCH 1
**Awards include**
The Agnus Wright Striking Award
The Donald K. Young Memorial Award
The Class of 1913 Award
The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award
Description of Awards included or nomination form.
Carol Wirtman,
Vice President and
Student Loan Officer
PETER M. CUNNINGHAM
Student Loans At Your Fingertips: 865-0278
Come by our Student Loan Department or call today.
At First National Bank, we are the Student Loan Specialists. With 30 years of experience behind us, we have a strong record of service to students like you. We're known for our friendly, quality service on Stafford, PLUS and SLS loans; our 24 hour processing ensures quick turnaround on your student loan application.
865-0278
First National
An affiliate of Mercantile Transportation Inc.
Main Bank, Ninth & Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 60044-0428 • (913) 865-0200
Member FDIC • Equal Opportunity Lender
Lender ID # 804669
M
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 1, 1993
9
Daily Re-affirmation
The joy of the spirit is a loving support system for all my goals and aspirations. I am lucky to have you unyielding dedication to excelling, as well as being right and good for me.
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Business
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
238 Typing Service
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
The Kanasan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kanasan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is all tied to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise or display a product in an office based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disclosure.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
300s
Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban and Vuartet-France
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
99 Mass Ave 10411
Loose up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $30, 100% Guarantee! 832-947-67.
1
Announcements
Watkins Health Center
110 Bus. Personals
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
*Regular Clinic Hours*
Mon - Fri 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Sat 11 a.m. - 11:30 p.m.
*Urgent Care (after hours charge)*
Mon - Fri 4:30 p.m. - 10 p.m.
Sat 11:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Sun 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Recycle the Kansan
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
- Student Airfares
*Student Airlines*
*International Railpasses*
*International Identity Cards*
*Worldwide Adventure Tours*
*Travel Gear and Guidebooks*
*Expert Travel Advice*
Council Travel
Student Travel Experts
1634Orrington Ave Evanston, IL 60201
403s
Property Sales
208 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
340 Roommate
Wanted
370 Want a Home
403s
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
1-800-475-5070
WE DID IT!!!
FITNESS FREAKS
LOSE FAT GET STRONGER
FOR FREE - By helping your
friends do the same
120 Announcements
My name is Jennifer Brehm, a junior in AZD,
and my friend Lee and I have lost 21 lbs. and over
6" between us "without dieting." We both look
and feel great and because of our results we
have started our own part-time business. We now
get paid to be in great shape and hang around
with athletes because we can get you "dudes"
stronger too!!!
FEMALE SUBJECTS FOR STUDY ON SIBLINGS OF GEXUAL ABUSE INVOKERS
SURVIVAL QUESTIONS questionnaire Call Tamarra 605-2886
For anovulation info and support for AIDS care
If you want to feel great,
lose your fat and inches or
get stronger before Spring
Break—CALL NOW! NOW!
Call Jennifer, Lee, Tom or Greg at 1-800-955-2524
Notice Information If you're thinking about outsite or are concerned about who is叫你 841 2045 or 9191 1615 Mass. Headquarters Council Center
MIRACLE VIDEO
814 95 Adult Video Sales
910 N.2nd - 841-8903
910 Haskell - 841-7504
Speed reading is useless for students...
NOT!
Reading for
Speed
(3 meetings, 6 hour instruction)
Tuesdays, 3:30-5:30 pm
March 2,9 & 16
Register & Pay $19 by March 1 at 133 Strong Hall
The Student Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
SPRING BREAK 93 PARTY WITH THE BEST FOR THE LEAST CALL JOAN OR MARK 85
Spring Break quad occupancy. Daytona beach, room, limited 2/15/16 748 Pte. 79-1928
Live Comedy
Wednesday March 3
Featuring David Naster
from the Fox 101
Morning Show
AT
BENCHWARMERS
50 cent
draws
140 Lost & Found
Found: lg. sum of money Fri in basement of
Building 181 Floor 2/24 West Union Sq & Woold-Fludle
very wern Silver Pulsar watch w / black face &
Band Must vein-very important. Call 832 6982
Male and Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
505 SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS in NY, PA,
MAASS; & MAINE. Need skills in. Tennis,
Gymnastics, Baseball, Basketball,
Soccer, Hockey, Lacrosse, Canoeing,
Fencing, Gymnastics, Dance, Ceramics,
Fitness, Dance, Piano, Guitar,
Ropes/Pioneering, Nurses, Food Service
Upper Class
CAMP COUNSELERS want for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, volleyball, scrambling, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, Sailor $100 or more. Lunch with Seager 716 Maple, NDIL, IL 784-444-2444.
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries
Earn $400+ / week in economics or $4,000+ / mo on
fishing boats. Free transportation! Room &
Board! Male or Female. For employment pro-
spective.
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people, bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen help, nannies/housekeeper, maintenance person for Mountain Summer Camp, Box 710, Boulder, CO.
SPRING/SUMMER OPENINGS
*10-40 hrs. weekly* "Flexible around classes"
*$10 to start"Call 842-8035*
Line缆车 line crew level on board/handde positions available. Summer or year round, great pay.
Workday, Monday-Sunday.
Help Wanted! Recreation Services is hiring intramural Socio officials. 4 to 7.0 per hr/ anyone interested should attend an organizational meeting March 8, 19 at 8:00 am in 15 Robbins Arena
Full-time position opening for Employment Training Specialist working with adults and older ado-leres in the community. Requires minimum of 4 years experience. Requires minimum of 4 years experience setting or a B.A. in a social service field, business, or management.
Line up your matron job you are. We currently hire a crew for 1989 harvest, starting in May and ending in October. Apply online at www.NestingCombining Inc Models needed are: 1750-3600, TV & PTV Films
Fundraiser. We are looking for a student organization that would like to make $500-$1000 for a weekly marketing project. Organized and hard working. Call 4-800-2121 ext. 308
long-term mental illness. Looking for strong public relation skills strong written and interpersonal communication skills, and team involvement. Send letter of interest and resume to the attention of Lawrence Center, Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence, Kansas 60044, by March 3, 1991. EOE Fundraiser. We are looking for a student that would like...
Naimihi Hall RA application for Fall 1985 are now available at the front desk. All interested students can apply by contacting NANNIES NEEDLED NEAMY NC. We offer great facilities, HH and one year exp. TREASURED!
Nanny positions available nationwide including Pinyin, Hawaii summer/year round Great pae
Pinyin, Hawaii summer/year round
Nanny positions available nationwide including
Boston, New York, or summer/yr. Great pay.
Easy to apply. 812-643-4444
+ a nice secretarial position. Must have Macintosh Microsoft Word processing experience. Position available from May 1, for 6 months. Hours are 3:00-5:00 Tues. & Thurs., on 9:00 to 5:00 additional days as needed. Send resume to Trevor Taurier, 3200 Parkway Club K, Lawrence, KS
Students needed to work w/young child w/autism
training required. Possible independent study credit/employment over summer. Call R32
0017.
Part-time/temporary position: The KU Printing Service is taking applications for work assisting in UDK press production. Hours are 7 to 9 each morning the paper is on hand and 4 per hour. The KU Printing Service or call Don Payne 864-3414. EOE.
Tutor needed for English 435 children's literature experience with prof. Lichter B4-8109 leave empty space.
Students need to work with young child with autism. Initial training required. Possible independent study credit/summer employment. Call 832-0017.
University student needed to manage small business in Wichita or Topeka this summer. Good money, respond immediately. Ask for Eric. (912)735-0341
Youth Ministry Coordinator
Energetic, programmatic person need to provide educational leadership for leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during school year, full-time during summer. Must be at least 25 years old. Resume to Lutheran Church, 1248 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS 60044. Deadline: 03-21
WANTED: Photography Major or UDK photographer. Your resume will be required. Services will be needed 22 May, to take formal and informal shoots at my wedding and reception. If interested call 749 0481 or leave message.
Wanted Babyfisher in my home AM positions
in new condition conditions, exp. nef
req. 749-816 Micky
225 Professional Services
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law of offices
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
DONALD G. STROLE
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial aid, scholarships & grants. No GPA or Income req Write to ESSM Co P O 324 Hall 65946 License day care has opened Call 841-2822 Make your modeling dream come true! Make a model photo with Case Rochi 841- 8981, Student rates. Don't delay!
Donald G. Strole SallyG Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Speed reading is useless for students...
NOT!
Reading for
Comprehension &
Speed
(3 meetings, 6 hour instruction)
March 2,9,&16
Tuesdays, 3:30-5:30 pm
The Student Assistance Center
Register & Pay $19 in advance at 133 Strong Hall
Wines of the Southwest
235 Typing Services
$1./Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
rush jobs, Call Paul 749-648-6063
Expert typing by experienced agitator. IBM Cor-
lissian, Cordova, Maitiia. 841-2190. East Leigh,
Lawrence Call, Matius. 841-1187.
I-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transform Woman to accurate pages of letters.
842-895-365
www.academia.edu
$PRING SALE 50,000 + files for $40.25,000 message
from the "Psychologist" 'Lawrence Online'
2722 N. WEST 14th ST
X
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertation, resumes. Editing, composition, rush writing.
305 For Sale
85cm Bianchi racing bike. Bike has won several races. $50 w/ extrax. Night Christian 865-361 Airline Ticket one way KC Seattle via Denver Airline Ticket two days $7. Great for spring break get-kits. 864-816.
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Chamber. No calls AFTER 9pm. 843-8568
Computers: New and Used
P.C. Compatibles
P.C. Source 832-1126
1991 Burton Snowboard, BurtonAir, Airl, like a treadmill, keeps bindings, retention leathers, and maintenance.
300s Merchandise
Diet Magic
Helped Me Lose
over 50 LBS!
Ask me bow!
100% Natural
Doctor Recommended
all now to start losing the
Excess bbs!
One way ticket to L.A. $150 Leave message 749
Matching love seat and chair, good condition $80.
Price is negotiable. 414-1578
For Sale. Leather coat full length and navy (inter view) suit. Size 4"F. Call 749-8823 leave message.
Kerweed CD pullout player $500.
Roadead Jee bike rack $45.
Call Grant 632-8239
370 Want to Buy
340 Auto Sales
Sega Genesis, almost new. Includes 2 controllers.
受 extended catches. Games: Sega Macintosh
360, Sega Dreamcast, Nintendo Wii, PlayStation 3,
Madea 628 GT Power everything 4 door greed condition $900 Must call 642-8685 454 Ford Excort 10i/hawkback 4 apx Typeek desk mirror 18,000 rating 7,800 miles also 642-1988
WANTED LEENY 501'S JEANNE WE PAY UP TO
$10.00 allow Buying Jean Jackets 814-6546
Wanted: Keyboard for Tandy 1000SX personal
computer 814-4821
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 Bdr. House near campus. Pully furn. W/D/C/A, dwm. Spirit Spiral leaves, leaise mid Aug. No windows.
1800 NISPTHM 3 4 4 BR. 2 Bath. Lg rooms.
micro suite. 3-room apartment, operated laundry,
variable leaves. 1-room apartment, variable leaves.
Avail Now. 3-2 BRL Ap1. Close to KU + downstairs
Avalance, all ailes Apples, plus petrog
844-892-6072
Available in May. Nice 2 BR aparts in quiet comp-
all kitchen appl., central air, low usb, bus
router, & pool. Excellent mgmt & maintenance. No
wets. $25/mo. B41-8686.
Available Mar. 1, newly renovated to bldm. apt., beautiful old house, near neth. 10th and Kentucky. Wood floors, claw foot tile, dishwasher, window ar./ off-vent. Kitchen, stainless-steel refrigerator. HEY RU Med Students. Rainbow Tower Apartments is now leasing St. 1 & 2 bed apartms. for fair, Luxury HI Rise Living, Limited Entry, Heat & Water paid, pool, sam, jacuzzi, & spa, garage. Room rentals from KU Campus. 810-KU (Karen) Campus from KU Med Campus. 831-9051.
COTTON WASHING MACHINE
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5
*Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
Bedroom TownHomes
Garages, 24 Baths Microwave Oven
- Microwave Ovens
*Some with Fireplaces
*On KU Bus Route
*On KU Bus Route
*Swimming Pool and
Tennis Courts
841-8400
Large 2 bdrm apt. 4 blocks from campus $180/mo.
Room with large kitchen, laundry room,
31, 198 with option to renew. Big yard; smart
roommate responsible, quiet, like living alone.
Pets allowed. Off street parking. Contact Jennifer
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 1. 3½ yr,
luxury laptops, close to campus. All 3 BR,
microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appli.
decks or patio/patio Wet insulated, energy effi-
cial.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
· FURNISHED
Studios, 1,2,2,3 & 4 burn apts ..designed with you in mind!
Campus Place-841-1429 1145 Hours
Hanover Place-841-1212
Regents Court-749-0445
HardCorkers-749-4221
15th & Kaskid
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
842-4455
at Aspen West Apartments. 2 BR, 18r
no pets, water paid, on bus route 852-2500
or 944-733-6888.
Now leasing for June & August. Nice, quiet. BRATs. low utilities, central air, gas, heat, all kitchen appliances, on the floor, beautiful pool. CPA's based in New York or Mexico. Spanish Crest Apts. Call 641-8684 for appt.
BH-App. Apt. Avail. June 1. Hard-wood floors. $290.
841-5797
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
* 4 Stops on Property
*2 Pools
Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
- 2 Laundry Rooms
* Some Washer/Driver
NAISMITH
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, KS
66044
(913)843-8559
NOW
LEASING FOR
FALL
"we'll make life easier for you"
Perfect summer subscale for female nonmom2 user:
Kevin's beta OK 19$/mo. {
*includes utilities!*: 8431328 $
Spacious 2 bedm apt. Summer sublease all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3628.
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE BEACH
Party on the beach / 2/3 BR 212-471-6801
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-
681. Storm In 140 Tennessee
Two bedrooms available now! A/C. cable, $25 per month, on bus route. BK 801-036-193
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Non caller to share beautiful, roomy, historic 2
bathrooms. Call us at info@suites.us or visits
Available now. Call 843-494-7600.
Prime location. Roommate wanted to share 4 bd 28 bap app 3 guys $187.50 + call Us 641-7814 611
How to schedule an ad:
1 Bdmr in a 4 Bdmr, pool 2, bath 819, +util. to
stop Apple Lane Orthochord Corners Call 843 3828
4 large LBR, 2 BA furn. loft ap, Orchard Corners.
Avail ASAP No. dep req. no leap. Mail-Aug - Mar-205
+/util. 3 great rooms, privacy, + more fun than any dorm. 865-1199
LOOK-SKABLE female nonsmkne needed for D3, bmduplex. CA, lg bath, lg backw, D3W, great location,lg living area. On bus route. $180/mo + utilities. CHECK US OUT #U71-7258 leave message.
1 m roommate need to share 2 BR Aspen West
1875/me, Call 749-649-1257
$179/mo, Call 749-649-1257
Wanted? 2 + Bm here in the country, rent/lease.
Would consider house-mates Nancy,
806-5784.
Prime location 1900 Natsimh. Share 3B3 prb
locality $240 +m/ +\vuln Call 749-1898
1-461-1311
Roommate needed immediately. Great place. 4 min. in room, walk from campus $145/mo + /hr.
Roommate needed immediately. Great place. 4 min. in room, walk from campus $145/mo + /hr.
Save Money- Third Roommate Needed to share a
Savings account. Visit www.cities.com/
Cities to Save Leave Map 842-799-9731
- 6 phone calls.
Ads phone may be mailed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
490 Shoreline Flat, 1198 Shoreland Drive
Stop by the Kankan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or W Visa.
Calculating Rates:
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Bank of America or have it imprinted on a Visa Card or a MasterCard. Ads that are billed to Visa Card the Bankcard quality for an unused瞪ed days card.
Classified Information and order form
Calculate minutes.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate cost, the multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the total cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canning a classified data that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertised 'account' will be credited for the unpaid days. Failures canned and those that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
BIRD BOX NUMBERS:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Cost per line per day
1X 2X 4X 6X 8X 15-29X 30+X
1.95 1.50 1.00 0.90 0.70 0.45
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.65 0.60 0.40
1.76 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 0.85 0.60 0.55 0.50 0.35
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Classifications
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Please print your ad one word per box
148 test & found
252 highest level
225 professional services
225 juicy services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to buy
495 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins:
Total ad cost:
Total days in paper:
Classification:
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☑ Check enclosed ☑ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furniture the following if you are charging your ad:
Master Card
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of California Daly Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
**8.6845**
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
BLUEBERRY HILL
"Norm? This is Mitch. ...
You were right — I found my drill."
city commission ELECTIONS
Vote today in the Lawrence City Commission primary election. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. See page 3 for where to vote.
11.
city commission ELECTIONS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.111
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY, MARCH 2.1993
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
President unveils plan for student aid
Program to allow repayment of college loans through service
The Associated Press
PISCATAWAY, N.J. — President Clinton pledged yesterday to revolutionize college aid by allowing students to repay loans through community work. He cast his ambitious national service plan as a 1990s G Bill to change the United States forever and for the better.
Starting with 1,000 slots this summer and growing to 100,000 or more within four years, the program will make college affordable to all while setting off a wave of involvement in education, health, safety and environmental projects. Clinton said.
"All across America we have problems that demand our common attention." Clinton said. "National service
is nothing less than the American way to change America."
The program was a centerpiece of Clinton's campaign, and he chose the 32nd anniversary of President Kennedy's creation of the Peace Corps to formally propose his plan. Congressional approval would be required.
Aides say many details are still unclear, from how much a student would be able to borrow to how big a stipend to pay young people while they work off their loans.
Clinton's plan is designed to dramatically reshape federal student aid programs and offer young people opportunities and incentives to perform such community service as working in inner-city children's health and drug clinics, tutoring in literacy programs and walking streets in neighborhood police corps.
The president himself set high expectations for the initiative, framing the announcement as "one I hope will be a truly historic moment in our nation's history." He compared it to the GI Bill's offer of education to servicemen returning from World War II, a program that expanded the nation's middle class.
"One of the things that we have to realize in this country is that an economic investment is not just building an airport or a road or investing in new technologies," Clinton said. "It's also investing in people."
One year of service would qualify students for two years of college loans. Eli Segal, the Clinton adviser drafting the program, said the administration had yet to decide on a borrowing cap.
Students could borrow first and enter service after graduating, or enter service after high school and
acquire credits for loans. Segal said stipends likely would be paid at or near the minimum wage, but no final decision had been made.
Students who chose not to enter public service could pay back loans based on a percentage of their income — not the amount borrowed — which Clinton said would encourage graduates to enter lower-paying but critical professions such as teaching and working in community health clinics. Clinton said states would have broad discretion in shaping the programs.
CITY
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
16 more implicated in fake license ring
Carrie Finnehead, Manchester, Mo., senior, poses in front of a mural she painted last summer by Hockenberry's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St. The mural decorates a wall of the bar's outdoor terrace. See related story, Page 5.
Mural music
KU police suspect nine others to be involved in student operation
By Mark Klefer
Kansan staff writer
Sixteen additional students have been given notices to appear in Douglas County District Court in connection with last week's arrest of a student who has been charged with making fake driver's licenses.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that police were in the process of finding nine other students suspected to be involved with the incident.
Ten of the 16 students are residents of Oliver Hall. The other six live in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall.
Each student is scheduled to appear March 11 in court to respond to the charges, which include either possession of false identification or attempting to possess false identification.
KU police arrested Robert Martin, West Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, Wednesday after they received a phone call on the KU Crimesupporters' hot line that said a student had been making fake licenses.
Martin now faces a felony charge of manufacturing false identifications.
Bailey said another resident told him about the fake identifications.
Robert Bailey, Austin, Texas, freshman, lives on the same floor as Martin and was one of the students given a notice.
"I went to check it out and let him take my picture," he said.
Bailey said that he later decided not to get the license and that he never paid Martin for the fake Iowa driver's license.
He said that Martin had a stamp from the state of Iowa that added authenticity to the license but that the blank back side of the license gave it away.
"I've seen the real one and knew that it was a fraud," Bailey said of the initation Iowa driver's license.
Mullens said Martin had been selling the licenses for $25 to $50.
Bailey also said that he had his picture taken one week before Martin's arrest.
The arrests constitute the first fake license manufacturing case on campus since April 1991, said KU police officer Burdel Welsh.
The 1991 incident, also originating in Oliver, led to 21 notices for students to appear in court. The student had been making Missouri driver's licenses.
A Crimestoppers' call also led police to the discovery of that operation. The caller received a $300 reward.
Integration of gays into U.S. military echoes past
By Tracl Carl
Special to the Kansan
One night, in Augusta, Ga., several years after President Truman ordered the integration of the military, a car full of military police watched as George Allen, an African-American MP, was beaten by local police because he refused to walk in the gutter and not on the sidewalk.
"When I woke up in jail, the only way I could get out was to go to Korea," said Allen, now president of the Organization of African-American Veterans and the Fort Huachuca, Ariz. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "I figured it would be better over there than in Augusta, Ga."
His stories of tension and discrimination within the military are familiar. It has been 45 years since Truman signed Executive Order No. 9981 on July 26, 1948, which ordered the gradual integration of troops and forced the military to disregard race, color, religion or national origin.
Truman's order didn't mention sexual orientation. But the same fears and myths about African Americans, which made integration difficult 45 years ago, now are haunting homosexuals. Allen said.
The true test of integration is not eliminating the barriers for combat, but eliminating the social barriers, Allen said.
"I know I've got more scars from being a soldier in the United States than from served in Korea," he said.
Now the issue is discrimination of another kind.
Homosexuals always have fought beside heterosexual soldiers, and there has not been a problem, Allen said.
Alen said he had friends who tried to get out of serving in Korea by claiming that they were gay, but the military gave little thought to sexual orientation and forced them to serve anyway.
If they needed soldiers, the military wouldn't oppose lifting the gay ban
"If we were at war, there would be no issue," he said. "The issue is not whether gays can serve honorably like anyone else. They've been doing that for years. The "issue seems to be whether we know the person is gay or not."
But another African-American veteran sees more differences than similarities between integrating races in 1948 and integrating sexual orientations in 1993.
Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism and Korean War veteran, said lifting the ban on homosexuals in the military was different than integrating the army because race was something that couldn't be controlled. The gay ban is based on behavior that can be controlled, he said.
"The military has always discriminated based on certain types of behavior." Adams said. "We're talking about two different things. We're talking about a control over lifestyle and a control of race."
In 1952, the military drafted their
soldiers. Today they hire them, and that changes the authority the military has over soldier's lifestyles, Adams said.
"The military is not a democracy," he said. "They just tell you what to do."
Adams said he thought homosexuals deserved to be treated equally, but he knew their fight for acceptance in the military would be hard.
African Americans' fight for equal rights was a small war in itself, Allen said. He said he knew it would take more than an executive order to ensure fair treatment for homosexual soldiers in the military. He knows he fought many of them and arguments homosexuals are fighting today.
"The good-old-boy attitude is still at
work." Allen said.
This attitude held that allowing African Americans to be associated with white soldiers would hurt morale. Allen said.
These are the same arguments, based on stereotypes and misconceptions, that are being used to uphold the ban on gays today, he said.
such as soldiers today worry about sleeping next to a homosexual, soldiers in the 1950s worried about coming to an African American, Allen said.
"Southerners just couldn't see sleeping next to a Black person," he said.
These stereotypes spurred violence during the period of integration, just
INSIDE
Continued on Page 3.
Noregrets
KU professor's book puts tests to the test
Senior point guard Adonis Jordan reflects on his career at Kansas before his last home game tomorrow night.
3
See related story. Page 7.
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansan staff writer
F. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology and author of "Testing Testing: Social Consequences of the Examined Life," says he thinks tests have established how our society's beliefs are established.
Taking tests is an inevitable part of life, right?
One KU professor thinks we are overtested and wrote a book to prove his point.
He cites 16th and 17th century tests for witchcraft to illustrate his point.
Back then, the ankles and feet of a suspected witch were tied together. The suspected witch was then thrown down from a rooftop and a witch, if she drowned, she wasn't.
"The fact of doing that test established for society that witches exist," Harrison says.
He says the same thing is happening with the idea of intelligence today.
"I argue that the very concept of intelligence is the product of intelligence tests," he says.
Tests such as the SAT, ACT or IQ establish intelligence as a fixed number that people are stuck with for life, when intelligence really is the sum of many factors that can change, Hanson says.
"You begin to get a sense of yourself from those tests and act in a way that reflects them," he says. "It's kind of a life sentence for a 6-year-old to be called mediocre or a genius."
Hanson, who has been teaching at KU since 1966, does not have a problem with tests that measure learned knowledge. He does have a problem with tests that establish ideas about future performance.
In "Testing Testing," which was reviewed in Sunday's The New York
Times, Hanson addresses drug testing.
Manson says it is ironic that heroin, cocaine and barbiturates clear out of the system in a few days, while marijuana, a less destructive drug, stays for much longer.
Hanson said that with any kind of observation, a supervisor would be able to detect drug use anyway.
"We are being made by tests in our society and we don't know it," she said.
He says pre-employment tests are problematic because the subjects know the test is coming and have the chance to stop using the more destructive drugs.
Fransje Knops, Lawrence graduate student, has read Hanson's book. She said she thought the book was timely and important because people need to be reminded of what is happening to our society.
PETER L. HENRY
F. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology and author of "Testing Testing: Social Consequences of the Examined Life," examines the social effects of testing in such areas as intelligence and drug use. It will be available at the KU bookstores next week.
2
Tuesday, March 2, 1993
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ON THE RECORD
A student's motorcycle, valued at $1,750, was taken between Feb. 15 and Sunday from a parking lot near Jahyawer Towers, KU police reported.
SHOWIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
A purse and its contents, valued together at $308, were taken Saturday from a vehicle in a parking lot near Sunnyside Avenue and Illinois Street, KU police reported. Damage to a window was estimated at $90.
A student's purse, wallet, eyeglasses and several earrings, valued together at $368, were taken Friday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. KU police reported.
The front windshield of a student's car was damaged between Thursday and Sunday in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $200.
A student's pistol, valued at $110, was taken between Feb. 19 and Friday from a residence in the 900 block of Maine Street, Lawrence police reported.
A KU employee's purse and contents, valued together at $120, were taken Saturday from a vehicle in a parking lot near Sunnyside Avenue and Illinois Street, KU police reported. Damage to a window was estimated at $100.
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WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 63°/49'
Chicago: 43°/30'
Houston: 72°/46'
Miami: 76°/66'
Minneapolis: 43°/25'
Phoenix: 70°/47'
Salt Lake City: 53°/31'
Seattle: 51°/40'
LAWRENCE: 44°/32'
Kansas City: 43°/31'
St. Louis: 48°/37'
Wichita: 45°/29'
Tulsa: 55°/37'
TODAY
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Mostly cloudy, 80% chance of rain.
High: 43°
Low: 32°
Partly cloudy,
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Low: 31°
Source: John Pfeifer, KU Weather Service; 864-3300 Derek Noelen / KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, K6045.
Speaker: Mary Harren
"Catholics For A Free Choice"
Date: Tuesday, March 2
Time: 7:30 p.m.
ALOHA BOWL CHAMPIONS!
Place: ECM (across from the crossing)
Sponsored by the KU Pro Choice Coalition.
KU CRIMSON CREW
\*\* Discussing the issue of choice birth control, feminism and the Catholic Church.
Get involved with the University and the Football program by participating in the 1993-94 Crimson Crew.
This is a great experience for anyone interested in Public Relations, Communications, Marketing, or other related fields.
KU
All interested freshmen, sophomores, and juniors are asked to attend an informational meeting in room 135 Parrott Athletic Center:
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Any questions? Call the Football Office at 864-3393
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Tuesday, March 2, 1993
3
Senate to hear qualified admissions bill
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — For only the second time in a decade, a qualified admissions bill has made it out of a legislative committee.
The Kansas Senate Education committee yesterday voted to pass the qualified admissions bill to the Senate floor, where a full-chamber vote may come as soon as today. The full Senate must act on the bill by end of the tomorrow, when most Senate bills move to the House and vice versa.
KANSAS
LEGISLATURE
school students to meet at least one of three requirements for admission to a Regents university. Students would need either a 2.0 grade point average, a composite ACT score of 23 or be in the top third of their high school class.
Qualified admissions legislation has only once been passed out of a legislative committee since it was introduced in 1983. In 1990, the House Education Committee sent a qualified admissions bill to the House floor, but eventually it was defeated.
One approved amendment required 5 percent of a university's incoming students to be allowed admission to a Regents university without having met one of the three qualified admissions standards.
As the bill went through final committee debate, several amendments were proposed for each.
chance to prove themselves in college.
Qualified admissions supporters have said that the 5 percent "window" would allow "late bloomers" who had trouble in high school to have a
The Senate bill would require high
The amendment, introduced by State Sen. Tim Emert, R-Independence, tightened the window to 5 percent from the 15 percent that was proposed in the bill. Emert said he was in favor of getting rid of the window altogether.
"My concern all along was that the standards in this direction were too weak to begin with," he said.
Last week, the committee discussed how the basic skills test might fit into the state's plan to accredit its schools, called qualified performance accreditation, or QPA.
State Sen. Christine Downey, D-Newton, said she thought the committee had lost sight of the purpose of the basic skills bill and would probably not agree on what those skills were.
The controversial bill passed to the full Senate with a related bill that would require high school students to pass a basic skills test before being admitted to a Regents university.
The bill requires the state board of education to define basic skills.
Senate Education Committee chairperson Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, declined comment on the near future of the qualified admissions legislation.
"This is major legislation we're talking about," she said. "These are critical things that are going to be implemented in schools all over the state."
Ted Ayres, Regents general counsel,
said he was "cautiously optimistic."
The Regents support qualified admissions.
"It certainly is very significant that the Senate Education Committee thought it appropriate to pass it forward," Ayres said.
The committee also passed three other education bills, the first of which would create 40 minority graduate student fellowships.
Potential lift of gay ban stirs up past
as violence against gays is reported today.
Allen said he was not surprised by the recent incidents of homosexuals being beaten and, in one case, killed.
"You had the same incidents when Blacks came into the system," he said. "If they were in a group, no one would touch them. But if they were alone, they were beat up."
There is power in numbers, Allen said, and it is the only way homosexuals will survive in the military.
Alen said he thought that President Bill Clinton believed in equal rights for homosexuals in the military but that equal rights was not the true motive for President Truman's decision.
He said he thought the power in the number of African Americans in the military had accumulated was the real reason Truman ordered the integration of the military.
Truman wanted to decrease the power of a growing, separate African-American military that might become too powerful unless it was dispersed among the white soldiers, Allen said.
But there are no documents that support Allen's theory, said Dennis Bilger, an archivist for the Truman library.
As for homosexuals, the military is not ready to once again be a catalyst for change.
Reports that African Americans were being beaten in their home towns appalled Truman and motivated him to issue the order. Bilger said.
A survey published Sunday by the Los Angeles Times found that 74 percent of 2,300 enlistees said they disapproved of lifting the ban on homosexuals. Eighteen percent favored the change.
But lack of support shouldn't be a reason to give up, Allen said.
In the past 45 years, soldiers have been able to change who their enemies are, but their feelings for those on the same end of the gun have remained the same.
"If we can forgive our enemies, who we took up arms against and tried to kill," Allen said. "Can we do less for our fellow Americans?"
Where to vote today
Registered voters can cast their ballots for three of the 12 candidates running in the Lawrence City Commission primary election. The top six vote-getters will advance to the general election April 6.
People can vote in their assigned precincts from 7 a.m. to 7 o.p.
7 - 2 5 - 1 8 - 1 6th Street 1 - 4 Kansas River
6 - 2 5 - 2 Harvard Road 3 - 1 2 - 1 9th Street 1 - 5 Street
12 - 2 9 - 2 3 - 2 2 - 2 2 - 6 15th Street 1 - 3 Sunnyside Ave.
Kasold Drive 10 - 2 Iowa Street 4 - 3 2 - 3 19th Street 1 - 4 Clinton Parkway 3 - 3 21st Street Massachusetts 2 - 4
8 - 2 9 - 11 - 2 22nd Street 5 - 3 8 - 3 7 - 3
Source: Douglas County Clerk's Office
Polling places by ward and precinct
Polling places by ward and precinct
2.1 Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
2.1 Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont
4.1 National Guard Armory, 200 Iowa St.
4.1 Deerfield School, 101 N. Lawrence Ave.
4.2 Plymouth Congregational Church, 925
Varnmont St.
2. 2 South Park Recreational Center, 1141 Massachusetts St.
Massachusetts St.
812 Hillcrest School, 1045 Hilttop St.
82 Allen Field House, Naismith Street
85 West Junior High School, 2706 Yale Road
86 First Baptist Church, 1330 Kasol Drive
87 American Legion, 3408 W. Sixth St.
88 First Presbyterian Church, 2104 W. 23th St.
89 Immanuel Lutheran Church, 2104 W. 15th St.
102 Clinton Parkway Assembly of God, 3200 Clinton Parkway
11-2 Holcolm Recreational Center, 2700 W. 27th St.
12-3 Mustard Seed Church, 700 Wakarusa Drive
12-1 Central United Methodist Church, 1501
2 Cordley School, 1837 Vermont St.
3 Lawrence High School Annex, 2017 Louisiana
43 Centennial School 2145 Louisiana St.
23rd, Chickens, 23rd and Louisiana streets
36 Schweiger School, 2021 Oudahl St
73 Southside Church of Christ, 25th and
Missouri streets
8-3 Sterling Heights, 1800 W. 27th St.
1-4 Central Junior High School, 1400
Northwest St.
Massachusett St.
2:4 Babcock Place, 1700 Massachusetts St.
1:5 New York School, 936 New York St.
2:5 Judicial Building, 111 E. 11th St.
Derek Nolen / Kansan
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting at 10 a.m. today at 4020 Wescoe Hall for students interested in studying in Spanish-speaking countries.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will have a brown-bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union and from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow at Aceve B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
International studies and programs will present the Worldview Lecture Series from noon to 1 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas University. John Poertner, associate professor of social welfare, will speak on democracy and social welfare in Paraguay. For more information call Cathy McChure at 864-4141.
■ Association of the United States Army will hold an open forum at 4:30 p.m. today at the second floor of the Military Science Building. Lieutenant Colonel Esen of the Turkish General Staff will speak on Turkey's future in NATO, the Kurdish issue and related topics. For more information, call 864-3311.
Armchair Generals will meet at 6 p.m. today. A game session will be held. New players are welcome. For more information, call 864-7118.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will have a meeting from 6:30 to 8 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call
Peace Corp alumni will meet at 7 tonight at Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall.
KU Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call David Olson at 841-6249.
Triathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2734.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Doug Hesse at 749-1255.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries,1204 Oread Ave. will have a University forum from 11:40 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow. Paul Danieri will speak on conflict and cooperation in the former Soviet Union. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4833.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kristi Holdsworth at 832-1751.
Library system stacks up well in 1992 report
**Watkins Memorial Health Center will have an eating disorders support group meeting from 7 to 8 tomorrow night at the second floor conference room in Watkins. The topic of discussion will be the media and eating disorders. For more information, call Chris Cameron at 841-0086.**
KU ranked top in conference for its facilities
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas' libraries ranks in the top 40 percent of those belonging to the Association of Research Libraries, according to a report released in January by the association.
The association, which includes 108 university libraries and 12 independent research libraries in the United States and Canada, compiles the report every year.
The fiscal 1991-1992 report ranks KU 39th among the university libraries. Among U.S. public universities, it ranks 23rd.
The University surpassed all other Big Eight schools included in the report. Kansas State University is not a member of the association and was not in the rankings.
The rankings were based on volumes held and added, serials, total expenditures and total staff.
KU ranks 17th in government documents, a category not included in the overall rankings.
Robert Melton, publications coordinator at Watson Library, said it was hard to compare accurately universities' libraries.
"Some don't like overall ratings because there are so many different variables," Melton said. "There are so many things that make the rankings apples and oranges.
"This would really only be meaningful if every school was offering the same number of programs and had the same number of students."
But he said he thought KU deserved
Best libraries
01.108 university systems surveyed for fiscal 1991/1992, the University of Kansas’ system ranks 30th, the highest of any other university in the Bigh Eight.
Kansas State University is not a member of the Association of Research Libraries, the organization that did the survey.
1. Harvard University
2. University of California at Berkeley
3. Yale University
4. University of California - Los Angeles
5. Toronto
6. University of Kansas
7. University of Colorado
8. University of Missouri
7. University of Nebraska
7. Iowa State University
8. University of Oklahoma
103. Oklahoma State University
Source: The Association of Research Libraries
KANSAN
a fairly high ranking.
"Not only do statistics show us to be good," he said, "but my sense of things here is that this library is more able to support original research than most libraries in this region."
Melton said original research required materials like manuscripts, archival materials and original editions of publications.
The University ranks 32nd overall in the number of volumes with 3,043,964. This number increased from fiscal 1900-1991 by 83,199 volumes, alarger increase than any of the other Big Eight universities in the association.
But looking too good could mean less funding because of the perception that the library is financially stable, Melton said.
"Statistics can be a double-edged sword," he said. "Looking good can be bad in a way."
Many universities take the report with more than a grain of salt, Melton said.
"Literaries take it fairly seriously," he said, "partly as a way to get their funding improved."
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Tuesday, March 2, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Congress should pass bill to restrict gun sales
Under the law, any person may purchase a handgun within a matter of minutes and take it from the store immediately—no questions asked. However, a bill presently before Congress would revise appallingly lax gun control laws.
The Brady Bill, named for former press secretary James Brady who was crippled by a gunshot wound in 1981, would impose much needed handgun regulations. Under the Brady Bill, anyone who wants to purchase a handgun would endure a seven-day waiting period before actually obtaining the gun. During this time period, a person's criminal and mental health records would be checked. Convicted felons and persons deemed mentally ill would be denied the right to purchase guns.
The Brady Bill was proposed and eventually defeated in Congress in 1988 and again in 1991. Now the bill has resurfaced, and Congress once again has the opportunity to enact a gun control law that is both logical and beneficial.
The benefits of the Brady Bill's seven-day waiting period are simple and obvious. By checking consumers' criminal and mental records, people who have been proven dangerous or mentally unstable are identified before they can purchase guns.
The waiting period also serves as a cooling-off period. By imposing a seven-day wait, an irate person who impulsively attempts to buy a gun has time to rethink his or her feelings. The waiting period could prevent enraged people from taking irrational actions they might not otherwise consider.
Skeptics argue that the Brady Bill will not alleviate the nation's violent crime epidemic. They're right. The Brady Bill will not prevent violent crimes from ever occurring again. No law can possibly do that. The bill is not a cure-all for violent crime, but it is a preventive measure that will keep potentially deadly criminals from obtaining firearms legally.
Members of the National Rifle Association and other opponents of the bill assert that it infringes upon citizens' right to bear arms. However, the vast majority of citizens will have no difficulty obtaining handguns after waiting a mere week. Keeping convicted felons and the mentally ill from purchasing guns is not unfairly prohibitive.
Purchasing a handgun should not be as quick and painless as picking up a loaf of bread, and every citizen should not have instantaneous access to deadly weapons. The present policy of allowing anyone and everyone to immediately obtain handguns regardless of criminal or mental history is both frightening and ridiculous. The Brady Bill would establish reasonable restrictions without encroaching upon people's freedom.
The Brady Bill is not a panacea for violent crime, but it does represent a significant improvement to the law. Even if the bill saves only a few lives, it should be considered a success. Congress should take the first step toward imposing strict handgun regulations by passing the Brady Bill.
COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Kansan Editorial Board:
Kris Belden, Greg Farmer, Vered Hankin, Jeff Hays, Val Huber, Kyle Kickhaefer, Stephen Martino, Jolinda Matthews, Colleen McCain, Chris Moeser, Simon Naldoza, David Olson, Jeff Reynolds, Chris Ronan, and Michael Taylor
Kansan Cartoonists:
Kansan Cartoonists.
Michael Irvin, Michael Paul, David Rosenfield, Moses Smith, and Rob Tapley
KANSANSTAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
TOM EBLEN
Editorial Business Staff
Aest Managing ... Justin Knapp mgr
News ... Monique Guilain mgr
David Mitchell ... Stephen Martino mgr
Editorial ... Amy Stumbo
Campus ... KC Trauner
Sports ... David Mitchell
Photo ... Mark Rowlands
Features ... Lynne McAdobe
Graphics ... Dan Schauer
Campus sales mgr ... Brad Broon
Regional sales mgr ... Wade Baxter
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Porter
Anthony Sheehan
Production mgr ... Amy Stumbo
Marketing director ... Angela Cleverwong
Creative director ... Holly Perry
Classified mgr ... Jill Tormey
Art Director ... Dave Habager
The student should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writing affiliated with the University of Kassaa must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. **Guest columns** should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be placed in the Student reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kassaa newsroom, 111 Stuart Flare Hall and
Mr. Clinton, Mr. Bentson, You Wanted Specifics, Not Hot Air, So Here They Are!
First Start with Governmental Budget Cuts Consisting of an across the board congressional salary and expenses cut of at least:
50%
M. J. RVIN
Specific Enough For You?
Worthless anti-crime campaign makes McGruff the real criminal
worried about crime? A silly question. Of course you are. Who isn't, with children being shot in gang wars, drug addicts murdering for the price of a fixic, and motorists blasting each other away after exchanging traffic insults?
But I bring good news. Better times may be ahead.
Yes, your tax dollars are at work in the war against crime.
As TV viewers know, there is a cartoon character named McGruff. This canine wears a trench coat and a federra like a private eye while giving advice on how to avoid being a victim of crime.
He tells us that we should lock our doors, which is really good thinking. Until McGraff warned me about that, I used to sleep with all of my doors wide open, with a sign on my porch saying "Welcome thieves."
Or he might urge us not to leave valuables in our cars or leave the car unlocked. That was news to me. I had always put my wife's fur and my golf clubs on the back seat for all to see.
COLUMNIST MIKE ROYKO
McGruff is a creation of the National Crime Prevention Council, which has received about $3 million in the last five years from the Department of
Justice.
But what's a few million in the war against crime? Who knows how many thousands of people are alive today because McGruff taught them to lock their doors at night so that a fiend could not creep in and lop their heads off?
Yes, who knows? That is the question.
And it appears that nobody knows for sure. So your tax dollars are again being put to work.
I discovered this in looking at the Medillian, an alumni newsletter put out by the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.
It contained this story:
"McCruff has been urging the United States to 'take a bite out of crime'
for 12 years. Is the United States listening?
"...The law-and-order basset hound has been the central character of one of the most visible public service announcement campaigns since the early 1980s.
"Now, the US Justice Department, with the help of Professor Paul Lavrakas, wants to find out how effective it has been in preventing crime.
"The agency, which funds the campaign, has awarded Lavrakas a portion of the $350,000 University of Wisconsin grant to conduct a two-year study to examine the campaign's effectiveness. The Northwestern portion of the funding totals $131,000.
"Lavakras, who is also director of Northwestern's Survey Laboratory, is working on the project with Garett K'Oeeke of the University of Wisconsin and Dennis Rosenbaum of the University of Illinois.
"What the campaign has done so far is laudable and has involved a lot of work. Our job is to find out if it accomplished the Department of Justice's goals related to crime prevention," Lavrakas explained.
...The study began in February 1991, and the research team plans to
present their data and recommendations to the government by June of 1993. Whatever their findings, Lavrakas expects that they will have an impact on public policy.
"We are planning on writing at least two books on our findings, and there is already talk of future funding for a follow-up study to look at the other aspects of public service announcement campaigns such as this one," Lavrakas explained.
"These two years of study will generate a decade's worth of research."
This is the sort of thing that should silence those critics who think that the bureaucrats in Washington just sit around shuffling papers.
around the classroom. By having a few professors, who are renowned for their street smarts and crime savvy, conduct a study, we can all sleep a little sounder with McGruff and the professors on the job.
And as the Northwestern professor said, "These two years of study will generate a decade's worth of research."
How exciting. Just avoid getting shot for the next 10 years, and you can read all about it.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
Studies uncover the amazingly obvious
"What's News?" the front page of The Wall Street Journal regularly asks. This feature is a handy device that allows readers to scan news blurs and decide which articles they want to read. The page number of the corresponding news story conveniently accompanies the blurb.
I had to read it twice. "How breaking! How cutting edge! Unbelievable!" I thought. "Just think, normally this stuff is too expensive for me." Eagerly I turned to page B4 for
On this particular day, since school was canceled, I had a more leisurely approach to this section, so I scanned for more than hard news stories. One story in particular proved how much vital information can be missed by limiting reading to only headline news and opinions. The blurb read: "Two population studies confirmed that men who are physically fit have a lower risk of heart disease and death than sedentary men."
STAFF COLUMNIST
ANN
JURCY
the more complete scoop. In case you missed it, allow me to fill you in on this most revealing story.
As it turns out, two studies have confirmed that men who regularly exercise had less risk of dying from heart disease. (The costs of these studies were not mentioned.) One study took 16 years to determine that the most fit man had a $30% lower risk of getting heart disease than the least fit man. The other study ventured to say that fit men run half the risk of
dying from heart disease than unfit men. I'm sure this is just the news all the couch potatoes have been waiting for. I'm sure they will all start sunrise programs. And I'm sure all the joggers, swimmers and basketball players are relieved to know that they can continue their exercise regiments.
I'm beginning to understand why Hillary Rodham Clinton will not allow the press into her National Health Care Reform meetings.
The Wall Street Journal article reminded me of the time recently when I was lucky enough to catch one of KCTV anchor Anne Peterson's health watch reports. She was relaxing a study that indicated that reducing salt in your diet, eating a wide variety of foods and exercising would reduce stress and high blood pressure.
I might have missed the intricacies of this finding if not for the small talk following her in-depth report during
which Wendall Anschutz attempted a summary: "So you mean if you eat right and exercise you'll be healthier?"
"Yes, Wendall, that's right," she pined cheerly.
Wendall was obviously so impressed with the news that he could barely control his grin and suppress his laughter.
Of course, these studies do not include female participants. Maybe I should sell my Body Boutique account, that is, until a 16-year study is done on women. Who knows, maybe reading The Wall. The control weight and lower stress better than step aerobics three times a week.
In the meantime, if you hear of any such reports, please let me know. I won't be sitting on the edge of my chair waiting for the results.
Ann Jurcyk is a Kanaan City, Kan., graduate student majoring in liberal arts.
Mystery Strip
by David Rosenfield
MY DREAM HOUSE
AN ECONOMICAL LIVING ARRANGEMENT
STYLISH ROOF
NO NOISY UPSTAIRS NEIGHBORS
VACUUMING-TAKES TWO MINUTES
NO ROOM FOR AN ANNOYING ROOMMATE
STATE-OF THE-ART DRAINAGE SYSTEM
LOW UTILITY BILLS
NICE GREEN BACKYARD
LIKE HAVING YOUR OWN ISLAND
NICE GREEN FRONT YARD
STOP FONT REPLACER
DON'T HAVE TO WALK FAR TO GET UP TO CAMPUS...
TINTED WINDOWS
IDEAL LOCATION TO MEET LOTS OF NEW PEOPLE EVERY DAY
COZY ASHECK!
Early Bird Fitness
0115 0423
Morning people sacrifice sleep to go to Robinson and exercise before they go to class. These out-of-the-ordinary college students say they are conquering laziness and developing better exercise habits.
By J. L. Watson Special to the Kansan
M
att Davis'
alarm goes off
at 5:30 a.m.
Five days a
week, Davis,
Ocean Township, N.J., junior, and a group of friends meet to lift weights and play racquetball at Robinson Center
Davis has not missed a day since he started doing sunrise fitness last semester.
"Sometimes I'm a little slow getting started, but it's not that difficult," he said. "I don't know if it ever gets easier or if you just get used to it."
While most KU students are still sleeping, a small but dedicated group of athletes sweat it out in the weight room, on the racquetball court and in the pool. Robinson is open from 6 to 8 a.m. Monday through Friday for those willing to throw off the covers and exchange physical fitness for a few more moments of sleep.
For Davis, getting up early means not having to deal with lines for the equipment.
"it's more crowded at night," he said
Lucy Joo, Shawnee senior, said she recently started her early morning workout routine.
"Maybe it's psychological, but if you work out in the morning, you don't want to be lazy for the rest of the day," she said. "It also keeps me awake for the rest of the day."
Joe also said that she participated in Tae Kwon Do, and that her extra workouts enhanced her skills in the sport.
Mike Chapman, physical therapist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that most people who had an established early-morning routine felt vitalized the rest of the day.
However, he cautioned newcomers to go slow.
"It might not be the best thing for someone who has a health problem to jump out of bed and exercise right away," Chapman said.
Laura Muller, Fairway junior, combines her workout with her job. She works as a lifeguard at the pool and uses the facilities after she gets off work.
"By getting up early I have the whole day ahead of me," she said. "Seeing others work out is motivation for staying in shame."
Muller said she saw a variety of people doing laps in the pool.
Some are good swimmers or triathletes, and some are just beginners, she said.
Brade DeBiere, Pittsburg junior, is one of the people who swims during the early-morning hours.
"Before I did this, I was a lazy bum," he said.
DeBriere said a friend sparked his interest in sunrise fitness.
"Before I started doing this, swimming long distance was a fear of mine. It is something I want to conquer."
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
DeBriere said he still was working on that.
In addition to the facilities offered at Robinson, early morning joggers also can use the track at Anschutz Sports Pavilion from 6 to 8 a.m. Monday through Friday.
There also is a sunrise aerobic program at Robinson. The next session is from March 8 to April 29. Classes meet from 6:15 to 7:15 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. There is $20 fee, and it is open to members of the community as well as students.
THE MUSCLE GYM.
Community members also may pay a $20 fee to use Robinson during sunrise fitness. KU students only need a KUID.
Without a river to row on, Sandy Kollenberg, Lansing senior, works out on one of the rowing machines at Robinson Center. Kollenberg was rowing yesterday in one of the two exercise and weight rooms at Robinson Center.
art
KU art students hope to make creations profitable
Kansan staffwriter
Making money may not be the ultimate goal for most KU art students but after a while, they may find themselves weighing the values of art against the need for food, clothing and shelter.
Rv James I. Reece
"There are more artists per capita in Lawrence than any city in the U.S," said Robert Brawley, head of the art department at KU. But he said a slumping national economy made art a risky way to make a living especially in Lawrence.
"It's a little town," he said. "The prices that people get–you can't survive on that."
But he said the art school faculty emphasized creating art rather than selling it.
Jeff Ridgway, Brookfield, Mo. graduate student in painting in the school of fine arts estimated that one or two students in any
"Most artists believe that art is a pure purse," he said. "People that are into it aren't into it for the money. On the other hand, there are problems with survival."
given drawing class of 30 students would eventually go on to a professional career in art.
"Getting a degree in art pretty much qualifies you to flip burgers," he said.
Ridgway spent 10 years as a commercial artist in Kansas City before coming to KU where he has taught drawing classes. He said painting commercially began to effect the originality of his own art work, especially when clients brought him aesthetically bad ideas and he accepted them.
But Carrie Finneseat, Manchester, Mo., senior, was confident this summer when she sought a job painting a mural for Hockenberry's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St. She said she heard about the job from her roommate and approached Brad Ziegler, the owner of the bar.
"I guess the honesty is what I felt Iacked," he said. "I guess I was the Eddie Haskell of the art world."
"I went over and told Brad I was the best artist he could get for the money and he let me do it," she said and earned about $500
John Sabraw, Lawrence junior, had an art career before he came to KU. He started by writing and illustrating a children's book and then did freelance illustration. Then he designed lady's handbags in New York City.
dollars for the job. She hopes to be a professional designer when she graduates but she said she would also like to teach art.
Trey Parker, Brookfield, Mo. graduate teaching assistant in art, recently was selected to paint a mural in the Wescoe Food Court. He will get $950 to buy paint and supplies for the project.
He said the money was great but a hectic environment with up to seven-day work weeks left him feeling unfulfilled.
"I had no time to create what I wanted,' he said, so he returned to Lawrence to attend KU.
But after three years in the handbag business, he called it quits.
"I thought that his work was probably the most mature and interesting of the entries," said Roger Shimonura, professor
of art, and one of three judges for the contest.
Parker also had a career in New York City before returning to college. He sold and showed his art in the Soho district from 1980 to 1989 and has sold seven "Cow" prints in Lawrence and Kansas City. The prints are on four foot square white paper with cows in black, red or blue ink, and sell for $85
The Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St., the Jazzhaus, 926/12 Massachusetts St. and the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. have dislabeled students' artwork.
Bars and restaurants are popular places for students to display and sell their art.
Brawley, said that success does not come easily to artists in Lawrence.
"It's extremely difficult for artists, even established artists to maintain their art careers here because it is so isolated," he said.
Luck plays a big part in it, he said. "You are talking on the level of movie stars versus the actor," he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
MARCH 2, 1993 PAGE 5
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
Lectures and Seminars
P
Student Union Activities
Faye Wattleton, President of Planned Parenthood
"Reproductive Rights and Reproductive Health Care"
7 p.m., Friday, Kansas Union Ballroom
$1 students, $3 non-students
Adam Sandler, comedian from Saturday Night Live
8 p.m., Saturday, Kansas Union Ballroom, $9
Office of Study Abroad
Informational meeting for students interested in studying in Spain, Costa Rica and Germany in Fall 1993
3:30 p.m., Tuesday 205 Lippincott
3:10 p., Friday, Kansas Union lobby
Department of History
Informational meeting on Women and the Historical Profession
7 p.m. Today: 4020 Wescoe
KU Social and Economic History Seminar lecture
Continued on Page 6.
CALL 864-SHOW MOVIES MOVIES CALL 864-SHOW
• THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
IN A TOWN LIKE TWIN PEAKS
NO ONE IS INNOCENT.
AT DAVID LYNCH
TWIN PEAKS
FIRE WALK WITH ME
39 STEPS
Alfred Hitchcock's
TUES., MARCH 2 AT 7:00
WED., MARCH 3 AT 7:00
THURS., MARCH 4 AT 7:00 & 9:30
AND SAT., MARCH 6 AT 4:00
WOODBRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2
CALL 864-SHOW MOVIES MOVIES CALL 864-SHOW
• THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
IN A TOWN LIKE TWIN PEAKS
NO ONE IS INNOCENT.
FILM BY DAVID LYNCH
TWIN PEAKS
FIRE WALK WITH ME
39 STEPS
Alfred Hitchcock's
TUES., MARCH 2 AT 7:00
WED., MARCH 3 AT 7:00
THURS., MARCH 4 AT 7:00 & 9:30
AND SAT., MARCH 6 AT 4:00
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.50
Great copies on your terms
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IN A TOWN LIKE TWIN PEAKS
NO ONE IS INNOCENT.
STARRING DAVID LYNCH
TWIN PEAKS
FIRE WALK WITH ME
WED., MARCH 3 AT 7:00
E
kinko's
6
Tuesday.March 2,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Some facts about blood:
1. You cannot get AIDS or any other infectious disease by donating blood.
All materials used by the Red Cross, including the needle, are new, sterile, disposable and used only one time.
2. Six of every 100 people in the US are current blood donors.
3. People with blood type "O" are especially needed right now.Those donations make up nearly 50% of the hospital usage.
4. All donations are tested for hepatitis B and one each for hepatitis C,
non-A non B hepatitis, syphilis, the HIV- I/AIDS and HIV II
antibodies, and a rare adult leukemia.
15. One single donation can treat as many as three different patients.
What's your blood type?
38. 4 have group O positive blood.
7 7 have O negative.
7. 7 have O negative.
6. Shave A negative
9. 4 have B positive
1. 7 have B negative
3. 2 have AB positive
0. 7 have AB negative
Sign up to donate in front of Wescoe and in the Student Union. Friday is the last day, so hurry!
Donation Competition KU vs K State
Let's prove that we can beat them at everything, including basketball.
For the next two weeks, Lawrence has the opportunity to take part in belly dancing, gymnastics, rug weaving or yoga.
Lawrence offers self enhancement in 8-week courses
Kansan staff report
These are just a few of the spring classes offered by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department. Others include swimming, fitness and arts and crafts classes like ceramics, clay sculpting, jewelry making and photography. Other dance classes include those in jazz, tap, international folk and country and western line dancing.
A steady flow of people enrolled yesterday for the spring classes, said Karen Laushman, recreation program clerk. She was taking walk-in registrations at the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St.
"Fitness is most popular for adults," Laushman said. She also said country dance classes had big followings.
Information brochures on the classes can be found at all city recreation centers, City Hall and the Lawrence Public Library. Deadline for enrollment is March 8. Most classes start March 9 or later and last about eight weeks.
Presented by Nancy Garner, History and Western Civilization Program
"Molding the Next Generation of Men: The Kansas WCTU and the Loyal Temperance Legion, 1890-1940"
3:30 p.m., Thursday, Hall Conference Room, First Floor, Hall Center for the Humanities
"Molding the Next Generation of
Humanities Lecture Series Call for nominations for speakers, 1994-95 academic year Deadline March 5
Contact 864-4798 for information
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Power: Are Women Afraid of it...Or Beyond it?
7-9 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union
Watkins Health Center How to help yourself stop smoking
Watkins Health Center
1:30-4 p.m., Tomorrow. First
floor conference room
Why is my cholesterol high and what can I do about it?
11 a.m., Thursday, same loca
1:30 p.m., Monday, same location
Sex and alcohol
tion
Music
Chamber Music Series Peter Serkin, piano, and
Pamela Frank, violin
Preyer Theatre
3:30 p.m., Sunday, Crafton-
Power Theater
Public $15 & $13, K and K-12
students $7.50 & $6.50, Senior
citizens and other students $14,
$12
8 p.m., Saturday, Swarthout Recital Hall, free
Master's Recital; Ron Mongomery, trumpet
Student Recital; Paul Haar, saxophone
8 p.m., Sunday, Swarthout Recital Hall free
Student Recital: Durema Kohl, Organ
8 p.m., Monday, St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, free
8 p.m., Monday. St. Lawrence
Entry Form Application
Address
Name
Address Phone
Phone
Please Describe Entry
Send to:
--are there no single women in Lawrence' Grad student with little free time and tired legs, or a teacher with female for com. sponsorship, occasional beers, live music etc. I am a SWM, 25, reasonably fit, open-minded, and kind.
(Please circle on)
Commercial $50
Family $25
Student Free
Type of entry
Lawrence St. Pat's Day Parade P.o. Box. 303 Lawrence Ks. 66044 Phone 749-6609 Starting Time 1:00 PM From 901 N. 9th to 6th & Wisconsin
Mar. 2 Benefit Concert Bottleneck 9:00PM $3
Mar 5 River City Golf Miniature Golf Tournament 7:00PM $5
VISA
VISA
Mar. 7 Gusto's Comedy Nite Dinner Buffet 5:00PM $7⁵⁰
Mar. 10 Gusto's Country D.J. and Dance 7:30PM
Mar. 13 Johnny's Shamrock Shuffle 5K Run 8:00AM
Mar. 17 St. Pat's Day Hockenbury Tavern Lonesome Hounddogs
What to use when your term paper's still not finished but your printer is.
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MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
...
PLACE AN AD FREE!
QA
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
22 yr. old SWM seeks SWM who also competes or is in the K.C. area on weekends preferably 1 enjoy both go out and eavesdromes at sports, sports events, long talks and like to cry new things. Call
Blonde, mountain bikes, herbal tea, 25 day hikes,
tall flowers, a warm blanket, destroy your
travels, skirts, spring evenings, ona coffee on
blue tables, blue eyes, intelligent table, hounds. Call
Short-tailed SWM seeking to discover fellow vegetarians who are environmentally aware and who bicycle ride, camping, watching Disney ticks, and talking into the wee hours. Do any such adventures?
Do you worry about repeating conversations, having thick ankles and wearing a multifruit flavored dress? Do you brave it? Do you handle it constantly? Or maybe you just love Mr. Pibb? Let me let you know that someone came up with the idea to include yourself if you have brown curly hair and green eyes. Call box #10117/S/W/M Nontraditional student, who has time and experience with Don't be shy. Call me what you have got to lose except mayleness. Box
SNWM. 23, is looking for a woman, 19-22, who likes sports, old movies, long romantic war, is intelligen-tive and loves writing, is married but not dating, has been right now not looking for a serious relationship. I want to have an amicable Call to you.
WHISKY 10. HAUBEY 6 blue eyes, dark brown hairstyle, siyne, sincere with good sense of humor, looks female 18-24 for friendship and maybe more. I like movies, dating out, romance, and Star Trek. Graphic.
SWM 29 looking for singles and couples any sex, age or race for intuitively stimulating couples.
SWM Graduate students, 26, seeking possible service relationship. I am interested in helping people with an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I will work on both the front and back of a shirt based on mutual respect, caring, and fun. Call
**SWIM (18)**: Traditional no-engineering student who doesn't wrest what about his feet are teaching in lakes and never went to the school, but gives a demeanor. I wouldn't answer a personal ad, but was thinking any less of you when pouring. Mt. Dick, okay, and with open feet for the funnel. Call her.
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
♂
2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both under 25, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet men w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down to earth for long walks, movies, talking on the phone, to find any scam to get us rich quick. Call box
25 yr. old single female white graduate Attractive, slender, easy-easy, and fun. Would like to meet other graduate student or mature young men. Someone who likes KU basketball but is not a major occasion player or at art museums. I really like nice clothes, young men. Call box 20139.
3 SWF Attractive and physically fit seek harlem of SWM ages 20-85 with a drink with sampling to Buffet, dancing all night and will treat us like the princesses we are; smokers need not apply) please. Call
Bi SWF 21, non-drinker, smokes occasionally, but smokes. Looking for unique feminine girls and cute guys age 20-24 who like to go dancing and live in a club. Find a friend with close friendship with trustworthy people #20/41
Grad. 229.-@Ws. NS, recently separated with one child, S/D/WMN 28-40 for company/companionship. I'm athletic, intelligent and outgoing. I don't have children or a sense of passions. I am socially conscious and believe in thinking about life in shade of gray rather than white. I am always willing to work would like to spend spare hours with mature, intelligent, attractive, white male with some interests. If dinner is as innovative as you can do, a date won't fail.
Love seeking intriguing P. B. to a light virgin belly button, do you? I work it up in a base, not wearing any underwear. So, "If you won't go tell me so," call me P. S. If you can baby talk me.
SWF blue eye, long haired brunette seeking SWM
Swimming with laughs, the outdoors and a good MGD. Any man with a Dalmatian, call me. I delightn't inquire. #2014
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
&
Common abbreviations
GW study looking for someone to share it in a common. Like nature walks, great outdoors, sporting events, dining out or attending art exhibitions. Have a great time. Do have a shoulder to lean on will also need someone to be there when needed. Not afraid to be seen with an older student. Non-smoking. Be yourself. Have friends for singles and couples any sex, age or race for intellectually stimulating conversation and maybe mutual gratification. #30021
Common
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Haspanic N/S Non-Smoki
GWM - 30 something, have been called tall dark and handsome. Discreet but not closet. I love the outdoors & cooking and going to the theatre. Staying home is great but weekly outings are a challenge. We take you to the theatre who is looking for someone to have a good time with. I take good care of you. #49061.
♥♥
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
20 year old inexperienced WS looking for someone feminine 19-23 to explore friendship with adventurous people. (We're also taking it liae who enjoys art films, traveling, and the Coctaeau. I'm too shey to open up to women I find attractive so I resorted to this! Don't worry about a commitment you just get acquainted. Call box.)
BI SWP, 21. In-Drinker, smokes occasionally,
but smokes. Looking for unique female girls and
cute guys ages 20-24 who like to go dancing in
friendships and trustworthy people. Bex #+0005
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
1. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an and in the Jaytak Network section of the Kanapp (on 8 to lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your id runs in the Kansan,
you call a free 800-number to listen
to the messages people leave for
you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will go along you the way You be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 2, 1993
7
Jordan has no regrets
Seniors to play last home game tomorrow night
kansan sportswriter
By David Dorsey
Kansas sportwriter
Adonis Jordan said he would leave Allen Field House tomorrow night with no regrets about his basketball career at Kansas — a career that has lasted four seasons, at least one year more than any of his teammates.
The senior guard has been a three-year starter and the Jahyaws' floor leader at point guard, Jordan, senior center Eric Pauley and senior guard Rex Walters will play their final home game at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the field house against Nebraska.
Jordan is the only senior who has played four years at Kansas. Paulley is a junior college transfer, and Walters transferred from Northwestern after his sophomore season.
"My four years have been great," Jordan said. "At the time that I signed my letter of intent, there were a lot of things going on. I knew I wanted to come here, but at the time I wasn't 100 percent sure that it was the right decision. But everything has worked out right."
"Everything Coach Williams
promised me has happened," Jordan said. "He said I'd get the opportunity to play and to become a better player."
Improvement, Jordan said, was what he strived for. His freshman year, he played behind Kevin Pritchard, who was drafted by Golden State of the NBA and now plays professionally in Spain.
"My sophomore year, I thanked Kevin," Jordan said. "He showed me a lot of toughness. After my freshman year, he shot started getting better. Then I got more consistent.
"My personal goal is to improve every day. When there comes a day that I can't improve, then I won't play basketball any more."
He averaged three points a game his freshman season while averaging 13 minutes of play. His scoring average improved to 12.5 points as a sophomore and 12.8 points as a junior.
Since his sophomore season, Jordan has led Kansas in minutes played. He has led the team in minutes this season despite playing with a stress fracture in his leg. Although Jordan's scoring has dipped to just below 12 points a game this season, Williams said he never lost faith in Jordan.
"What matters to Adonis the most is winning." Williams said.
As Pritchard helped Jordan improve, Jordan has taken sophome point guard Calvin Rayford under his wing.
"I'm trying to work with Calvin like Kevin worked with me." Jordan said.
Walters said that Jordan's work with Rayford showed in many ways Jordan's importance to the Iroquois.
said. "Adonis is the kind of guy that will help Calvin, and that will help the program. Adonis has done a great job leading the team."
Jordan's importance to the Jaywhas.
"They're like brothers." Walters
Walters said that his impressions of Jordan had not changed from the moment of their first meeting.
"He's always happy, always smiling," Walters said. "He's a happy-go-lucky guy."
On the court, Walters said he respected his teammate.
"When he was a sophomore, he was trying to establish himself as the best point guard in the Big Eight," he said. "After he did that, the expectations on him for this season became so high that they're unrealistic. He's still had a lot of assists, a small number of turnovers, and he's always a threat to score."
Jordan said he did not know how he would react when his name was announced tomorrow night. He did, however, recall some of his favorite moments.
"The Final Four, and winning the Big Eight were great," Jordan said. "But we still have the goal this season of winning the conference and the
Jordan will be nine hours short of getting his degree in Human Development and Family Life at the end of the semester, but he said he would finish his degree through summer school and correspondence courses. Jordan said that he hoped to be drafted and play in the NBA next season, but said his thoughts until then remained on finishing up at Kansas.
"I'd like to be remembered as a player who came out and played hard every day," he said.
KANSAS 20
TRIMBLE 3
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Adonis Jordan, senior guard, keeps Colorado's Johnny Terrell at bay. Tomorrow's game against Nebraska will be the last home game for seniors Jordan, guard Rex Walters and center Eric Pauley
Campus lacks basketball courts
Welcome to the University of Kansas, an institution known for its academic excellence, beautiful hill-top campus, and oh yeah, basketball.
We are one of the most tradition- rich basketball schools in the nation, but you wouldn't know it by looking at your student-accessible basketball facilities.
Kansas offers four full-court, indoor basketball courts to its students. Four? Surely you mean four-teen. Nope, four.
COMMENTARY
Kansas State, a university with rich sports tradition in nothing — well, maybe rodeo — has twice as many courts as us. K-State should not double us in anything, except maybe cowboy boots.
Bobby Hurley, one of Duke University's 5,000 undergraduate students, has six courts to choose from when he wants to play a pick-up game. In case the math is not obvious, that averages more than one court for every 1,000 students. Kansas has one court for every 7,200 students.
And it's not like we don't have the money. Kansas residents pay $728 for tuition, and out-of-staters pay $2,814. In addition to tuition, each student pays a $171 campus fee. Out of each student's campus fee, $9 is allocated to recreation services, $3 of which is for the maintenance of Robinson Center.
Iowa State. a school close in comparison to Kansas in enrollment
25,373 students — charges $1,150 for
resident tuition and $3,094 for non-
residents. However, $21 of each student's tuition goes to maintain its gym, including 30 basketball courts.
MARK BUTTON
If it's not bad enough that we only have four, the courts are occupied by aerobic exercisers, dancers and volleyball tournaments as often as they are used for basketball games.
If I had a nickel for every time I went to Robinson Center with hopes of playing ball and found the Crimson Girls or the Jane Fonda wannabes using the courts, I could build my own gym. And it's not that I have anything against the Crimson Girls, they need space to practice just like all athletes. I just wish it was somewhere else. Of course, the fact that the Crimson Girls don't have a more logical place to practice — provided by the Athletic Department — is another column altogether.
Again this year, the Kansas basket
ball team is ranked among the best teams in the nation. The 'Hawks were on ESPN six times this season. What does that mean? Revenue. Cash.
Now I know that the money generated by the basketball team does not go anywhere near Recreation Services. But as students, we buy tickets and go to the games. We buy the $3 Cokes and M- & M's. We pay our fees and buy Kansas basketball paranormalia.
I do not care where the money comes from. The fact is that the money is out there. Spend some of it on what we need—basketball courts.
Perhaps students should be given a choice of where their $171 in campus fees go. Students are charged $71 a semester for the privilege of using Watkins Memorial Health Center. I've been there once in four years. That was a $568 visit.
Students contribute more than $800,000 a year to non-revenue sports, like women's basketball, through campus fees while the Athletic Department allocates more than $1 million to the men's basketball program. Of course, I'm not suggesting money should be taken away from non-revenue sports. But the department should take care of itself.
Well anyway, enough complaining. I'm going to lace up my Nikes and go watch the Crimson Girls practice.
Mark Button is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism.
BRIEFS
Weather postpones Kansas' baseball game
Today's scheduled baseball home opener against Washburn was postponed until March 18 because snow made field conditions at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium unplayable.
The Jayhawks are 3-3. Kansas is scheduled to play host to Grandview in the first of a three-game series at 3 p.m. Friday.
Oklahoma hinders Cowboys'title hopes
NORMAN, Okla. — Jeff Webb
herd had 19 points and Bryatt
vann scored 17 as Oklahoma
frustrated 7-footer Bryant
Reeves and spoiled No. 19
Oklahoma State's debut in
the rankings with an 80-80 victory last night.
The loss crippled Oklahoma State's chances of winning or tying for the Big Eight Conference title. The Cowboys, 18-6 overall and 8-5 in the conference, must hope league-leading Kansas loses to Nebraska tomorrow night.
Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports.
Oklahoma, 19-9 and 7-6, held Reeves to 12 points, seven below his average.
Aloha Bowl boosts Mason, 1992 team into Hall of Fame
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas football coach Glen Mason and the Jayhawks achieved an unpublicized honor when the Jayhawks took the field against Brigham Young in the 1992 Aloha Bowl.
Mason became the 127th member of the University of Kansas Athletic Hall of Fame, and the 1982 Jayhawk football team to be included in the hall of fame.
The criteria for membership for a football coach is to have coached a team in a bowl game. The football team's participation in the Aloha Bowl qualified it for hall of fame status
Assistant athletic director Richard Konzem said the official induction ceremony for Mason has not yet been determined.
"We are waiting for Ted Watts to finish the portrait of Coach Mason," Konzem said. "When he is finished with it, I assume we will choose an appropriate event next fall to present Coach Mason with his portrait."
Watts, a sports artist from Oswego, has painted the individual portraits for every member of the Hall of Fame. He said he should have the portrait of Mason completed by the end of April.
Portraits of all 126 individuals of the hall of Farm hang along the walls of the barn.
"I am in the process of working up several rough sketches based on the photos and reference materials I have received," he said. "When I am finished with the sketches. I share them
DANIEL R. LEMAN
Glen Mason
with the people in the athletic department, usually Richard Kozem and Doug Vance, to get their approval to start on the portrait."
Vance is the assistant athletic director for media relations and marketing.
Once Watts gets approval from the Athletic Department, he said, it takes about 20 hours of painting to complete a portrait.
For the portrait of Mason, Watts said he has three good ideas that could work.
"One has Glen in a semi-formal pose wearing a coach's shirt with a view of Memorial Stadium in the background," he said. "It would look like Glen is in the stands looking at you."
The two other ideas have Mason posed, one with game action in the background, the other with a Kansas helmet in the background.
KEN KASHIWAHARA ABC News Correspondent
"Experience as an Asian American in Journalism"
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Tickets on sale in the Hall Mall Box Office; KU student tickets available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved; $18 & $16, KU and K-12 students $9 & $8, senior citizens and other students $17 & $15, to charge tickets by phone, online or via email. Information about shuttle about 3:45pm at the Tampa Performing Arts Center, call 864-3824.
Partially funded by the Mid-America Arts Alliance through the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, additional support provided by the KU Student Senate Activate Fee, Seward County Youth Advisory Association, sponsored by the county, this year is Very Important Partner: Payless Shoe Source.
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Religious cutt releases children as standoff continues in Texas
The small, heavily armed Branch Davidian sect turned back dozens of agents during a fierce, 45-minute gun battle Sunday morning. The standoff passed the 24-hour mark this morning and was continuing early this afternoon.
WACO, Texas — A wounded cul leader and his followers let some children go but maintained a standoff with law officers following fierce gun battles that killed four federal agents and two cult members.
Made possible by the KU Student Senate
The FBI, meanwhile, dispatched its elite Hostage Rescue Team to the scene, said a federal law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"The problem we had is we were outgunned," Sharon Wheeler, a representative for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, said at a briefing this morning.
Supreme Court agrees to clarify definition of sexual harassment
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to clarify what conduct amounts to illegal sexual harassment, setting the stage for a ruling of enormous importance to the workplace.
The court said it would rule on the case of a Tennessee woman whose boss made sexual remarks about her clothing, asked her to retrieve her wallet and have it returned, and about room to a tutel. To negotiate her raise," about room to a tutel."
Lower courts threw out her lawsuit, ruling that she only was offended and had not suffered "severe nscological injury."
KU students favor transferring department to fine arts school
Two KU students spoke in favor of transferring the department of art and music education and music therapy from the School of Education to the College of Visual Arts, where they heard in Alcoves A and B of the Kansas Union.
The transfer would "diminish the competition between the art education and music education departments," said Sandra Davalos, Hutchinson
The transfer committee, which heard the public comment, will meet in a closed session at 7:30 a.m. Friday to make a decision about the transfer.
The hearing, one of a series to consider restructuring recommendation stemming from last year's program review, lasted 15 minutes.
The committee comprises faculty from the department of art and music education and music therapy.
BRIEFS
graduate student in fine arts, who read from a prepared statement.
ABC correspondent Kashiwahara to speak tonight in Union ballroom
ABC News correspondent, Ken Kashiwahara, with speak at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom about his experience as an Asian American in journalism.
"Having someone visible in the broadcast field shows a diversity of what Asian Americans can do," said Lori Lin Robinson, Leawood senior and president of the Asian-American Student Union. "It breaks the stereotype that all Asian Americans are in the science field."
Kiwahirawana, bureau chief in San Francisco, is an 18-year veteran with ABC News.
In 1988 and 1989, he accompanied U.S. veterans to Vietnam, resulting in a special report on "World News Tonight" about three fathers' reunion with their American-Asian children. He also did a one-hour "Nightline" special on eight veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Kashiwahara was the ABC News bureau chief in Hong Kong for three years after the Vietnam War.
Kashiwahara's speech is in conjunction with the Asian-American Festival. It is sponsored by the Asian-American Student Union, the Society of Professional Journalists, Student Senate and the Office of Minority Affairs.
Previous to his years in Hong Kong, he covered stories in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. He was one of the last U.S. citizens to be airlifted from Saigon in the final days of the war.
Legislative committee approves credit-hour fee for KU law school
The Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved a credit-hour fee for the University of Kansas School of Law.
The credit-hour fee for the KU law school starts at $20 per credit-hour and increases eventually to $40 per credit-hour.
The committee also endorsed proposed budgets for the University of Kansas, the University of Kansas Medical Center and other Board of Reqents institutions.
Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee and committee chairperson, said he did not wholly support the per credit-hour school fee for two reasons.
He also said he was not pleased with statements made by Robert Jerry, KU dean of law, about Washburn University.
The school has been trying to dismiss a tenured professor on the basis that he violated the faculty code of conduct. Bogaina said if the matter had been handled appropriately, she would have more money to use on other matters.
Workshop to aid international students with income tax filing
International students struggling with filing their first U.S. income tax returns can find help at a workshop designed for them at 3:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
The income tax workshop is sponsored by Legal Services for Students and the Office of International Student Services.
The workshop will help international students understand and fill out the 1040 NR form for U.S. nonresident aliens, Jo Hardesty, director of Legal Services for Students.
The service is free to KU students.
Even international students not filing income tax for a refund are required to file a statement with the Internal Revenue Service by June 15. Workshops in April will assist students with this form.
Compiled by the Associated Press and Kansan staff reports.
PETER HENRY
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Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; KU student tickets available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats are reserved, public $15 & $13, KU and K-12 students $7.50 & $6.50, senior citizens and other students $12 & $14; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
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100s Announcements
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140 Lost and Found
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200s
Classified Directory
235 Typing Services
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205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
1
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any property race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or limitation to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
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My name is Jennifer Brehm, a junior in AZD, and my friend Lee and I have lost 21 lbs. and over 6" between us "without dieting". We both look and feel great and because of our results we have started our own part-time business. We now get paid to be in great shape and hang around with athletes because we can get you "hides" stronger too!!
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The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against women, race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
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120 Announcements
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Babyfax one or two afterborns a week, occasion-
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Part-time/temporary position: The KU Printer Service is taking applications for work assisting in UDK press production. Hours are 7 to 9 each morning the day of the week and 4 per day. Apply at the KU Printer Services or call Don Payne 864-3414. EOE.
Full-time field opening for Employment Training Specialist working with adults and older adolescents who have severe intellectual disabilities or 2 years experience working with special populations in a vocational setting or a B.A. in a social service field, business management, or long-term mental illness. Looking for strong public relation skills strong written and interpersonal communication skills, and training in job preparation to the attention of Dale Creamer of Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, Inc., 354 Missouri Avenue, Suite 209. Resume to Nebraska State University Hospital Help Wanted! Recruitment Services is hiring internal Security officials. 4:30 p.m. to 1 p.m. Anyone interested should attend an organization meeting March 8, 1983 at 8 a.m. in Hoboken.
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Naismith Hall RA applications for Fall 1983 are
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1993 Fall Marketing Opportunities Available
AT&T is seeking ambitious, sales-oriented students to participate in our 7-day oncampus marketing program selling AT&T products & services. Hours are available Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. bonuses. Must be available in 1 - 2 weeks prior to the start of classes. We need
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To find out more about these great opportunities, call 1 800 592-2121, ext 135, or send resume to CDI. ATTN: Shirellah T. Stirff. 19th Floor, Philadelphia. PA 19102
Equal Opportunity Employer
Tutor needed for English 413 children's literature experience with prof. Liclth B4.0128 have mssse
University student needed to manage small business in Wichita or Topeka this summer. Good money, respond immediately. Ask for Eric. (217)843-3041.
Wanted Babyfitters in my home AM positions
Mon-Pri, flexible, excellent conditions, exp.ee
e-mail: babysitter@marys.com
Energetic, enthusiastic person needed to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during school year, full-time during summer. Must be at least 18 years old and have a resume to Trinity Lutheran Church, 1248 New Hampshire, Lamprey. KS 65004 Deadline: 03-12
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial and scholarship, no grants. No GFA or income required.
225 Professional Services
Make your modeling come true!
Professional photo photography. Call Rachel 841
6929 Studios
www.rachel-photo.com
TRAEFIC-DUIS
AFFORDABLE TYPING & EDITING. Honora
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 hrs.
a day. Tutoring awail. near campus. Lowest rates in
town. 832-1296.
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters.
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Donald G. Strole SallyG Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
DONALDG. STROLE
$1/$Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
rush jobs. Call 749-4648
**SPRING SALE 50,000 + files for $25.25,000**
Eliza the "Psychologist" Laurenne online
www.psychologist.com
Export typing by experience secretary. IBCorrecting Selectivity page in eastern Page. EAT Multiplier.
Resumes
- Professional Writing
* Cover Letters
* Laser Printing
PA RW Professional Association of Brand Writers
Transcriptions
1012 Mass 842-4610
World Perfect Wireless Processing Near Orchard
Wireless. No calls after 10pm. 430-6080
word processing, applications, term papers, dissertation resumes. Editing, composition, rush writing. Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers, graphic presentations. Law review and engineering. Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers.
X
1991 Burton Snowboards, Burton Airti AirL, like new, w/ $250 in donations, retention leaves, & more.
300s
Merchandise
55cm Bianchi racing bike. Bike has won several
scooters 50 w/xtras. Nights Christian 865-361
Airline ticket one way KC-Stealth via Denver
before March 24. $7. Gear for spring break get-
away.
305 For Sale
CABLE DESCRAMBLERS! Fight high costs
that will require additional cabling. We will descramble ANC cable Send 510 for complete manual, plans, and parts list to Advanced Industries, P.O. Box 27349, Corpus
Furniture on Consignment
Used
Waterbeds + Futons
WANTED
Let us sell your
Furniture for you on
Consignment
Bobbi's Bedroom
842-7378
For Sale. Laptop coat full length and navy (interview) suit. Size 4* C9. Call 748-9832 leave message IBM compatible 286, 40 meg hard drive, 5.25 floppy drive, mouse, keyboard, & brand new monitor, D5 5 included, $00 OBO, OCall 832-8340. Matching seat love and chair, good condition $80.
Diet Magic
Helped Me Lose
over 50 LBS!
Ask me bow!
100% Natural
Doctor Recommended
Call now to start losing lbsone
Excess Ibs!
(913) 841-3432
Matching love seat and chair, good condition $80.
Price is negotiable 841-1578
Sigma Genesis, new include. New includes 2 controllers
Sigma Squad, new include. New includes 3 controllers
Madden 8, Ecco, Shinobi, $75.0 b/o 64-1188
Used Book Sale, March 12-14. M卡尔泰 Fishing
American Association of University Women
MasterCard
340 Auto Sales
1986 Maida 626 GT Power everything. 4 door great condition. $300 Must sell. Call 842-696-85
85 Ford Escort 2d/hatchback. 4 spd Tapecked
1986 Maida 750 reliable, 78.0 million miles. $254 843-168-85
370 Want to Buy
**WANTED LEVIT S 501'S JIENES WE PAY UP TO**
$10.00 also Buying Jean Jackets B 41-0464
**Wanted:** Keyboard for Tandy 1000SX personal
computer B 41-4821
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 Bdr. House near campus. Fully furn. W/D C/A.
2 Bedroom. Mid Aug. Mid Doug. 104% water paid. 843-9209
HEY)KU Med Students, Rainbow Town Apart-
ment, HI. 813-724-6200, Rainbow Huise,
HILI Luxe Living, Lumped Entry, Water
& Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage
paints; 3458 Rainbow HI. K C KS 8165 Across
Arts
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these ape's again. If you can take one June 1, you can be an ape. There are beautiful buildings at West Hills Apts. 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS. 813-8400 or 312-6507.
Available in May. New 28R bpk in quiet complex
locations and in quiet complex locations
bpc excellent kettle & maintenance. No pets
in the vicinity. Please contact us.
1900 NAISMPH 3 & 4 BR. 2 Bath. Lg rooms,
micre, etc. Cabble tv data operated laundry
machine.
2.5gb rdm4 . a 4bcks from campus $180/mo.
1329 Valley apt. to optionally Marriott Max.
1700 West 46th to optionally Roommate responsible, quiet, like living alone.
Pets allowed. Off street park. Contact Jennifer
Quail Creek
Now leasing for June & August. Nice, quiet 2 BR apts. Low utilities, central air, gas, heat, all kitchen appliances, on bus route. beautiful pool. New listing! $1695/mo. $285/mo. Spanish Crest Apts. Call 441-8483 for info.
A
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 1 9, 2017; luxury laptops, close to campus. All 3 IB microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen app. 2 refrigerator. Full energy, installed energy. Call 749-1166.
2111 Kasold 843-4300
树 树 树
Naismith Place
2-19th FROM $360
• Jezus in beach pla-
tion
• 11am to 8pm bus route
• 7pm to 10pm bus route
• Pc cell phone TV plans
• Postcard tour card*99
• Datebook & 20% CAT. Gift
Datebook & 20% CAT. Gift
Offices Hours
3:45 AM to 6:45 AM
3:45 AM to 6:45 AM
Opportunities
Boardwalk
Experiences
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444 OpenFi days a week for your convenience
LORIMAR TOWN HOMES
All amenities
•Fireplace
•Dishwasher
•Microwave
•Washer/Drye
•Free Drain
Now accepting applications for Fall
1,2,3 Bedroom
Call Dave 841-7849
3801 Clinton Pkwy
One Bk. Apt. Avail. June 1. Hard-wood floors $290.
$350.
Perfect summer sublease for female nonsmoker 2
female $19,850; male $19,850;
includes utilities #4-333,358 Li
YOUNG LIFE
WOODWAY
Each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- On KU bus route
- Carport available
1- bedroom $340, $365
2- bedroom $460, $470
3- bedroom $525, $585
office
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
Mon. Wed. & Fri.: 12:00 - 2:00p.m.
Tues. & Thurs.: 6:00 - 8:00p.m.
Please call Kelly for appt
South campus location 1801 Maine. Nice 2bedroom house, hardwood, AC, garage, available April 1. Short or long term lease $500 + deposit, pegs negotiable 882-1309 by appl. please.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED
Studios,1,2,2+3&4 bdrm
apts... designed with you in
mind!
Goto
Campus Place-841-1429
Hanover Place-841-1212
Regents Court-749-0445
14th & Mass.
Orchard Corners-749-4228
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
842-4455
Spaceca 2 bedrm apt. Summer sublease all-utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call 748-3562
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE BEACH
Parties in South Padre Island.
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
*2Pools
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate pregnancy.
NAISMITH
*2 Laundry Rooms
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
4 Stops on Property
Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
1800 Naismith Dr
Lawrence, KS
66044
(913)843-8559
Call or stop by today
2401 W 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(noprops)
(sleepy)
LEASING FOR
FALL
"we'll make life easier for you"
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantasies call 749 0871 or 841-0848. Stop by 1406 Tennessee
Two bedrooms available now! A/C, cable $125 per month, on bus route. BK61 083-1638
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Bdrm in a 4Brdm, pool 2, bath 819; usl. Built
stop Apple Lane Orchard Corners. Call 843-6528
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
1 M roommate need to share 2 BR Apent West
1 M. nice balkow on bus route, & close to campus
How to schedule an ad:
Beautiful 1 bdmr 1 ack near campus Hardwood
1 bdmr 1 ack near campus Hardwood
1 bdmr 1 ack near campus Hardwood
1 must see 10th and Kentucky 642 8229
1 must see 10th and Kentucky 642 8229
- By phone: 864-4358
Add phone in may be billed
Prime location 1900 Nismith. Share 3 BR ap2.
RA paid cable $240 + moll / +tul. CA 740-18988
+moll / +tul. CA 740-18988
Prime location. Roommate wanted to share bk 2 bb app with 5 girls $187.90 + Call 864-711-611
Large 4R 2B BA furnit. left apt. OHDR corners. AVail ASAP N no req dep. You leave Mar.-Ago $205 /+.util. *great rooms*, privacy, + more fun than any dorm. 865-1599
Female roommate wanted for 1 bdrm & 8 bdm
roommate, call 729-4985, close to campus
rent付租, call 729-4985
Great Deal! 1 Bedroom in old house near campus
$165/mo + tax! utl. share kitch, bath, ivroom
$100/mo+ tax!
Roommate needed immediately. Great place, 4 min and 36 sec walk from campus $145/mo + room fee.
Single parent would like indy to share domestic pets. Eg. 20 mft from catsmips 848-7329
LOOK Sociable nonsmoker needed for 3 dbram duplex. C, Ig bath g, backdy D, DW great location. lg living area. On bus route $180/mo + home phone. Nn Smoker to share beautiful, roomy. Rb App H, D W C A $20 per meal /u/s. Available now. Call H-843-463 leave message
- By Mail: 117 Stairmaster FI, Lawrence, NS, K6043
You may choose to print your classifier list on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Save Money - Third Roommate Needed to share
big two bedroom, low rent,优越。Closet to
share. Please see description below.
Ads shown in may be killed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
*answer 1198: Flipper Fleet
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nar line nar dav
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1.95 1.50 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.45
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1.78 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 0.85 0.60 0.55 0.50 0.35
Classifications
Please print your ad one word per bo
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper
0 days begins:
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The University Dalby Kansan, 119 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445
By
THE FAR SIDE
Bv GARY LARSON
© 1992 FaWorks, Inc. Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Hey! You! ... Yeah, you! I ain't gonna tell you again to quit spittin' on me!"
10
Tuesday.March 2.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
story idea? 864-4810
Jayhawk Bookstore
---
32 Toppings to choose from!!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 10"Pizzas ONLY
$8.99
2 toppings plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
2 drinks
7-19-0055
Home of the Pocket Pizza
Open 7 days a week
Open 7 days a week
Kief's The Lowest CD Prices Kief's
Beginning Tuesday, January 19th...
25% OFF
Compact Disc
Tuesdays
Kief's...The best selection
The best service
And THE LOWEST PRICES.
Excludes orange tag and cheap cds
Not valid with other offers
KIEF'S
CDs/TAPES
2438 Loway St PO Box 2 Lawrence 802648
CDs & Tapes Car Store
91432544 91432544 91432544 91432544
Daily Re-affirmation
Knowing that I am accepted and darn home in spirit's world encourages me to live fully. I do not have to push to get where I'm going; I move along in the protective flow of divine order.
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
SEX
• SEX
• SEX
• SEX
• SEX • SEX • SEX • SEX • SEX • SEX • SEX •
Sex is all around, but most folks would really rather not talk about it.
What do you say when a friend shows you a bruise from her last date? What do you say when a friend tells you she had a child in high school that she gave up for adoption? What do you say when someone tells you that your roommate is homosexual? What do you say when your companion wants to go farther than you do on the first date? What do you say when a friend asks you about contraception? What do you say when someone asks you out, but you aren't attracted to people of their gender? What do you say when a friend asks you about abortion? Why is sex so tough to talk about?
What do you say to a little "tough talk" about some of the difficult issues of sexuality?
"Tough talk" is about dialogue and listening, not distribes and lecturing. Bring your questions about relationships and sexuality, and we'll all struggle with the answers.
7 PM Thursdays at Lutheran Campus Ministry 12th and Oread -- one block north of the Kansas Union
SEX
SEX
SEX
SEX
- SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX ·
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES Graduate Mentor Award Spring1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS.This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator." Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College. 'Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator,and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office, 864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to one single-spaced page.
the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
Send your nominations to Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 60645. Deadline is March 26,1993
C
S
OUP
60¢
Bowling
(Exp.03/15/93)
P
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 60¢ game during open bowling.
Kansas Union Level One 864-3545
O
Jaybowl
KARAOE UNION
GOOD FOR A FREE
EXTRALARGE
CHOCOLATE
CHIP
COOKIE
SUN-RANDWRIESE
CAFAS
MR. GOODCENTS
15th & Kasold
Orchard Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, KS
limit one cookie per coupon (with sub or pasta purchase)
Pizza Shoppe
841-8444 WE
8420600
DELIVER!
Medium Pizza
Single Topping
Extra Topping $.75
$6.95 + tax
2 for 10.95
601 Kasold
DECEMBER
VISA
MERCHANTS
Large Pizza
BORDER BANDIDO
2 for $14.95
Single Topping
Extra Topping $.95
$8.95 + tax
Surrito
JUNIOR'S FARM RECORDS factoryfresh compact discs, cassettes, &c.
Buy one #1 Texas Burrito-
Get the Second #1 Texas Burrito
$2.00 off any printed Sweatshirt $1.00 off any printed T-Shirt
FREE
$2.00 OFF
1528 W.23rd
Expires 3-17-88
Not valid on delivery
our already great prices!
any single in-stock item not already on sale.
downtown 9241/2 MASS
842-3344
935 Mass.
749-5194
MasterCard
Visa
3-17-93 not valid on delivery
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
Mon.-Sat. 9:30 -
5:30
Thurs. 'til 8
Sun 12-5
---
Valentino's
Restaurants
FREE
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET
Lunch $3.99 Pizza, Lasagna,
544 W. 23rd
Dinner$4.99 Spaghetti,Bread Sticks &
749-4244 Salad Bar
This offer good for lunch or evening buffet, 7 days a week. One coupon per five people. Please refer to the specials section. Cannot be used in addition to KIDS AT FREE EBREU buffet.
VISA
MasterCard
CAMICORNER
EXP. 2/28/93
UDK
* GAMES
* MINIATURES
* COMICS
* CITADEL PAINTS
10% off coupon
841-1294 not valid with any other discounts
1000 Mass. St. Suite 5, Open Sunday to Friday 11-7 Sat 10-8
Lawrence, Kansas
CORNUCOPIA
RESTAURANT & BANK
1801Mass
FREE appetizer with any two dinner entrees
offer expires March 31,1993
PERSONAL
CHECKS
DOCUMENT
New York City
VISA
HOURS
Mon-Thurs 4pm-2:30am
Fri & Sat 11am-3am
Sunday 11am-2am
841-5000
PERSONAL
C' ECKS
GUMBY'S
Pizza®
expires March 31, 1993
TIN PAN ALLEY
FATS
BAYLAND & KILLER
Two
North of the Border.
dinner entrees for.
$10
1105 Mass
SMALL 2 small one item pizzas
2 medium one item pizzas
中
2 large one item pizzas
UPTOWN
bagels
New York Deliciously
$11^{33}$
2 x-large one item pizzas $18⁸⁹
$755
Buy any specialty sandwich, get 1/2 off the 2nd one!
Good Thru2/28/93
749 * EATS
818 Mass.
$614
Quinton's BAR & DELI SANDWICHES SALADS BREAD BOWL SOUPS.
Full Bar
50€off
Any 1/2 Soup & Sandwich
Not valid w/any other offer
Expires March 15, 1993
• Dine in only
VIDEO BIZ
615 Massachusetts
VIDEO BIZ
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa 749-3507
Fast Free Delivery!
2 Video Tapes and VCR one night rental $5.99
USED VIDEO GAMES!
SEGA
GENESIS $3.00 OFF! SUPER
NINTENDO
On tiny GENESIS, SUPER NES, AMIGA or PC game purchased!
Aardvark March Special: 388 DX 40 mothbar board w/28K cache = $220 with coupon!
AARDVARK ELECTRONICS
BUYSELFTALK
Pier & Umed Games
610 FLORIDA SUITE C
explore
03-81-93
843-9104
2 Movies for the price of one!
Expires 3-15-93
NATURALWAY
EXPIRES MARCH 15TH
2 Sandwiches for 99¢
Deli 6" hoagie
limit 2 with coupon
only at
Checkers
23rd & Louisiana
Coupon good through March 20, 1993
---
2 Sandwiches for 99¢
Deli 6" hoagie
limit 2 with coupon
BODYWARE
Natural Fiber Clothing
BODYWARE
15% OFF
1111111111
Bayshore
841-0100
820-822 MASS. 841-0100
$1.00 OFF ANY PURCHASE
Albums-Cds-Tapes
Posters
Alley-Cat
RECORDS
717
Massachusetts
expires 3-31 1993
Alley-Cat RECORDS 717 Massachusetts expires 3-31 1993
15% off
on any item in the store
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
843-4344
present coupon with purchase
expires 3/31
TANNING
7 tans $20
10 tans $25
15 tans $35
(We will be any
local special)
EUROPEAN
LANDMARK MALLON
Southern Hills Center
23rd & Ousdahl
[Location Airport]
TRAVEL
5-40% SAVINGS
GUARANTEED
Unlimited
Tanning
3 months
$119 or $29
no expires
$2 per
charge
$10 cash reward
for referrals
√
SPORTS: The Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships begin today, Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 102, NO. 112
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE 3/2
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3,1993
NEWS:864-4810
A man inserts a ballot into a box while two women watch.
Six advance in commission primary
Bill Bell, left, of Lawrence removes ballots from a sealed box at the Douglas County courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St., while ballot judge Laura Kimbal, right, and Linda Long of Lawrence look on.
Candidates look to general election
By Todd Selfert
Kansan staff writer
Only 7,336 of the 45,000 registered voters cast their ballots yesterday for Lawrence City Commission and Lawrence School Board candidates in the city's primary election.
But the low turnout and rainy weather did not dampen the spirits of Bob Moody, president of the North Lawrence Improvement Association. Moody finished first out of 13 commission candidates with 2,818 votes.
Mooody, Bob Schumm, Jolene Andersen, Doug Compton, Sam Shepley and Milton Scott all advanced to the April 6 general election. Voters will select three of these candidates to fill the available commission seats.
"This is where we hoped to be," Moody said. "Historically, primaries are a good indicator of the eventual outcome, but we'll have to wait and see about that."
"I'm just pleased with the percentage of voters that felt comfortable choosing me as their candidate."
Schumm, an incumbent commissioner, finished second with 2,717 votes.
"I'm very pleased with the position I finished in," he said. "I'm very thankful for being there. I don't know if we even worked as much as we could have. We'll definitely be working more hours for the election in April."
Andersen, an office manager for Ron Turner's American Family Insurance Co., said she was not going to change her campaign strategy despite finishing just ahead of Compton by 36 votes.
Compton, owner of Compton Rentals, said he also had no plans to change his strategy.
"Why change something that's working?" Andersen asked. "We're not going to do any negative campaigning. I respect my opponents, and I even have a fondness for them."
Down to the final six . . .
"We're just going to keep working hard and doing the same things we've been done," he said. "We've run a strong campaign so far. We came from people not knowing our name to people recognizing it. I think that says a lot for our campaign."
Shepley, owner of Shepley Insurance Agency, said he expected to finish higher in the April election because he would be more prepared for the general election.
said. "We only spend about $500 on our campaign while the other candidates spent about $4,000. It will be a challenge to move up to the top three, but we knew it was going to be a challenge when we started."
"I think we definitely have a chance," Scott
"We didn't really get organized until three weeks before the primary," Shepley said. "We'll definitely start working sooner for the election in April."
Scott said he would continue to campaign door-to-door and meet the people in the community.
That is one area where Chander Jayaraman, Prairie Village senior, said he could have done better in. Jayaraman finished 11th in the voting with 358 votes.
"I think the field is wide open. That's not to say that we don't have our work out for us in the next election, though."
Scott, a KU graduate student and assistant director of student housing, said his only goal in the primary election was to advance to the April 6 run-off.
"If I would change anything, I would have campaigned more in the community," Jayaramaan said. "I campaigned a lot on students, but they didn't show up to vote.
city commission ELECTIONS
The results are in from yesterday's primary election. The top six candidates will proceed to the April 6 general election, where three candidates will be elected to office.
"In a way, it's kind of a victory because I think what I've done is plant a seed for others and shown them that they can get involved."
Scott Dalton, Pratt junior, who is taking a semester off from classes, finished last in the voting with 253 votes. He could not be reached for comment.
Lawrence City Commissioners
USD 497 Board of Education
| | Votes | Percent |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bob Moody | 2,818 | 17.14 |
| Bob Schumm | 2,717 | 16.53 |
| Jolene "Jo" Andersen | 2,679 | 16.30 |
| Doug Compton | 2,643 | 16.08 |
| Sam Shepley | 1,572 | 9.56 |
| Milton Scott | 840 | 5.11 |
| Roger L. Browning | 696 | 4.23 |
| Fred M. Markham | 654 | 3.97 |
| Richard Payton | 564 | 3.43 |
| Ken Wilson | 361 | 2.19 |
| Chander Jayaraman | 358 | 2.17 |
| Dolly L. Gasser | 280 | 1.70 |
| F. "Scott" Dalton | 253 | 1.53 |
| | Votes | Percent |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| John A. Tacha | 3,152 | 20.07 |
| Renee Karr | 3,028 | 19.28 |
| George Crawford | 2,886 | 18.38 |
| Gene Ramp | 1,706 | 10.86 |
| William Skepnek | 1,703 | 10.84 |
| Michael Heffner | 1,438 | 9.15 |
| William Kipp | 924 | 5.88 |
| Carlton R. Lartigue | 863 | 5.49 |
Voter turnout
Primary - Feb. 1993
Primary - Feb. 1991
General - April 1991
Source: Douglas County Clerk's Office
Voters / Registered
7,936 / 45,000
7,071 / 24,939
12,628 / 25,074
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Low voter turnout reported at Allen Field House
Bv Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams would have been disappointed yesterday with the crowds at Allen Field House.
Of 1,147 registered voters in the 4th
Precinct of the 2nd Ward, only 28
pulled the curtain of a voting booth
and marked their ballots.
The crowd that voted in the Lawrence City Commission's primary election, that is.
The non-voters missed out on homemade cookies baked by Mildred Clodfelter, precinct clerk.
"It's a recipe I've had for years," she
Patty Jatimes, county clerk, said two KU students running in the election, Chander Jayaraman and Scott Dalton, requested that she open the polling place.
seated, seated behind a registration table. "I thought I'd bake them and have something for them to nibble on."
All University housing, except for scholarship halls and GSP-Corbin Hall. is included in the district.
Voter Melissa Vaskov, Albuquerque, N.M., sophomore, said it was important for KU students to
"I just feel like we do live in Lawrence nine out of 12 months of the year," she said. "It's good for students to have a voice in the city. Even though it was only a primary, there were a lot of students or former students that were running who could make a difference."
The last time the field house was opened for a city primary election was 1987, when 18 voted.
vote in the election.
Jaimes said she would decide after the general election in April whether to keep the field house open for future elections.
"We wanted all the voters to participate," she said. "But I do think we have to consider the cost element also."
workers.
when they arrived at the field house at 6:15 a.m., Clofdelter and her three co-workers each guessed how many voters would show.
About $200 was spent on the four
"I made the lowest with 150," Clodfelter said.
Only two voters had come by 10:30 a.m. One was in the wrong precinct.
Jayaraman, Prairie Village junior, said he was disappointed after hearing about the low turnout.
"Twenty or so people showing up to vote at the field house is pitiful," he said. "That just shows that students don't care."
"I thought they'd respond in a much larger way than they have," he said. "I figured about 30 percent or so would be the minimum."
Clofdefer said somebody joked to her that she brought her homemade cookies to bribe students in the district to vote.
thy than he had anticipated.
Les Blevins, a precinct judge, said there was a higher level of voter apa-
"I don't think we've bribed anybody," she said, looking down at the nearly blank registration sheet.
She then returned to the newspaper puzzle she was working on, while Janie Harris, supervising judge, embroidered a square for a quilt she was making for her grandson.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Bill would help needy students Funds would come from tuition increase
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A Senate bill that would create a $2.3 million grant program for Regents university students passed the full Senate yesterday.
Money for the program would come from an 8 percent tuition increase that the Regents have proposed. A quarter of the increase would pay for the tuition grant program.
If the bill is passed, the Regents would distribute the money to needy students.
The proposal will be considered next by the House Education Committee.
The bill would require that students receiving grant money not receive more than half the average of in-state tuition costs at the Regents institutions. That means about 2,400 students could receive $960 each year.
State Sen. Audrey Langworthy, R-Prairie Village, a member of the Senate Education Committee, spoke in favor of the bill. She said that if the Legislature was preparing to increase tuitions, it should approve a bill that aided students who could not keep up with the increases.
"It has been this legislature that has encouraged the Regents to increase tuition over the past three, four and five years," she said.
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee,
spoke in opposition to the bill. He said
he was not in favor of a grant program
financed by a tuition increase.
Bogina said that if legislators wanted to increase the amount of money going to Regents school students, they should simply give them more from the state's general fund rather than create a separate grant program.
State Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson and head of the Senate Education Committee, responded by saying that there were endowment funds and federal funds available for Regents students but no grant program like the one outlined in the bill.
The grant program would be what the bill calls a "supplemental" grant program because there already is a state grant program that provides money for private school students.
The Legislature established the private school tuition grant program several years ago to close the gap between tuitions at the Regents schools and the state's private schools.
The 17 private schools in the program split $5.5 million each year.
Several other bills that originated in the Senate Education Committee passed the committee Monday, including a qualified admissions bill and bill that would establish minority graduate student fellowships.
The qualified admissions bill would require high school students seeking entrance to a Regents university to have either a 2.0 grade point average, have a composite ACT score of at least 23 or be in the top third of their high school class.
The qualified admissions bill is scheduled for full Senate action today.
INSIDE
Holey bodies
Pierced ears are just plain boring, and nose rings are becoming commonplace So people are searching for new and unusual body parts to pierce
See story, Page 9.
Students, staff like opportunities Clinton program offers
By Todd Selfert
Kansan staff writer
President Clinton's community work program is being met with guarded optimism by students and employees at the University of Kansas.
"It sounds too good to be true," said Amie Kuhn, Topeka senior. "I'm curious about how they will get it to work."
The plan would allow college students to repay federal loans by working in community-oriented jobs like inner-city health clinics and tutoring in literacy programs. Students could perform one year of service to repay two years of loans.
The program would begin with a test program of 1,000 students in the summer. The test program would cost about $15 million. The plan would expand to 100,000 or more.
"It sounds too good to be true."
Amle Kuhn
Athire Kulmi
Topeka senior
students by 1907 at a cost of about $7.4 billion.
Greg Mehojah, Pairfax, Va., junior, said he thought the program would allow more people to attend college.
Any plan would have to be approved by the U.S. Congress before any action could be taken.
"A lot of people can't afford to pay for loans to go to school," he said "A lot of people have parents that make too much
"I think the program is really meant to get students involved in government and to get them involved in areas where our country has a need for participation." Clinton cites
money for them to get the financial aid they need. This would help those people get money for school."
Mehojah said he thought he would consider enrolling in the program if he had the opportunity.
Allan Cigler, professor of political science, said he also thought the program would allow more people to attend college, but said that was not the real intent behind the program.
Melanie jenney, a public affairs specialist for the Peace Corps, said she hoped more students would get involved with community work if the proposal passed the Congress.
"I think this provides good incentive to work in areas that aren't necessarily financially rewarding," Jenney said. "There has to be some incentive because the types of jobs he's talking about don't pay the bills."
Diane Del Buono, director of the office of student financial aid, said too little was known about the proposed program to know if it would help students obtain loan money for school.
"It doesn't sound like they know if the program will even get off the ground," she said. "It does sound like it will be on a very small scale. When you consider that 6,000 to 7,000 students receive financial aid at KU through federal loans, and the test for this program will only be 1,000 students, you can see that this won't really help too many, at least not at first."
1
---
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring1993
Send your nominations to: Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045. Deadline is March 26,1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College.
Criteria may include the following:
outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator, and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
ON CAMPUS
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Association will hold a brown bag lunch at 1a.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., will hold a university forum at 11:40 a.m. today at ECM. D'阿尼师 will speak on "Conflict and Cooperation in the former Soviet Union." For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
KU Enviroins will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kristi Holdsworth at 832-1751
Armchair Generals will meet at 6 p.m. today for a game session. New players are welcome. For more information, call 864-7118.
**Watkins Memorial Health Center will hold an eating disorders support group group at 7 tonight in Watkins' second floor conference room. The topic of discussion will be "Media and Eating Disorders." For more information, call Chris Cameron at 841-0086.
Japan-America Club will hold a conversation group and brown bag lunch at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For
**Latin American Solidarity will hold a Rice and Beans Dinner at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Ed Haase will present:"Cuba Today." For more information, call Marc at 841-5606.
Womyn's Concerns will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burgee Union.
more information, call Ben Tompkins at 865-0116.
KU Libertarians will hold a business and informational meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 824-2411.
The Student Assistance Center will hold a workshop titled "Reading for Comprehension and Speed," at 7 p.m. tomorrow. Students should register in advance and pay a $19 material fee at 133 Strong Hall. For more information, call 864-4064.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burre Union.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 841-108.
WEATHER
Omaha: 37°/34°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 63°/53°
Chicago: 38°/31°
Houston: 63°/40°
Miami: 80°/69°
Minneapolis: 40°/30°
Phoenix: 73°/46°
Salt Lake City: 53°/26°
Seattle: 51°/40°
LAWRENCE: 42°/33°
Kansas City: 44°/33°
St. Louis: 49°/38°
Wichita: 48°/29°
Tulsa: 53°/34°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Cloudy with scattered showers.
High: 42°
Low: 33°
Cloudy but dry.
High: 45°
Low: 34°
Partly cloudy.
High: 44°
Low: 32°
Cloudy with scattered showers
ON THE RECORD
Ten women's swimsuits and 10 T-shirts, valued together at $350, were taken from the locker room of the women's swim team at Robinson Center on Saturday, Sunday or Monday. KN police reported
DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS
A student's mountain bike valued at $500 was taken between Feb. 20 and Sunday from a residence in the 1600 block of West 15th Street, Lawrence police reported.
A student's sapphire and diamond ring valued at $400 was taken Friday or Saturday from a house in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
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3
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BRIEFS
Regents head questions state's right to raise university tuition
The head of the Board of Regents sent a letter last week to state senators questioning a Senate committee's authority to set fees and tuition for the state's public universities.
In a letter dated Feb. 26, Regent Shirley Palmer objected to the Senate Ways and Means Committee's recommendation that out-of-state students receive a 10 percent tuition increase.
The Regents had proposed that both in-state and out-of-state students receive an 8 percent tuition increase.
In the letter, Palmer called the committee action an "unwarranted intrusion into the Board's statutory authority."
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, received the letter Monday shortly before he and other Ways and Means Committee members approved the Regents budget and sent it to the full Senate.
The committee had recommended 10 percent for out-of-state students in early February, and Bogina called the timing of the letter "hudicrous."
Yesterday, Palmer said, "We felt they were going beyond what was expected. It was not in any way meant as disrespectful. It's just that the board had a stand, and we felt it was not the way to proceed."
College Assembly discontinues courses in history of science
The College Assembly approved yesterday the discontinuation of several courses in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in an effort to make advising and enrollment easier.
The discontinued courses either were duplicated within departments, had not been taught for several years or were required for a degree program that had been recommended for deletion as part of program review.
Eleven undergraduate and graduate history of science courses in the department of history were canceled. University officials recommended that the history of science degree be deleted during program review.
The assembly also tightened the requirements for transfer students from junior and community colleges. The College will require transfer students to have nine hours in Math 101, English 101 and English 102, or their equivalents, before they will be admitted into the College.
Body of Lawrence man found at Burcham Park water facility
A water department employee found the body of a Lawrence man Monday while making a routine check of a water facility in Burcham Park.
After arriving at the facility, police pronounced Robert Preisner, 55, 104 Arkansas St., dead at the scene. The cause of death was a gunshot wound.
The water department employee found the man at 8:10 a.m. and called the police. Lawrence police Sgt. Mark Warren said that the man had been there a short time before police arrived and that the death was an apparent suicide.
Burcham Park is located along the west side of the Kansas River near the intersection of Second and Indiana streets.
State House tentatively passes bill to stiffen drunken driving laws
TOPEKA — The House tentatively passed a bill yesterday that would stiffen the state's drunken driving laws and includes a special provision for underage drinkers who drive.
The bill would lower the blood-alcohol concentration at which drivers are considered legally intoxicated from 0.10 to 0.08 percent.
If the bill doesn't pass, the state will lose substantial federal highway funds because of a federal mandate requiring the limit be lowered.
Amendment to the bill, which passed 70-52, provides a special provision for drivers under 21.
Briefs complied from Kansan staff and Associated Press reports.
Any driver under 21 with a blood-alcohol concentration greater than 0.04 would be subject to administrative penalties. Underage drinkers who drive would lose their licenses for 30 days on the first offense and receive a six-month suspension and $25 fine for the second.
Reporter denounces 'Japan-bashing'
Discrimination is evident in the lives of Asian Americans
Rachel G. Thompson / KANSAN
By Jess DeHaven
Kansan staff writer
H. J. KIM
Ken Kashiwahara, ABC news correspondent, said last night that the misconception that all Asian Americans had the same heritage often led to discrimination.
The rise in Japan-bashing has led to an increase in violence against all Asian Americans, whether or not they are of Japanese heritage, he said.
"Racism does not discriminate," Kashiwhara said. "There are many Asians who are threatened because of what has been done by the Japanese in the past."
Asian American Festival
About 60 people attended the speech, part of the Asian American Festival, at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Kashiwabara, an 18-year veteran of ABC, pointed out that Asians, particularly Japanese, are singled out for causing many of the problems in American industry today. He said that while news stories often portrayed the Japanese as buying up everything in the United States, Britain and
Canada had larger investments in the nation than did the Japanese.
Kashiwahara said he did not experience racism in his early childhood in Hawaii, but came face to face with it when his family tried to move to a suburb of Washington when he was 14 years old. They tried to move into an all-white neighborhood but were kept out by neighbors who did not want them.
Ken Kashiwahara, a news correspondent for "ABC World News," speaks about his experiences. About 60 people attended the speech last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Kashiwahara said that this type of discrimination caused him to be embarrassed about his heritage.
"I lost a lot during those days, including my sense of identity," he said. "Over years, I've eventually come to appreciate my heritage."
Kashiwabara said that he did not feel he had been discriminated against in the news business, but said that he did believe Asian Americans as a whole had been kept out of many positions.
He also said that Germany, like Japan, was an enemy of the United States in World War II.
War II, but Germans were not placed in internment camps or singled out for discrimination like the Japanese were.
"We have still not been fully accepted in our own country," Kashiwahara said. "We have become scapegoats."
Lori-Lin Robinson, Leawood senior and president of the Asian American Student Union, said Kashiwahara's speech was a
good start to the festival.
"He was very inspirational and motivational," Robinson said. "He really brought up some race points that I hadn't thought about before.
"He helped to make us realize that we must still maintain our heritage and be proud of our heritage. He also helped to dispel some of the stereotypes."
Rachel G. Thompson / KANSAN
Devoted fan
Equiped with bedding and something to read, Steve Kloss, Glen Ellyn, Ill., freshman, stakes out a place in Allen Field House to wait for tonight's basketball game against Nebraska.
Senate continues to spend over cap
Bv Brett Riggs
Kansan staff writer
Despite warnings from the Student Senate treasurer about spending over its budget cap, the Senate Finance Committee passed four bills last night totaling $5,118.
In its final meeting last fall, Senate passed a $60,000 spending cap for its unallocated account, reserved for granting organizations' requests during the year. Senate already has over-spersed the cap by $24,315, leaving about $150,000 in the account.
STUDENT SENATE
Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer,
said that Senate had the option to
spend over the cap, but that he did not
think Senate should get into the habit
of doing so.
"I have been saying all semester that we are way ahead in our spending but that has never stopped the finance committee." Sigourney said.
er and Jyl Lynn Felman to speak during Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, April 4-10. Lavender is a nationally known comedian and Felman is a renowned author.
who supported the bill, said he dis-
warned with having a budget cap.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas requested $2.750 to bring LVN Laven-
The finance committee passed the bill at $1,500 and suggested that GLSOK drop the honorarium for Lavender.
Troy Aldaffer, GALA week chairperson, said that dropping Lavender would affect the success of the entire week.
"I recognize trying to be fiscally responsible, but I wish they would consider the amount of benefit to students." Dilye said.
"Lynn is scheduled for the first of the week and would draw a lot of attention for the rest of the week." Alldafer said.
The finance committee also passed a bill to allocate $1,031 for Korean Night on April 10, sponsored by the Korean Student Union. The student union requested $1,500 for the event, which will attempt to inform students and the community about Korea and its people.
Patrick Dilley, graduate senator
James Finkeldei, finance committee member, said that he thought the organizations' requests were worthy of funding but that the committee needed to consider the cap.
needed to contribute the sup-
In other business, the committee:
In other baselines, the company
Passed a bill to allocate $1,985 for
the Student Union Activities' Outdoor
Finals Film Series.
Passed a bill to allocate $601 to fund Arts on the Boulevard.
Police want students' help in charity run
By Mark Kiefer
Kansan staff writer
Law enforcement officers in Lawrence are asking for your help.
Not to solve a crime, but to raise money for the Kansas Special Olympics.
"We're trying to get the student community a lot more involved," Lawrence police officer Jim Miller said of this year's fund-raising event. "Students did not get involved last year."
Miller is the local coordinator of this year's Special Olympics Torch Run, which precedes the Kansas Special Olympics in Wichita. Kansas law enforcement officers who raise at least $50 in donations carry a torch from Lawrence to Wichita, each of them running approximately a half-mile.
The Lawrence Police Department, Douglas County Sheriff's Department and KU police are taking part again this year to raise money for the event. The Lawrence portion of the run begins June 3.
To raise money, the officers are sponsoring a program called Adopt-A-Cop.
To adopt an officer, an organization or individual must raise $50 to sponsor a Lawrence law enforcement officer, who will then take a turn carrying the torch. Miller said that an organization could choose a law enforcement officer or have one assigned to it.
He said that the program not only helps raise money but also gets the community involved with police officers.
"We try to involve the community as much as we can by asking student organizations to adopt at least one police officer." Miller said.
Once an organization chooses to sponsor an officer, that officer will come and get acquainted with members of the group.
"It's really good for us to be out there with students in a positive context," he said. "It's a chance for us to interact with students more, besides just being a cop."
The 1992 Torch Run raised $10,635 in Lawrence. Miller said he hoped to meet this year's goal of $1,600.
Lawrence police officer Don Gardner was the top fundraiser in Kansas in last year's run. He said that the run to Wichita was fun and that officers enjoyed the half-mile segments of the run. The run from Lawrence to Wichita takes a total of two 12-hour days.
Gardner said that 33 officers from Lawrence run in last year's torch run, including three KU police officers.
Organizations interested in adopting an officer and donating to the Kansas Special Olympics can contact Jim Miller, Don Gardner or Dan Affalter at the Lawrence Police Department.
Beat the Clock, Hair Studios Announces Expansion!
Jerry, Gary, and Ariell, in keeping with their tradition of quality service, announce Dahl Chester joining their staff. Dahl, a Lawrence resident, brings many years experience and training to the salon. Most recently Master Stylist for Par Exsalonce in Overland Park, he has several years experience as a Salon Owner/Stylist in New York City, and extensive training at Trevor Sorbie Hair Academy in London. Other credits include that of a Commercial Stylist for television. He currently is a Redken Performing Artist, providing regional education to many salons in the Kansas City area
---
Beat the Clock offers a comfortable exclusive environment, with each stylist client tastefully located in large private rooms. Other amenities include a multi-faced video system.
computerized client records, an array of complimentary beverages, and quality products of Tigi Linea and Lanza. Available soon will be Aroma Vera, the aromatherapy line featuring over 90 oils/synergies for use in environmental fragrancing, soaps, body oils, masks, and gels.
Salon hours are 10-7 weekdays, and 9-5 Saturday Appointments are recommended.
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4
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Rock Chalk is worthy of a standing ovation
For the past seven months hundreds of students have invested tremendous amounts of time and energy into the final creation of this year's Rock Chalk Revue. Tomorrow night, Rock Chalk Revue will open the first of three performances on this, its final weekend. A tradition at the University of Kansas for more than 40 years, Rock Chalk Revue is not only an outstanding night of music and comedy, but a worthwhile philanthropy too. Those students who have invested their time and energy in to the production are to be commended. Those who have not, can still play a vital part in the process — by attending the show.
All proceeds from Rock Chalk Revue go to benefit the United Way of Douglas County. In recent years, these proceeds have grown in more ways than one. In addition to increased donations, which last year reached $43,000, a community service program recently has been instituted that helps get students involved in various community service projects throughout Lawrence. The total number of donated hours for this year will not be known until tomorrow night. However, it is expected to be in the range of last year, when more than 10,000 hours were donated. That is a phenomenal figure that the entire University can be proud of.
There are not many activities at KU that have been around as long, get as many students involved and benefit the community as much as Rock Chalk Revue. For only a couple dollars more than a movie, students can help contribute to its continued success and see an enjoyable musical variety show in the process.
JEFF REYNOLDS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New federal land prices will help environment
For more than a century, the United States has treated publicly owned land in the West as a resource for exploitation rather than conservaresource for exploitation rather than conservation. It has subsidized the commercial development of public land by offering below-market prices to loggers, miners and ranchers.
Now President Bill Clinton has come up with a bold new plan that would drastically alter the way these lands are managed. Clinton's proposal would require public land users to pay the market rate to use the land. The plan makes sense both environmentally and economically.
For example, the Bureau of Land Management charges ranchers $1.92 to graze a cow and its calf for one month on federal land. The going rate for privately owned land is $9.25. The discounted fees were the primary reason the government's grazing program lost $52 million in 1990.
Timber companies receive similar subsidies for logging done on federal land. In 1991, timber programs in 69 of the 120 national forests lost money.
Mining companies currently do not pay anything for minerals such as gold and silver that are mined on federal land.
Clinton says the plan could save the United States $1 billion over the next five years. The savings would be used for debt reduction and to restore areas that have been damaged environmentally by overuse.
That damage is extensive, according to the bureau. A recent report indicated that 83 percent of public land held by the top 20 users is in "unsatisfactory" condition.
Congress should end the subsidy for public land use by adopting the fee increase. It will save money and encourage environmental conservation, not exploitation.
CHRIS MOESER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
TERRORISM
Paul 3-93 UDK
Practice of affirmative action helps achieve racial equality
In a world that is far from fair, it is important to try and attain equality in every instance that presents itself. Affirmative action, the practice of giving one benefits based on something other than qualifications, is one way of doing that.
Racism and discrimination are rampant, and being a minority puts one at a distinct disadvantage. Thus there is need for something to be done. Affirmative action is needed, if not for this reason alone, to be instituted on nationwide basis. If there were no discrimination, there would be no reason to hire someone for any reason except for their qualifications. Since there is discrimination, something needs to be done.
ANDREW
GILMAN
The theory behind affirmative action is vital to understanding the reason for implementation. If one
STAFF COLUMNIST
gives ajob or scholarship to a minority, and he or she use it to benefit himself or herself, the aim is that they will take the job or money back to their community. The community, in turn, benefits.
This idea, although not always used correctly, is the basis behind the plan. It would be naive to think that this happens all the time, but it is important to know that this is what affirmative action strives for.
Eventually, if this practice is put into use there will be no need for it. Each community, in the ideal sense, will be brought up to the level of every other community. Realistically, that day is a long way off, but it is something to work toward.
Even though this will probably never be achieved, it is no reason not to try. We always need to be looking to move ahead, and if this means appropriating money or giving a job to someone who is less qualified, so be it. The benefits in the long run will outweigh the hassle of today.
Granted, today's business world is much more fair than it ever has been, we still need to realize that it could be better. Racism and hate crimes are increasingly. With this being true, it shows that people still harbor ill will
toward minorities, thus it is prudent to allow for some degree of equality. This is the United States, and we are allowed to pursue of happiness. To some this pursuit is blocked by certain prejudices, and in turn affirmative action is needed.
This problem can be fixed. Affirmative action is one small way that it can be done. Other steps need to be taken, but this practice is a way of not only allowing for more opportunities, but a possible way to ease racial and ethnic tensions.
The next four years are a time when things can start looking up. With more liberal policies toward domestic problems, programs like these have a chance not only to be instituted but given a full opportunity to take effect.
Andrew Gliman is a Norman, Okla., sophomore majoring in English.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Kansan excludes same-sex couples in ads for Jaytalk
clientele in promotional ads for the network. The Kansan should stop exploiting gays as a financial resource and begin accurately portraying the diversity of its customers in ads for Jaytak. In the meantime, I discourage gays from using the Jaytalk service, which, although it superficially encourages equality and equal opportunity for everyone, ultimately discriminates against them.
I would like to draw your attention to what I consider covert forms of bigrythy and discrimination evident in the Kansan's ads for "Jaytalk, KU's Meeting Network." Although Jaytalk accepts listings for "Men Seeking Men" and "Women Seeking Women," same-sex couples, to my knowledge, are not used to advertise the service in the Kansan. This is particularly ironic considering that usually about one-third of the Jaytalk listings is requesting same-sex compani-
ship. By not picturing same-sex couples in ads, the Kansan promotes heterosexism by implicitly suggesting that gays are invisible nonentities which, eventually, serves as justification for further discrimination.
Moreover, the Kansan's advertising policies smack of bigrythy due to the fact that the newspaper, although it readily accepts service charges from gay customers, refuses to acknowledge this significant aspect of its
Randall Griffey Norton graduate student
Anti-gay group should not get Page 1 coverage
When I opened up the *Kansan* to see what the front page held, I was dismayed. I realize that it is any newspaper's job to write on certain topics whether they are popular or not, but the article on Fred Phelps' Baptist church made me sick to my stomach. Personally, I do not have homosexual tendencies and I cannot
imagine what it would be like to be a homosexual. But I do not lash out at them. These Baptists may have a place for their beliefs but not on our front page. I do not think this article earned front page priority. Not only does it upset people even more, this article gives the idea that these Baptists are right and gays are wrong. This is not true. All people have their own feelings toward this issue, but that is all they are, their own feelings. Keep it that way! We need to love and try to understand each other, not lash out to hurt each other.
Anne Bristow Leavenworth freshman
Saferide would be unnecessary if all were responsible
Friday we were informed that the Sateride program needed additional funds that would total $70,000 by end of the year. Are we adults who attend this institution or children who need supervision? How long
will we shu personal responsibility for our actions and ask "big brother" government to take care of us?
I do not doubt that this program has been good since it has saved a life or prevented someone from a terrible accident. I have no quarrel with those who have used the service in dire circumstances, but I do not doubt that it has been an easy way for many students to shun personal responsibility for their own behavior.
Perhaps some of the students do not mind paying extra money each semester in the form of student activity fees for the people who are not old enough to take responsibility for their actions, but personally, I present financing childishness among adults when my own family could use the money for necessities of life.
Once we leave this adult institution, I am afraid big brother government won't always be there to cover our irresponsibility.
Brian Wagner
Lawrence graduate student
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
YANG LE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Editors
Aast. Managing ... Justin Knupp
News ... Monique Guelain
Campus ... David Mitchell
Editorial ... Stephen Martino
Campus ... RC Truss
D sports ... David Mitchell
Photo ... Mark Rowlands
Featureue ... Lynne McAdobe
Graphic ... Dan Schauer
Wire ... Tiffany Lashua Hurt
Assistant Editors
Aasoc. Editorial ... Chris Mooser
Aasoc. Campus ... Joe Harder
Aast. Campus ... Christopher Laurel
Aasoc. Sports ... David Bartbinski
Reporters
Victor Bode ... Mark Button
Jess DeLennean ... David Dursey
Matt Doyle ... Dan England
Dan Drone ... Mason Shuler
Bill Lemons ... Frank McCleary
Ted Lyon McCormick ... Brady Prause
Jim Resco...Brett Riggs
Todd Selfert...Blake Spueng
Jay Williams...Ezra Walle
Scott Anderson...Copy Chiefs
Copy Editors...Shelly Solon
Heather Anderson...Aaron Baker
J.R. Clashborne...Alinne Estraza
Janet Fogle-Fergus...Alain Fugel
Kevin Tongg...Katie Greenwald
Karon Hadley...Jo Harder
Tiffany Laskas-Kunst...Chris Heathrow
Noelle Kastens...Christine Laue
Allison Lipperflies...Tim Marks
Stacy Morford...Maurice Nosew
Richie Richell...Corey Shoup
Julie Wasson...Jay Williams
Andrew Arnone...Jason Audl
Kim Buche...Alip Chin
Richard Devinkal...Kathy Drescel
Douglas House...James Horn
Rene Noehder...Paul Kotz
Irene Lanier...Rachel Thompson
Dave Campbell...Graphics Artist
Katherine Mawkerwell
Dave Campbell...Andrew Hodges
Katherine Mawkerwell
Designer...Daniel Nosew
Eric Fogarty...Katherine Mawkerwell
Derek Noten...Sean Trolet
Jule Wasson
News Clerk
Shannon Kimball
STEVE PERRY Business manager
MELISSATERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
BILL THOMAS Production
PAT BOYLE Accounting
Business Staff
Business Staff
Campaign sales mgr Braden Basson
Regional Sales mgr Wade Baxter
National sales mgr Jennifer Porter
Co-op sales mgr Ashley Pearl
Production mgr Amy Blumbord
Ashley Laughard
Angela Cleaver-Cooper
Marketing director Angela Cleaver-Cooper
Creative director Jackie Perry
Ad Direction Dave Hobbitger
Classified mgr 80 Tuncy
Special Sections Mythine Fuchs
Marks Dominik
Classified Assistant Laura Grob
Zone Managers
Jennifer Blowey ... Kim Brown
John Carlton ... Amy Casey
Jodi Cole ...
Retail Account Executives
Linda Boodeker ... Tricla Bumpus
Kate Burgess ... Ken Cole
Jonathan Bradley ... Jennifer Evenson
Justin Garberg ... Stephane Greenwood
Josh Hahn ... Tamme Johnson
Allison Kaplan ... Sue Kratsky
Robin Kring ... Jessica Lenard
Shely McConnell ... Chuck Morrissey
Mike Murray ... Kori Rathour
Ed Schröth ... Judith Standley
Gretchen Van Hoet
Campus Account Executives
Rebecca Boresow ... Kristy Enlow
Melissa Jonins ... Laura Manka
Russel Ilasa
Regional Account Executive
Nicole Abbett ... Jennifer Lald
Cathy McWilliams ... Troy Tawerst
Interns
Marcel Stueller
Intensus
Manuel Stauffer
Wednesday. March 3. 1993
5
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Help available for filing taxes
Legal Services, Lawrence firms can aid students
By Terrilyn McCormick
Kansan staff writer
Adjusted gross income, taxable interest income and earned income credit may be as incomprehensible to some students as a foreign language.
Bartlett Disability
With the April 15 Internal Revenue
Service tax filing deadline approaching,
several Lawrence agencies are
offering help for students having diffi-
culties filing their income taxes.
Legal Services for Students gives KU students free consultation and help in filling out tax forms. Students must make an appointment. Currently, the wait for consultation is two weeks, said Jo Hardesty, director of Legal Services for Students.
"We are absolutely swamped with students coming in with tax problems right now." Hardesty said.
Legal Service also offers help for international students who are filing income tax forms. The organization is the only accounting service in Lawrence that has knowledge about the special help that international students need in filing their taxes, Hardesty said.
Students who do not want to wait for an appointment at Legal Services may go to one of the three Volunteer Income Tax Advising centers in Lawrence. VITA centers offer free consultation and help in filling out forms. No appointment is necessary. The centers are at the Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St., Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Indian Center of Lawrence, 1423 Haskell Ave. Tuesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m; and Hashinger Hall, Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
What information is needed to file .
There are also accountants in the Lawrence area who can help students with income tax questions for a fee.
All W-2 forms from every employer the student has worked for in the last year.
Know your status: Are your parents still claiming you or are you claiming yourself?
Anyone who has a savings account, bonds or stocks must report interest.
- Locate the proper forms to use. Most students use the 1040EZ form or the 1040A form. These can be obtained from the IRS, Dillons stores, VITA sites, libraries, and banks. Legal Services for Students has state forms for surrounding states.
Fill out forms and file them by April 15. However, if you are getting a refund you do not have to file by the deadline.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
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Health officials emphasize sleep
student has too many priorities, that's exactly what will happen. The student won't be as efficient."
"If you burn a candle at both ends, it is going to burn out faster than if you burn it at one end," Yockey said. "If a
Yockey said students should plan their schedules to include adequate sleeping time.
"Most people take better care of their cars than they do their bodies," he said, "because cars come with instruction manuals."
Yockey did not advise using stimulants to stay awake. Caffeine distorts students' perceptions and makes them think they are performing better than they actually are, he said.
Modernt exams have arrived, which means increased hours of studying and decreased hours of sleep for students.
agreed the average adult should get eight hours of sleep.
"There is a relationship between continuity and performance," Miller said. "A person functions best if the sleep is continuous."
Taking 30 minutes each day to exercise also will make a student more efficient, he said.
David Miller, director of the Sleep Disorder Center at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Topeka,
That could mean more sick students, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Sleep deprivation often is associated with illness.
"The best way to get mono is to pull an all-nighter," he said.
---
Kansan staff writer
Legal Services for Students would like to say,
Thank You
By Vicki Bode
amount of sleep and when that amount is not obtained, the immune system is affected, he said. The most common health problems caused by sleep deprivation are mononucleosis and stomach problems, such as nausea.
to everyone that supported us during our student senate funding hearing.
"We have found that some people may need only three hours, but some people need 20 hours," Miller said. "These are extremes."
Yockey emphasized that there was no substitute for sleep.
Each person needs a minimum
"During midterms the number of ill students increases," Yockey said. "The biggest increase is right before finals, but midterm is the dress rehearsal."
Cnattapping during class is not beneficial to a student's body, he said.
Legal Services for Students
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SELL IT FAST IN THE DAILY KANSAN
FAYE WATTLETON
TICKETS: can be purchased from SUA Box Office at hour before the students. The tickets are purchased at the IDs office.
7:00 P.M.
FRIDAY MARCH 5,1993
KANSAS UNION
BALLROOM
Under the leadership of Faye Wattleton, Planned Parenthood has played a major role in defining the national debate over reproductive rights and in shaping the family planning policies of the government worldwide. Ms.Wattleton's vision and courage have projected Planned Parenthood into the forefront of the battle to preserve women's fundamental right to equality and self determination.
OF PLANNED PARENTHOOD
TICKETS: can be purchased at the SUA Box Office March 3-5 and one hour before the lecture for KU students. Tickets can be purchased by the general public the 5th. Tickets are $1 for students with KUID, $3 for non-students IDs will be checked at the door.
SUA
SUA
6
Wednesdav, March 3.1993
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Wednesday, March 10, 1993
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7:00-9:00 p.m.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Cult standoff continues
Source says death toll is at least 14
The Associated Press
WACO, Texas—An armed religious cult's leader failed to surrender as promised yesterday, and military vehicles surrounded his compound as a standoff dragged on into a third night. A source said the death toll was at least 14.
Authorities have confirmed that four federal agents and at least two people inside the compound were killed in gun battles Sunday. But a federal official, speaking on condition of anonymity, yesterday said that at least 10 were dead inside the compound.
Officials have said about 75 people were in the compound, but cult leader David Koresh has claimed more.
Since the siege began, 18 children and two adults have been released, and last night, Bryan Gilbert, representative for the state Children's Protective Service, said as many as 20 more children could be released
Later, several buses and minivans left the compound, but federal agents said the activity was merely a shift change.
In a 58-minute taped statement broadcast earlier yesterday on Texas radio stations at the FBI's request, the cult leader said, "I, David Koresh, agree upon the broadcasting of this tape to come out peacefully with all the people immediately."
"Even a man like Christ has to meet with unbelief," said Koresh, 33, who says he's Jesus.
"I'm sure you're all aware of how I'm involved in a very serious thing right now," Koresh said. "I am really concerned about the lives of my brethren here and also really concerned even greater about the lives of all those in this world."
wait "a long time We don't have a time frame for this." He added that the cult members likely had plenty of food and water, but officials were "working so it does not go on for a month."
The siege began Sunday morning as about 100 AFT agents raided the compound, seeking to serve firearms violations warrants on Koresh. Authorities said four agents and one child inside the compound — who Koresh said was his 2-year-old daughter — died in that raid. Another gun battle Sunday night left an adult cult member dead.
Buses and other military vehicles moved nearer within minutes of the broadcast's start. But hours after the broadcast ended, Koresh hadn't surrendered.
Negotiations with him continued into the night, Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms spokesman Jack Killorin said. He said agents were prepared to
Koresh told a radio station he had been gravely wounded Sunday.
The Houston Chronicle, quoting unidentified sources, reported that children released from the compound said at least seven people inside were killed in the firefight. The newspaper also said agents believed they had killed as many as 15 people.
He began letting children out late Sunday after a station agreed to broadcast a statement by him. He released eight more Tuesday before his radio statement. Two women also left, the first adults to leave the compound.
BRIEFS
Videotapes may solve Trade Center bombing
NEW YORK — A newly discovered videotape of cars coming and going at the World Trade Center parking garage could yield clues to who planted the bomb that rocked the twin towers. Additional video cameras may be buried in the rubble.
James Fox, head of the FBI's New York office, said Monday that some cameras were missing but that he didn't know how many.
Investigators said theories for the bombing range from a terrorist attack to revenge by a disgruntled employee. Investigators are still unsure what kind of explosive killed at least five people and injured more than 1,000.
Investigators have pegged the bomb to weigh up to 1,500 pounds, depending on what type of explosive was used.
NBC fires news executive following 'Dateline' incident
The tape could be important because experts believe the bomb was so large it would "test the springs of any car or any van," making it conscious on the tape. Fox said.
NEW YORK — NBC ousted Michael Gartner as president of the news division yesterday, making him the first casualty of the "Dateline NBC" debacle.
Gartner, 54, a former Wall Street Journal editor and owner of several Iowa newspapers, said he would resign as president and leave the network on Aug. 1. The resignation was also announced briefly on the network's "Today" show.
"Given the publicity of life, I think it best to announce it now in hopes that this will take the spotlight off of all of us and enable us to concentrate fully on our business," Gartner wrote in a memorandum to his staff.
Despite that memo and news accounts that Gartner was resigning, NBC President and Chief Executive Officer Robert Wright had demanded Gartner's resignation over the weekend, according to an NBC source, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Perot wants details to deficit reduction
WASHINGTON — The United States cannot afford to continue "massive, dreamlike spending programs" until the nation's deficit is controlled, and Clinton's plan is lacking details of how to reduce it, Ross Perot said yesterday.
"I can't understand the details of the plan," Perot said on "CBS This Morning." Citing newspaper accounts that the Clinton proposal would add $1 trillion to the national debt over four years, Perot said. "If that's true, then that's not a good plan.
"We need a detailed plan for the American people to see, a detailed timing of when these things will occur, when we will get our debt and deficit down."
Perot's morning TV appearance was a precursor to appearances on Capitol Hill later in the day.
Briefs compiled from Associated Press reports.
EVERYONE SAW THIS AS A PROBLEM ONCE.
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Wednesday, March 3, 1993
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
SARAJEWO Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs massacred civilians and blocked U.N. efforts to evacuate, 1,500 sick and wounded people yesterday as they overran a Muslim enclave in eastern Bosnia according to U.N. officials.
Serbs block U.N. evacuations and burn kill in Bosnian towns
Serbs were "plundering, killing and burning," said Lyndall Sachs, a U.N. spokeswoman, with tanks rumbling through the smoldering ruins of villages where U.S. pilots had dropped thousands of meals the day before.
The U.N. officials, basing their information on ham radio dispatches, said Serb fighters in the Cerska and neighboring Srebrenica area were killing women and children.
The food mostly fell into Serb hands, according to the Pentagon, while some 10,000 people it was meant to feed fled into the icy mountains. Some Muslims trying to collect aid reportedly were picked off by snipers, said another U.N. spokesman.
"If only 10 percent of the reports being received from ham radio operators are true, a massacre is taking place," said the officials of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, in a report radioed to Sarajevo from the northeastern city of Tuzla.
BRIEFS
Russian military plans to help U.S. with aid to warring Bosnia
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration warmly welcomed Russia's announced participation in the Bosnian air drop yesterday, hailing it as a milestone of post-Cold War cooperation.
"It's very important that they participate," said Bob Hall, Pentagon representative. "They have a tremendous military capability."
During the past two nights, six U.S. C-130 transport planes have dropped 38.3 tons of food and medicine over eastern Bosnia, the latest drop to the region of Zepa, Hall said. It is the most direct U.S. intervention so far in the conflict among the warring factions of the former Yugoslavia.
Hall said it was significant that the Russians participate in "this kind of humanitarian mission." Both the Russian and U.S. militaries have changed as a result of the end of the Cold War, he said.
Meanwhile, a senior Pentagon official said U.S. plans call for a pause in the Bosnia air drops after a third nighttime mission is completed.
The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said getting the Russians involved in the operation raised hopes for stronger diplomatic relations between the United States and Russia.
Yeltis assembles supporters warns them against hardliners
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin mustered his political allies yesterday before a showdown with Russia's hard-line Congress, and said he was willing to take "extreme steps" to save his reforms.
Yeltsin solemnly told a gathering of about 80 lawmakers and members of reformist factions in his second lobbying appearance this week that "the democrats alone cannot pull out this heavy cart."
The most chilling part of Yellins's speech was his warning that hard-line forces planned to assert their power through the Communist-dominated Congress to further weaken his government.
If they succeed, "these forces will bring about a reversal of the reforms to which people already have become accustomed," Yeltsin said. "If forces that can destroy Russia appear, extreme steps will have to be taken to save the country."
Former Yeltsin adviser Galina Starovoitova said later that Yeltsin was referring to the introduction of direct presidential rule.
Briefs complied from Associated Press reports.
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UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENT A MARTIN SCORSESS/BARBARA DEFINA PRODUCTION AND JOHN McNAUGHTON FILM
UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENT A MARTIN SCOURSESE BARBARA DEFENA PRODUCTION A JOHN MEHNADUCTION FILM "MAD DOG AND GLORY" WRITTEN BY ELKER REMNSTEIN PRODUCED BY BRANDARD PRICE MARKETED BY HENDRICK PRICE PRODUCED BY BARBARA DEFENA MARTIN SCOURSESE
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Pasta Penne 279 m/Meatball 339 m/ Sauage 349 Spaghetti 279 339 339 349 Rigano 279 339 339 349 cents
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---
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Commissioners want complaint line
Lawrence may get telephone number to air police grips
By Mark Kiefer
Kansan staff writer
The city's next telephone book may include a number to call if you have a complaint about the Lawrence Police Department.
Lawrence Police Chief Ron Olin last night presented the Lawrence City Commission with an update of the Peer Review Report, a comprehensive review of the Lawrence Police Department. His first meeting with the commission was Nov.9.
Commissioner John Nalbandian suggested creating a separate telephone line to give residents another channel to voice complaints they might have about police.
"It would enhance the citizen's view that they have access to police matters when they may not feel comfortable with the department," Nalbandian said.
Other commission members said that they liked the idea of a separate ine.
"Right off, my first response is 'I like
it and I think I would be in favor of it." Commissioner Bob Schumm will
The number would be directly connected to the city manager's office. From there, a complaint would be directed to police for an investigation.
Currently, citizens with a complaint can call the police department. Olin said he did not think a separate line was necessary.
"We're willing to expand the ways people can file complaints," Olin said. "But I don't think that it could replace the system that's already in place."
Olin called the report a "very good document from which to move for-
ward."
Olin also updated the commissioners about the city's enhanced 911 system, capable of tracing calls much quicker than the previous system, which is nearing completion.
"Afew years ago, tracing could have taken upwards of two hours, sometimes more." Olin said. "Now, we can trace them in seconds."
In other business, the commission gave its approvato proceed with preliminary plans to construct a barrier median Iowa Street from University to Stratford streets. The median would prevent cars from making left turns on or from Iowa Street.
National pageant opens doors for student
By Angelina Lopez
Special to the Kansan
Karen Blackwell, Miss Black Kansas, was shocked when the emcee announced her as one of the top 10 finalists for the Miss Black USA pageant.
"It took me by surprise," said Blackwell, Wheaton, Ill., freshman. "I was competing against really talented people, and I wasn't really sure how things would go."
Blackwell and 15 other women competed in the contest held Friday through Sunday in Washington.
Although the title of Miss Black USA was won by Ebony Warren, Miss Black Florida, the pageant opened up many opportunities for Blackwell. She was approached by the judges, a publisher and a couple of people offering acting jobs, she said.
Blackwell is committed to being Miss Black Kansas for a year, but she wants to pursue other opportunities once that year is up, she said.
Blackwell, 18, was, on average, six years younger than the rest of the women who competed.
was friendly and supportive — there was no cut-throat attitude," Blackwell said. "The contestants were real people."
She said many state pageant winners dropped out because they could not afford the trip to Washington. Because the pageants were sponsored by a non-profit organization, the state contests did not pay all the expenses for their winners to compete in the national competition.
"Though they were older, everyone
McCollum Hall, and the KU faculty and staff had not donated money.
She described the weekend as hectic but a good experience. In addition to promotional appearances, contestants rehearsed dance routines four hours each day.
Blackwell, who returned to KU yesterday, still was excited about the events of the weekend.
"It really boosted my self-confidence," Blackwellsaid. "When I went on stage, I could feel the audience's response. It filled me with so much strength."
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PART II
Holey bodies
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Body piercing is an unusual fad that is increasing in popularity However, it does have some possible medical side effects.
By Lauren Bone
N
Special to the Kansar
ed Nelson didn't get his nipple pierced to impress women. Hidden in prom shoes if
He did it in press matters.
Nelson, a Wichita senior, is one of many KU students who have had various unusual places on their person pierced. The trend of body piercing, which originated on the coasts, is slowly making its way to KI!
The popularity of body piercing has been increasing in recent years. One of the many odd attractions on last summer's Lollapalooza tour was a body piercing booth, where customers were able to get noses, hips, eyelids, eyesbrows, nailsens and, oh yes, their nipples punctured.
For the bravest, or just masochistic, there are many different locations on both the male and female genitalia that can be pierced.
Nelson got his nipple pierced at the Kansas City Tattoo and Body Piercing Convention about six months ago. He went with the intention of getting a tattoo but decided to get his nipple pierced instead.
"I'm a conservative looking person," Nelson said. "I can't pierce my tongue, so I pierced my nipple."
The procedure was quite painful. "It hurt worse than anything I've ever felt in my life. It made tattoos feel like a walk in the park," Nelson said.
For both men and women, a more common piercing location is the nose.
Joseph Gaulney, the owner of River City Hair Co., 1021 Massachusetts St., will pierce noses with a piercing gun for just $10.
gaultney says nose piercing is uncomfortable.
"If you can just imagine having a bit inside your
Gaulney said he thought that many KU students got their noses pierced for the novelty of it. They think of it as an extra accessory that adds to their appearance.
nose, that's how it feels," he said
Kate Gomez, Philadelphia freshman, disagrees. She first had her nose pierced in tenth grade, and she did not think it hurt too much.
Before Thanksgiving last year, Gomez had her other nostril pierced.
"I got it pierced again because nose piercing is such a trendy thing. That way I'm not like everyone else" she said.
But body piercing can be dangerous.
"When people start doing weird things to their bodies, they start having weird problems," said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Health Center.
According to Yockey, even though most piercing is merely through superficial tissue, complications can result. Infection is the most common problem.
Piercing the tongue is the riskiest thing, since that is the dirtiest part of the body, said Yockey.
"We see a few people with their noses pierced who have problems with sinus infections," said Yockev.
Another problem is the buildup of scar tissue, Yockey said. A man with a pierced nipple will have a visible scar if he decides to let the hole close, and a woman would definitely have problems breast feeding. Yockey said.
Vockey used the Amazing Mr. Lifto from the Jim Rose Sideshow as an example of this. As part of an act that came through Lawrence last fall, Mr. Lifto lifted cinder blocks from chains attached to rings in his nipples.
Yockey said that over winter break three people had noserings torn out of their noses. They required reconstructive plastic surgery.
The other problem Voyckey mentioned was trauma to the piered site.
"He has a lot of scar tissue to be able to do that," Yockey said.
Despite these risks, and whether the piercing is visible, what really matters is if it pleases the piercee.
10
Rachel G. Thompson / KANSAN
Top, Kate Gomez, Philadelphia freshman, has both of her nostrils pierced. She also plans to get her lip pierced. Above, Ned Nelson, Lawrence senior, exhibits his pierced nipple. Nelson said it hurt a lot to have it done, although it doesn't bother him now.
Nelson said that the little silver ring in his nipple was purely for his own pleasure. "Women are totally turned off by it," he said.
Gomez notes that body piercing is becoming more acceptable.
"Now, everyone's doing it, no matter what clique," he said.
Deia vu is familiar but unexplainable
Something weird happened to Carrie Cornelius, Topeka senior, in Baldwin City.
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
She had a strange feeling as she recognized each stop sign and house as she came to them. But what really scared her was that she had never been to the town before.
The French phrase literally means already seen.
Cornelius experienced what commonly is called deja va.
It describes the odd sensation people have when they feel they are experiencing something that has already harmed.
But explaining a deja vu experience is hard to do without sounding a little
bit nutty.
Takahito Shiki, Osaka, Japan senior,
said that Buddhism preaches life after
death, and that he and many friends
have often discussed whether deja vu
was a link to a past life.
"I never know if I should say anything about it around people," Cornellus said. She said she never knew the reaction it would bring.
"I do not really believe it but I sometimes wonder, 'yeah, maybe,' because I cannot find a connection between the two."
But Greg Simpson, associate professor of psychology at KU, was not so quick to delve into spiritual answers behind deja va.
"It's a very vague kind of feeling that you have, reliving some experience," he said. "It is kind of like tapping some
memory that is too weak to call up into any kind of detail."
Simpson said that deja vu was neither magical nor mystical but rather a strange phenomena of the memory. He said it had never been studied scientifically because it was impossible to induce deja vu.
"That's one thing that's kind of funny about them," Simpson said of dejuvu experiences. "You have them, and then when they are gone they are really gone."
Out satpurkha Kaur of the Ardra Foundation, 10 E. Ninth St., disagrees. Kaur has taught Yoga for 22 years and now works to develop and rediscover natural intuitive skills and human energy. She said she saw dua as kind of a spark of spiritual reality.
"it's kind of a multi-dimensional
occurrence that brings the past into the present moment or even the future moment into the present, * she said.
She said her studies of space and time led her to explain deja vu with time.
'My feeling is that deja vu is slipping into the present time, the now," she said.
Tom Allison, Hutchinson senior, said he has experienced deja vu and considered its mystic possibilities.
"I have had brief experiences but nothing about how I could win money or anything," he said. "I have heard it expressed as a certain clear knowledge of what will happen — as just a strong awareness. I will not believe in it until unless I can test it in some kind of rigorous way, but I will not dismiss it either."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MARCH 3, 1993 PAGE 9
KU Life
Issues and trends at the University of Kansas.
calendar
WEIRD
Lead Story
On Feb. 5, police in Tallahassee, Fla., charged Sean David McDonald and Kristen Elizabeth Tice, both 20, with disorderly conduct after police spotted the couple engaged in sexual intercourse while dancing at a night-club. Police said McDonald had his pants down and that about 100 patrons were watching. McDonald told police he did not even know the woman's name, but had merely asked her to dance. One week earlier, police in Calgary, Alberta, were called to a shopping mall at 4 p.m. to disentangle a copulating couple in front of Norm's Ski Hut.
Cliches come to life
- In January, Mission Control in Cape Canaveral, responding to a sensor alarm, scolded the space shuttle Endeavor astronauts to please remember to put the toilet seat down.
One teenager was killed and four were wounded in an explosion at a Chevron oil storage facility in September in Sherman, Texas. The boys had trespassed onto the top of a large tank, removed a manhole-type cover, peered inside and, when they couldn't see anything, lit a match for illumination.
In September at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility near Lucasville, electrician Charles Bobst suffered burns by performing electrical shocks while doing routine maintenance on the electric chair.
People with Too Much Time on Their Hands
Last summer, the cable television company that serves Columbia, S.C., aimed a camera full time at an aquarium to occupy a vacant
Continued on Page 10.
10
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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--channel, which was awaiting the September start-up of the Science-Fiction Channel. When SciFi replaced the "fish channel," complaints were so numerous that the company was forced to find another channel for the aquarium. It now runs 14 hours a day, sharing time with the Bravo channel.
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The Month of March is "Women's History Month"
This year's theme "DISCOVER A NEW WORLD: WOMEN'S HISTORY" invites you to discover not only the world of people and events that have been neglected in the traditional telling of history, but also the "new world" of your own life, one you are touched by the knowledge of women's history.
The Commission on the Status of Women recognizes the courageous women of the past who have dared to forge new roads and who have helped to create a world where future possibilities are limitless.
KU LIFE
Commission on the Status of Women is a student group funded by Student Senate
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA $ ^{\mathrm{N}} $
Continued from Page 9.
WEIRD
Mayor Walter Tucker III in Compton, Calif., proposed last fall that a local apartment house in which George and Barbara Bush lived for six months in 1949 be made into a national landmark. At the time of the mayor's proposal the apartment house
was a crack house.
Undignified Deaths
- In September, a 22-year-old lifeguard in Towson, Md., drowned apparently while trying to match a friend's feat of swimming two laps underwater on one breath of air.
1993 Universal Press Syndicate
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
11
Swimmers prepare for Big Eight meet
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
Men seeking end to'Huskers hold on league
A. G. R. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Senior Zhawn Stevens practices in Robinson Natatorium. The Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships begins today in Oklahoma City. The Kansas men's team is hoping to end Nebraska's 13-year reign as conference champion. The women's team is the defending Big Eight champion.
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Bad memories are sometimes hard to forget.
Senior swimmer Zhawn Stevens remembers how muscommunication in the 400-yard medley relay at last year's Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships probably cost the Jayhawks the con-ference championship.
Officials said Stevens dove into the pool to swim the breaststroke portion of the relay before Tim Cormineh finished the backstroke portion.
"There was a big dispute because I thought Tim had touched the wall when dove in, but the official said he didn't," Stevens said.
Kansas was disqualified in the event and ended up losing the meet by 17 points. The disqualification was a 26 point turnaround that catapulted the Huskers to a 13th consecutive conference championship.
The Jayhawks hope to end the Nebraska strangle hold on the conference title this weekend at the 61st annual Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships in the Aquatics Center at Oklahoma City Community College.
Last summer, Kansas swimming coach Gary Kemp sent a letter to team members that said to forget what happened in the past.
"I said the longer we live in the past, the longer it's going to take to recover," Kempf said. "We need to be ready when we get another opportunity."
Stevens recovered from the disqualification at last year's Big Eight Championships and won the 200 individual medley and swam a leg on the victorious 200 medley relay team.
This year, he will swim the 200 breaststroke, 200 individual medley, 400 medley relay, 200 medley relay and 800 freestyle relay.
Swimmers are allowed to swim only three individual events and four relays at the conference championships.
*Gary tries to pick events that we're good in that are on different days so
we can get a rest," Stevens said. "These events that I'm swimming in are the ones I have been focusing on all year."
Kemp visits this weekend's conference meet as a two-team battle between his squad and Coach Cal Bentz's Nebraska squad.
"We're going down here to battle Nebraska for the championship, not for second place," he said. "We got an even chance on a even playing field."
Nebraska, which defeated Kansas
"You can never ask for any more than that."
138-105 on Feb. 6 in Lincoln, returns two defending individual champions in sophomore Dong Humphrey and junior Jonathan Kerr.
Humphrey won the 200 and 500 freestyle titles, and Kerr won the 200 backstroke title.
Stevens, though, was not impressed with the 'Huskers swimmers when Kansas faced their last month.
they had some guys step forward for them in the dual meet victory," he said. "But looking at it as a whole, we have the potential to beat them."
Women hope to continue season's success
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf knew before this season that he had 16 returning veterans from last season's Big Eight Conference women's championship team. Kansas was expected to defend its conference championship.
But the presence of two freshmen have helped make the Jayhawks one of the top teams in the nation.
Katie Chapeau and Donna Christensen, who have stepped into areas that concerned Kempf at the beginning of the season, have helped the Jayhawks to an undefeated dual meet record and their best season in 10 years.
In 1983, Kansas finished seventh at the NCAA Championships.
The Jayhawks hope to continue their success at the 20th annual Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships. The event runs from today through Saturday at the Aquatics Center at Oklahoma City Community College.
"They have both established themselves as impact athletes," Kempf said. "Both of them had to learn the ropes, as most freshmen do in the beginning, but both of them have stepped forward to become a vital part of this team."
Christensen was a junior national finalist in high school in the 200- and 400-yard individual medley, but her personal best performance of this year came in the 200 butterfly, with a time of 2.05.55, in the season opening
2
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
swimming
and diving
championships
BIG8 CONFERENCE
meet against Missouri.
"I was hoping to come into this season and get some personal best times," she said. "The time in the 200 fly surprised me a lot and made me realize I was becoming a good 200 flier."
Christensen said that the 200 freestyle was her best event, with a season best time of 1.52.50 in the meet against Southern Methodist.
"Donna was one swimmer we knew that could come in and swim a number of events for us," Kemp said.
Kempf brought in Chapeau to help improve the Jayhawks in the backstroke events. Her performances in this year have brought praise from Kempf.
"Katie is one of the best backstrokers in the nation without a doubt," he said. "She came in with faster times and any backstrokers we ever had."
Chapeau's fastest time in the 100 backstroke, 55.87 seconds, came in the 152-148 dual meet victory against Southern Methodist.
"The time came as a shock to me because it was a dual meet against a great team," she said.
Jayhawk seniors to play final home game tonight
Both Chapeau and Christiansen said they feel that they have been able to fit in with a veteran cast. They have also been able to be a part of a program that has achieved an undefeated dual meet record, a top 10 ranking and the program's 100th dual meet victory.
"We've come out and proved we are one of the best teams in the nation," Chapeau said.
By David Dorsey
ansan sportswriter
The Kansas seniors — guards Adolis Jordan and Rex Walters and center Eric Pauley, will play their final home game at 7:30 tonight in Allen Field House.
The No. 8 Kansas basketball team will try to avoid a regular-season sweep by Nebraska. With a victory against the Cornhuskers, the Jayhawks, 22-5 overall and 9-3 in the Big Six Conference, can clinch the conference championship and avoid a must-win situation this weekend at Oklahoma State.
A loss would give Oklahoma State, 5 in the conference, a chance to tie the Jayhawks for the championship Sunday at Stillwater, Okla. The Cowboys' loss Monday night at Oklahoma knocked them out of contention for sole claim to the title.
The Jayhawks shared the conference title with Oklahoma State in 1991 and won it last season. The Kansas seniors said the Jayhawks do not want to share the championship with anyone this year.
"They're not going to give up." Jonan said of the Cornhuskers. "I think it's going to be a good game, and hope the grove will get into it."
Pauley, who did not play Feb. 22 at Iowa State after he injured his left
knee during pregame warmups, will be back in the starting lineup tonight. Sophomore center Greg Oertagt started for Pauley during Saturday's victory against Colorado, but the senior said his condition had improved.
Since Roy Williams has been coach at Kansas, seniors traditionally start their final home game.
"The pain is almost all gone," Pauley said. "Coach Williams has got me going for more than half the practice just to get it back in shape. I should be all right."
Nebraska, 19-8 overall and 7-5 in the conference, defeated Kansas 68-64 on Feb. 7 in Lincoln, Neb. The Comhuskers are led by junior guard Eric Piatkowski, who averages 16.3 points a game. Senior center Derrick Chandler leads the team in rebounding, averaging eight a game, and is second in scoring with 11 points a game.
onds.
Walters had a chance to tie the last game against the 'Huskers on the Jayhawks' second to last possession, but his driving, pull-up jumper did not fall. On the Jayhawks' final possession of the game Walters turned the ball over, and Nebraska freshman forward Terrance Badgett ended the game with an open-court slam dunk.
"In certain situations I didn't perform the way that I wanted to," Walters said. "During the game, I lost my focus. I made the right move, but I got bothered by Derrick Chandler coming up and rejecting one of my shots. I was unsure of exactly what I wanted to do. That's not going to happen again.
Kansas coach Roy Williams refused to blame Walters, but Walters said he made a mistake during the final sec-
"I can live with us losing a game and me taking the blame for missing a shot. But I expect more out of myself."
The seniors said they wanted to leave the field house on a high note. Pauley said that last season's loss to the University of Texas El-Paso in the second-round of the NCAA Tournament still haunts the memories of his two-year Kansas basketball career. He said he did not know how he would react to tonight's final home appearance.
"It's easy for me to say now that it's just another game," he said. "The heartbreak of last year's tournament still rests in my mind. We want to finish up strong and do well enough to put that our of our memories."
Though tickets for tonight's game were printed with a 7:00 tipoff, the game will start at 7:30.
COURTSIDE:
Kansas Jayhawks
Head Coach: Roy Williams
record: 22 - 5, (9 - 3)
game
28
Nebraska Cornhuskers
Head Coach: Danny Nee
record: 19 - 8 (7 - 5)
Game time
Tonight at 7:30 p.m.
Allen Field House
Nebraska's
probable starters:
Guard
Eric Platkowski
6' 7" - junior
Forward
Terrance Badgett
6' 6" - freshman
Forward
Bruce Chubick
6' 7" - junior
Center
Derrick Chandler
6' 10" - senior
Guard
Jamar Johnson
6' 0" - junior
Kansas'
probable
starters:
Guard
30 Adonis Jordan
5' 11" - 170 - senior
Guard
23 Rex Walters
6' 4" - 190 - senior
Forward
32 Darrin Hancock
6' 7" - 205 - junior
Center
51 Eric Pauley
6' 10" - 230 - senior
Forward
34 Richard Scott
6' 7" - 215 - junior
Coverage
radio: 105.9 FM KLZR
TV: Prime Sports
Dave Campbell / KANP
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12
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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — If Coach Bobby Bowie wanted to do all in his power to get Florida State its first national championship, he probably would have turned down an offer to play Kansas in the Kickoff Classic.
Florida State returns 16 starters from a 10-1 club that doesn't need the game to be No. 1 in 1993. If the Seminoles beat Kansas on Aug. 28 at Giants Stadium, it was expected. If they lose, they can say goodbye to No. 1.
-
There will be a MANDATORY MEETING on MONDAY, MARCH 8TH @ 7:30pm in 115 Robinson. NOTE:
Entries are accepted on a first come first serve basis beginning 8:30 am until 4:00pm on Tues., March 9th & Wed., march 10th.
Team managers not attending the meeting will not be allowed to sign up until Wed., March 10th beginning @ 2:00 pm
Intramural 3 ON3 BASKETBALL
"We had one guy play nearly every minute the last three years and now he's gone," Mason said. "So we have to find a quarterback."
Junior Matt Delargy, who converted the penalty kick, said the Jayhawks started out well by sticking to the basics.
"Money has become a factor," said
Bowden admits that taking the paycheck and playing an improving Kansas program is going to make his team's tough schedule a little tougher. Besides the usual ACC opponents and Kansas, Florida State also has non-conference games with Florida, Miami and Notre Dame.
By Blake Spurney Kansan sportswriter
Sophomore Brian Dix struck early
The Kansas rugby club's collegiate team scored on a last minute penalty kick to edge Tulsa University Saturday at Tulsa in its first game of the spring season.
Seminoles in Kickoff for cash
The operators of the Kickoff Classic also announced that the game will continue to be played at Giants Stadium through the year 2000.
Florida State gambles against improving Kansas football team
The Seminoles have posted a 63-9 mark the past six years, finishing in the Top 5 each time. The team has made 11 straight postseason bowl appearances, winning 10.
Collegiate rugby team beats Tulsa
Two of three Kansas club teams win as season opens on the road
The Associated Press
Kansas coach Glen Mason, who has transformed Kansas into a respectable program in five seasons, sounded excited about playing Florida State.
They're Back... West Coast Saloon presents
"We're going to pay some bills," Bowden said yesterday at a news conference to promote the game.
"The only negatives I've heard from our campus is from the seniors who won't be around to play in the game," Mason said.
Bowden, whose team is guaranteed a minimum of $625,000 for playing in the college football's season opener.
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Many of the players on Kansas' three rugby teams are beginners. The senior reserve team, which comprises alumni and students, and the club side, which is only alumni, also played in Tulsa.
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Even though Delargy said that Kansas was lucky to come away with a victory, he added that the team was invited to start the season with a victory.
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The club won 32-8, and the senior reserves fell 12-3.
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However, the Jayhawks made the right plays in the clutch to set up Delarve's penalty kick.
"We made all the tackles when it counted," he said.
said.
for Kansas when he ran in a five-point try. A try is similar to a touchdown in football in that the player scores when he crosses the goal line with the ball. The two-point conversion kick failed after Dix's score.
Tulsa came back and took the lead in the second half while Kansas'
Prizes & Giveaways, and $1.00 Shots!! Friday March 5th
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Later in the half, the Jayhawks scored again when sophomore Hayden Krizman ran in another try, and Delargy converted the kick.
Sophomore Colin Gotham scored the Jayhawks' final try early in the second half before Tulsa began a scoring barrage. Once again the kick went wide.
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"Defensively, we were flat," Delargy
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25 yr. old single white female grad student. Attractive, easy-singing, and fun. Would like to meet other graduate student or mature young men. Some who like KU Basketball but still enjoy an occasional play or visit art institute also like nice, sincere, young man. Call 801-2939.
Bi SWP 2, non-drinker, smokes occasionally, but smokes. Looking for unique female girls and cute guys ages 20-24 who like to go dancing and live music. Ask for a friend with trayware number. 20/41
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2. You'll place an and in the Jaytak Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ag runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Aycock named all-conference
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
Everybody knows it's coming, but nobody has figured out how to stop it.
Angela Aycock takes a pass on the left wing and faces the basket. She fakes to the middle and dribbles to the left, stopping after one or two dribbles and launching a short jump shot.
This season, the sophomore forward's sweet spot has been the left side. In the last four games, she has taken just one shot from the right side of the court.
"I didn't realize that," she said. "It's not planned. It just happens."
The Big Eight Conference coaches named Aycock to the All-Big Eight first team which was released yesterday. Her teammates and coaches already know her value to the team.
"She's been one of the key players for this team," said Kansas coach Marian Washington.
She will continue to be an important cog in the Jayhawks' machine as Kansas prepares for the Big Eight Tournament in Salina. The Jayhawks, 18-8 overall and 9-5 in the conference, will play Missouri at 2 p.m. Saturday in the first round at the Bicentennial Center.
Aycock is averaging 16 points and 6.6 rebounds a game. She also leads Kansas in steals, free throws and minutes played. She has improved in almost every statistical category this season from her freshman season.
But for Aycock, achieving team goals is more important than individual accolades.
"Coach and I talked about my role on the team and how I have to be a team player," she said. "Whatever I do has to be team-oriented."
Aycock has developed into one of the Jayhawks' leaders after adjusting to college basketball last season. Aycock, a tri-captain along with senior guard Shannon Kite and junior guard Michelle Leathers, has had to take a stronger role with the young Jayhawks although it is just her second year with the program.
"I don't look at it as taking it on all myself," Aycock said. "I look at it as 'you got my back and I got yours.'"
highly recruited out of high school and were expected to make an immediate impact.
Aycock has helped freshman guard Charisse Sampson adjust to college basketball. The two share a similar basketball background. Both were
Aycock said the pressure she put on herself was more than anybody else did.
"Coach told me last year, 'you can only do so much.'" Avcock said.
only observes him. Sampson, like Aycock last year, has shown some inconsistency in her freshman season.
Angie told me she's been through many of the same things," Sampson said. "She's always there for me. People are lucky to know her. She's a great player and a great person."
For Aycock, many goals remain,
including a trip to the Final Four.
"It may take a couple of years, but we'll get there," she said. "Also, we want to get recognized as a powerhouse team. Advancing to the Final Four would open those doors for us."
sampson and junior center Lisa Tate were also named to the All-Big Eight team as honorable mention selections. Sampson is averaging 12.2 points and 5.1 rebounds a game. Tate is averaging 9.3 points and 8.4 rebounds and leads the conference with 74 blocked shots.
NOTE:
Aycock improving
Averages per game 01.02.03
Angela Aycock has led the Kansas women's basketball team to an 18 - 8 record. Here are her stats from her first two seasons. The 6-foot-2 forward was named to the All-Big Eight team yesterday.
Points 10.3 16.0
Rebounds 5.2 6.6
Assists 1.3 2.1
Steals 1.8 2.9
F.G. % 48 47
F.T. % 63 68
Minutes 24.7 31.5
102
Angela Aycock
Source: Kansas Sports Information
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
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KU CRIMSON CREW
Get involved with the University and the Football program by participating in the 1993-94 Crimson Crew.
ku
This is a great experience for anyone interested in Public Relations, Communications, Marketing, or other related fields.
All interested freshmen, sophomores, and juniors are asked to attend an informational meeting in room 135 Parrott Athletic Center:
CAR REPAIR ISN'T
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THURSDAY, MARCH 4 AT 5 P.M.
- Any questions? Call the Football Office at 864-3393
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14
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bill may end anonymous AIDS test
KDHE proposal would eliminate test at Watkins
By Vickl Bode
Kansanstaff writer
Anonymous AIDS testing may not be offered at Watkins Memorial Health Center next semester, despite the large demand for such tests.
State-funded anonymous AIDS tests, like those conducted at Watkins, will be eliminated if a bill proposed by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment is passed by the Legislature this year, said Sally Finney, director of the AIDS section at the department.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said the number of students
tested at Watkins increased after Magic Johnson announced in 1991 that he had tested positive for HIV, the virus that causes acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
Last semester, students had to wait four weeks to get an appointment for an anonymous test, Yockey said. In December, Watkins increased the anonymous testing hours from a half-day on Mondays to a full day.
"Students can now make an appointment within a week," he said.
Watkins' staff does not think the elimination of the anonymous test would be a problem, said Patty Dunn, a registered nurse at Watkins.
Dunn said Watkins was one of 45 sites in Kansas that was financed by the state and would be affected by the bill. If anonymous testing is eliminated, Watkins will continue to offer confidential testing.
"I think people will feel comfortable
coming in and seeing a nurse using their real names," Dunn said.
Vockey said some students were confused about the difference between confidential testing and anonymous testing.
If students are tested anonymously, they use a false name and return to Watkins two weeks later for the test results. The anonymous tests are sent to a state laboratory.
In confidential testing, students use their real names, but the medical record cannot be released without the students' written authorization. Confidential test results are returned four days later, he said. Confidential tests are analyzed at Watkins.
Finney said that information on all positive anonymous test results were forwarded to the department of health and environment, but that the department could not reach the HIV-positive people because they had
used false names.
Eliminating anonymous testing would allow the department to help those who test positive, she said. "We want to be able to contact the person who tested positive so we can offer counseling and assistance with notifying their partners." she said.
Some legislators have received the bill favorably, Fimney said. If the proposal is passed by the Legislature, it will go into effect July 1.
The department surveyed other states that eliminated anonymous testing and found the number of people tested did not decrease. Finney said. The proposal designated five sites in Kansas that would continue anonymous AIDS testing, but Watkins was not one of them.
Yockey said Watkins' staff conducted about eight anonymous tests each week and four confidential tests every day.
Condoms are a pain for some people
Kansan staff writer
By Vicki Bode
Condoms have become the birth control method recommended most by medical professionals, but some people find using a condom irritating.
Some men and women are allergic to latex, the material in condoms, said Candye Waitley, health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
to something upon contact."
"Some people are allergic to the latex on the condoms, but many of them just experience irritation," Wattley said. "An allergy is a real reaction
An allergic reaction often includes hives and breathing difficulties, she said.
Janine Demo, health educator at Watkins, said that 1 to 3 percent of the U.S. population was allergic to latex.
"If a woman is allergic, the man can
Waitley said a nonlatex condom had been developed and should be on the market soon after it is approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Until then, people sensitive to latex still can use a condom and avoid the allergic reaction, she said.
use a latex condom and wear a lamb skin one on top of the latex one." Wattley said. "This seems to work for women."
If the man has the allergy, the lambskin can be worn under the latex, she said.
Lambskin protects against pregnancy but not against sexually transmitted diseases, Waitley said. The use of both the latex and lambskin is effective.
Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins, said the more that people were exposed to a substance the more like
ly they were to develop an allergy to it. However, he said, he had not treated many people who were allergic to latex condoms.
"Many times the person is actually allergic to the spermicide on the condom," he said.
Allergies to latex and spermicide are not serious, he said. The reactions clear up quickly. He said fear of allergy was no reason to avoid using condoms.
"There is not any other good alternative to protect yourself against sexually transmitted diseases," Buck said.
II
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A representative from Herff Jones will be present to assist you with your selection.
Jayhawk Bookstore
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd., Lawrence, KS 66044
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Christine Takada
Aide to Governor Edgar of Illinois
"Asian American Empowerment"
Thursday
March 4, 1993
Dyche
Auditorium
7:30pm
in
Conjunction
with the
Asian American
Festival
Presented by the
Asian American Stu-
dent Union,
Student Senate,
& The Office of
Minority Affairs
CALL 864-SHOW CALL 864-SHOW
• THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
IN A TOWN LIKE TWIN PEAKS
NO ONE IS INNOCENT.
DVD BY DAVID LYNCH
TWIN PEAKS
FIRE WALK WITH ME
SCHOOL TIES
WED., MARCH 3 AT 7:00
THURS., MARCH 4 AT 7:00 & 9:30
AND SAT., MARCH 6 AT 4:00
FRIDAY, MAR. 5 7 & 9:30 PM
SATURDAY, MAR. 6 7 & 9:30 PM
SUNDAY, MAR. 7 2:00 PM
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.50
SUA MOVIES SUA MOVIES SUA
CALL 864-SHOW CALL 864-SHOW
• THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
IN A TOWN LIKE TWIN PEAKS
NO ONE IS INNOCENT.
ATM BY DAVID LYNCH
TWIN PEAKS
FIRE WALK WITH ME
SCHOOL TIES
WED., MARCH 3 AT 7:00
THURS., MARCH 4 AT 7:00 & 9:30
AND SAT., MARCH 6 AT 4:00
FRIDAY, MAR. 5 7 & 9:30 PM
SATURDAY, MAR. 6 7 & 9:30 PM
SUNDAY, MAR. 7 2:00 PM
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $8 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.5
STA
STA TRAVEL
STA STUDENTTRAVEL
STA TRAVEL 1-800-777-0112
the world's largest student & youth travel organization.
Classified Directory
200s
LLODG Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansas will not knowingly accept any as verification for housing or employment that discriminates against persons or grounds personal or economic benefits to a person from nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation of advertising.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advice provided by us are made absolutely based on
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is送到 the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes employment discrimination based on race, religion, color, sex, handi-facility, status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, imitation or decorr call: 814-2454. Headquarters:
Suicide Intervention If you’re thinking about someone or are concerned about someone you call: 814-2454 or 1419 8149. Headquarters Command:
100s Announcements
XI
110 Bus. Personals
Bausch & Lomb Ray Bana Ban & Vuimet-France
Sunglasses
The Eic. Shop
69 Mass. 451-001
Loose up to 30 lbs in 30 days for $80, 100% Guarantee
25C DRAWS
WEDNESDAY
It Could Only Happen at ...
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO • 843-9273
A Campus Tradition Since 1919
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon-Fri 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11.30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon-Fri 4.30 p.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 11 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sun 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
*Computer Students*
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Morning Star Pet Care
Pet Care
15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
Current K. U.I.D. Required
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
VISA 842-9979
3D0s
Merchandise
1 Mile East of Johnny's
FITNESS FREAKS
LOSE FAT GET STRONGER
FOR FREE. By helping your
friends do the same
WE DID IT!!!
My name is Jennifer Brehm, a junior in AZD,
and my friend Lee and I have lost 21 lbs. and over
6" between us "without dieting." We both look
and feel great and because of our results we
have started our own part time business. We now
get paid to be in great shape and hang around
with athletes because we can get you "dudes"
stronger than!!
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Meccaniculous
370 Want to Buy
Spring Break quad eventency. Daytime beach.
Beach volleyball, basketball, swim, frisbee,
football, tennis. K13-85 699-3290
If you want to feel great,
lose your fat and inches or
get stronger before Spring
Break--CALL US NOW!
Call Jennifer, Lee, Tom or Greg at 1-800-955-2524
120 Announcements
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
FEMALE SUBJECTS FOR STUDY ON SIBLINGS OF SEXUAL ABUSE
130 Entertainment
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
SURVIVING QUANTUMICARE Call Tatmani 86-359-2100
For anonymity info and support for ADSN contact
www.quantumicare.com
SEXUAL ABUSE
SURVIVORS
story idea? 864-4810
Live Comedy
Wednesday March 3
Featuring David Naster
from the Fox 101
Morning Show
AT
BENCHWARMERS
50 cent draws
BENCHWARMERS
MILLHAUS NIXONS and THE WAKE AT
Thursday March 4
25 Cent Draws
Friday March 5
2 FOR 1
WELL DRINKS
Coming Attractions
Soul Shaker
Thursday March 11
Love Squad w/
August Red
Friday March 12
L.A. Ramblers
Saturday March 13
AT
BENCHWARMERS
140 Lost & Found
LAST - Russian style hat. Brown leather w/ black
brown. ENRARD? 863-1898
Last gold camp at Allen Fieldhouse. High sensitiv
ment value. Call Todd 904-1835. I Howard and
Simon.
LOSST. Black leather day planner. Very important addresses inside. REWARD! Lost last week. In Wrexor it 4 floor or by auditorium. If found please call 832-2711.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
SPRING/SUMMER OPENINGS
*10-40 hr, weekly*Flexible around classes*
*$10 to save*Call 842-763-9022
SUMMER CUPPING PORTIONS IN NY, PA,
MASS & MAINE. Need skills in Tennis,
Gymnastics, Equestrian, Baseball, Basketball,
Soccer, Beach Soccer, Lacrosse, Canoeing,
Volleyball, Dance, Ceramics, Ceramics,
Ceramics, Fitness, Dance, Piano, Guitar,
Ropering/Ropering, Nurses, Food Service,
Ultramarine, Upland Sports.
ALASKA BUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Inherits
Earn $1900 + week in employment or $4,000 + $0 on
fishing boats. Free transportation! Room/site/
Board! Make or Furnish employment package
on request.
AND if it happens to a small group you with a 10% coverage rate of lack of assurance, then it will stay in the same area and join the other areas.
Baby after one or two afternoons a week, occasion at average 1.yr, old girl, 4.yr old hair after 1.yr. Requests required, 3pm after 4.9m
Business Readiness, internship program that offers great resume experience, money and future business employment connections
C# 6.0/1977
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
1
part-time/temporary position: the KU Printer Service is taking applications for work assisting in UDK press production. Hours are 7 to 19 each morning the day of application and per day Apply at the KU Printer Service or call Payne DAY434. 841E.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teen, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water sports, gymnastics, horseback riding, outdoor camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $109 more or less. Mail to SEGER 783 Maple, NIL, IL 60093-784-4444.
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
staff, mountain guides, campers for Mountain Summer Camp, Box 711, Boulder, CO 80303 (303) 422-4557
Child care needed some afternoons. Light housew
need. Need care, references. 841-7036 evenings.
staff-childs's camps/northeast-tal salary,
winter camp, camp activities in one of the following activities: archery, baseball, basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama, dances, drumming, field basketball, football, golf, guitars, handwriting.
juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, biology, ballet, tennis, sailing, basketball, sea tennis, track, waterski, weights, wood. Support staff-kitchen steward; workers, bakers, cooks, servers; beach volleyball. Men call or write: Camp Winadu. 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10341-948-386. Women call Jennifer Wheelner at 841-267-5280.
Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience preferred. Mail resume to Wakarusas Partners. P.O. Box 1761, Lawrence
Full-time position opening for Employment Training Specialist working with adults and older adolescents who have severe and persistent mental illness. Requires a bachelor's degree or equivalent, working with special populations in a vocational setting or a B.A. in a social service field, business, or medical field. Requires long-term mental illness. Looking for strong public relation skills strong written and interpersonal communication skills, and team involvement. Applicants should possess an undergraduate degree of Dale Creme of Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 212, Lawrence, Kansas 60044, by march 8, 2018. EOE: Bachelor's degree or equivalent. Social Services Officer (5.0-7.9 per/hr) Any interest should attend an organizational meeting March 8, 19果 at 8:00pm in 151 Robbinson Hammond
Jacque's Restaurant and Ultimate Sports Bar is seeking wait staff, dishwashers, and cooks. Apply in person between Iamn and 4pm. M.A at 102, Westridge Shopping Center, 8th and Kasidan.
Help Wanted
FARN CASH ON THE SPOT
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BIOMEDICALCENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Line up your summer job here. We are currently hiring a crew for 1963 harvest, starting in May. Only drug-free, nonsmoking individuals need apply. Call 913-525-6326. Nagele Combining Inc
MARKETING INTERNSPHIL - Part time now- full time this summer. New progressive Printing Co. has a ambitions self-starter for commissioned printers. Apply in person, all Vermont. 8:30-14:30 M-F.
Models needed pro $175-300/day & TV/FM
extra 30% $225/day for Rutgers International hair show in Kansas City Males and Females. Must be available 9/1-3/21周 If interested call Dual Chester
families, $$, and one year exp. TREASURED
Nomination for 2014 $35K Nominee.
Nomina positions available
Namies positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii, summer/ryer, Great Pacific.
Naismith Hall KA applications for Fall 1993 are now available at the front desk. All interested students may apply. Application fee is $250 per VC. We offer great families, $$, and one year exp. TREASURED
Nanny positions available nationwide including
maximum summer /yr. Great pay. Free travel
b1-624-6345
The KU Department of Student Housing announces Scholarship Hall Director (SHD) vacancies for 1994-99. The SHD holds a 75%, live-in faculty position in the department, has balanced diet by purchasing food items for residents, coordinate physical maintenance, and help with development of a cooperative academic community. Required qualification is a degree or demonstrated experience, or two years of non-semester experience, group life.
SCHOLARSHIP HALL DIRECTOR
Fart time Secretarial position. Must have Maitin-
cy training and must have 30 hours of experience
available from May 1. Fart hours are:
3:00-4:00 Time; Tues. no to 3:00 Wed. plus
4:00 Thurs. no to 5:00 Fri. Fart hours.
Treasor, 3300 Clinton Park Ct., Lawrence, RS
98237.
taking no more than 9 hrs. per semester; group living preference. Preferred experience: Experience in menu planning, food preparation, budget management, customer service, facilitation skills and ability to assist
in development of a supportive academic/sociopetalive atmosphere for new first-year staff. A furnished apartment including utilities is provided as well as the necessary furniture and appliances are eligible for KU staff tuition rates. The tenants are required to pay.
through May 31, 1994 with the possibility for renewal for the following academic year. To Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining your plans to attend and three letters of reference to the KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W.11th, Lawrence, KS 65045. Applications must be posthumously by April 1, 1993. EOE #68385.
Students need to work w/ young child w/ autism.
Initial training required. Possible independent study credit/employment over summer. Call 832-9007.
Students needed to work with young child with autism. Initial training required. Possible independent study credit/summer employment. Call 823-0017.
Tennis juniper-summer in the camps-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Miss candidate Wheeler at 841-6600. Morn call or write Wheeler L, Mainero, Manaranco, N.Y. 10643 (441) 841-5883
Fultor needed for English 415 children's literature with prof. wolf. L424-818 leave maus sense.
Waterfront Job-WSL summer children's camp-marathon-beat men and women who can teach children to swim, coach wunt team, waterksal (sailboat) training and boat safety, pool and lakes. Good salary, job & board, travel allowance. Call m or write. Camp Winada, 5-8, 9am-6pm. Camp Winada, 10am-6pm. 9:30am-5:30pm. 9:30am-6:30pm. 10:30am-5:30pm. 9:30am-6:30pm. 10:30am-6:30pm. 9:30am-6:30pm. 10:30am-6:30pm. 9:30am-6:30pm. 10:30am-6:30pm. 9:30am-6:30pm.
Emergent, ambivalent person needed to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during school year, full-time during summer. Send resume to Lither Luther Church, 148 New Hamshire Lawn, KS 60044. Deadline 09/13.
225 Professional Services
N. Deskbook Publishing Hermann, Cover Letters,
brochures, Flies, Paper, Tapes, Newspapers,
FREE MONEY for school visit including Financial
scholarship and student loan repayment.
BASL No. 299 Bax 1309 XK 85683
Make your modeling dream come true
Model Perspective photography. Call Rochie 841
708-322-1605
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcoholoffenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The lawoffices of
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16:13th 842-1133
The law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Operations manager at LA Lawrence Catholic Student Center. Duties include supervising staff, monitoring the budget and the annual fund, and overseeing all administrative operations of the center by March 15 to Search Committee St. Lawrence Center. 1631 Crescent Road, Lawrence KS. 60444
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Promo Photo and Headshots & B&W Darkroom Fast Service. First Light Photography #414-8234
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 834-4023
235 Typing Services
i/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
uphs job, Call Paq 749-4648
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms text into accurate pages of letters and numbers. 93-205
**AFFORDABLE TYPEING & EDITING.** Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 hrs.
*Tuition Tutoring avail. near campus. Lowest rates in
town.* 833-1796.
Expert typing by experienced secretary. IBM Corp.
Expert typing by experienced secretary. IBM Corp.
Eastawrence Call Mrs. Martin 84129 - 1219
**PRING SALE 50,000 + files for $25 20,000 men**
**Psychologist - Lawrence Ontario**
**429.728 91.8**
*
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Chair
No calls AFTER 9pm. 843-8568
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations,
transcription, and other materials. Masters Degree; 841-6234
Masters Degree; 841-6234
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
graphic presentations, raw review and paper,
reviews, articles.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1991 Burton Snowboards, BurtonAir Aird, like
a mountain bike, retention leashes, and
calling: Call 832-04-80.
CABLE DESCRAMBLEMS! Fight high costs with this innovative bank's hands-on training. Send $10 for complete manual, plans, and parts list to Advanced Industries, P.O. Box 21347, Corpus Christi, TX 78905.
Diet Magic
Helped Me Lose
over 50 LBS!
Ask me bow!
100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Call now to start losing those
(913) 841-3432
MasterCard
For Sale. Laptop coat full length and navy (interview suit) suit. 4" Cale. 487-74832 leave message
IMM compatibility 288, 40 mg hard drive, 5.25 floppy drive, mouse, keyboard & brand new monitor, keyboard. Must have MS Windows 10. Must jailbird 1666 Ford LDT. Red P. S. P.W. $1200 Cal. BQ 841-7583 1.0 on fpm.
Furniture on Consignment Used Waterbeds + Futons
WANTED
Let us sell your
Furniture for you on
Consignment
Bobbi's Bedroom
842-7378
Used Book Sale, March 12-14 Metcalf Shopping
Center, 1530 W. 67th St; American Associa-
tion University Women's
340 Auto Sales
VISA
1800 Citation for sale, Runs well, $75 O.B.O. Contact Traxiv at 184-6560
**88 Subaru DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/FM Cass**
**Winter car BMW, winter Car" Call 843-4524 Leave**
**Phone**
Wanted: 1-3 tickets for Adam Sandler March 6
Call 842-5274
*e our tickets to Adam Sandler this Saturday night*
Will pay $9.90 plus for each. @ 844-8517
1988 Mazda 625 GT. Power everything, 4 door.
1988 Mazda 3000 Mustel $901 call 642-906-826
Wanted: Keyboard for Tandy 1000SX personal computer. 841-4821
405 For Rent
WANTED LEVIS S'50 JEANS WE PAY UP TO 10.00 also buy Jean Jackets. 841-646-046
370 Want to Buy
*Bd Mrs. near campus, Fully furry, W/D/C(A),
*dw. micro, Spiral Marina, litter mid-Ang
Mug. W/D/C(A), floral, potted plant.*
400s Real Estate
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Ouail Creek
Bird
2111 Kasold843-4300
SUNSHINE CITY
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3, &4 Bedroom TownHomes
SUNRISE VILLAGE
Microwave Ovens
Bedroom TownHomes Garages: 2% Baths
- Some with Fireplaces
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400 or
841-1287
1900 NAILSHIST 3 & 4 BR 2 Bath. Lg. rooms.
storage variable leases. Operated laundry,
storage variables leases.
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience
Boardwalk
Accommodations
Naismith Place
*Sub. lease to 2 JB. 28% very close to amps.
Avail Now. March rent free. 749-3590
28lR from $35
Jazzuit in neap
Jazzuit in nape
Private batehouses/Paices
Pd cable TV/Phones
Basketball court/park
Outside & 521st Blvd. 64-11-815
Office Hours
0-5pm / 7-9am / 2-5am
Offer Appointments
Large 28lb amt. a block from campus. $160/mo.
1323 Valley Lane. Sublet immediately Mar-
row Street. Roommate responsible, quiet, like living alone.
Pets allowed. Off street parking. Contact Jennifer
LORIMAR TOWN HOMES
All amenities
•Fireplace
•Dishwasher
•Microwave
•Washer/Dryer
•Free Cable
Now accepting
Now accepting applications for Fall 1,2,3 Bedroom
1,2,3 Bedroom
Call Drive 841-7849
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 1. 9% yr.
old, luxury laptops, close to campus. All
microswds, all kitchen set, all kitchen
cabinets, coffee cupboard. Wet insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1166.
3801 Clinton Pkwy
Call Dave 841-7849
-Close to campus
-Spacious 2 bedroom
-Laundry facility
-Swimming Pool
-Waterbed allowed
VILLAGE SQUARE apartment
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
at Aspen Wetland Appartment. 2 BR 1/4
or no pets, water on land, on balcony. 850-290
or no pets, water on land, on balcony.
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Must substitute immediately 2 bdrm. $80 very low
util. central heat/air. Please call 843-609-808
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
Large bedrooms
- Min blinds
- On/off smoke
-Carpets available
1 bedroom $340, $365
2 bedroom $460, $470
3 bedroom $524 $524
km. Wed. 8 Fri.: 12:00-2:00 pm
Tue. 7 Days: 6:00-8:00 am
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS
843-1971
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Available in May. Nice 2 BR aparts in quiet comp-
plex. All kitchen appl., central air, low busi,
use room, & pool. Excellent mgrt & maintenance. No
wetts. $235/mi B41 -8681
611 Michigan Street
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these aps. or August, but if you are in New York and you're browni unfurn, in the new buildings at Hills Park Hills 100 Emery Rd Great ocasion near campus. NO PETS 814-3800 or 814-3900.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 br apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Please call Kelly for appt.
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat
(Next to Benchwarmers)
No Appt Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt..Inc
Now leasing for June & July. Nice, quiet. 2 BMats. low utilities, central air, gas, heat. all kitchen appliances, on the beautiful pool. WWW.MAGICABUFF.COM $32/hr. Spanish Crest Apts. Call 841-6884 for appt
RAINBOW TOWER APTS
Hey! KU Med Students
Enter the Tower
Lifestyle...
Luxury...
Limited Entry...
Convenience...
- Across from KU Med
Studio,1 & 2 bdmpts
* Garage Parking
* Heated Pool, Sauna &
*
- Exercise Room & Clubroom
- Heat and Water Paid
Now Pre-Leasing For Fall
3838 Rainbow Blvd.
831-9363
5 Min. from Downtown & Plaza
Room in historic home on edge of campus Kitchen and laundry room privileges. Vacant now.
South campground location 1801 Maine. Nice 2 bedroom house, hardwood, AC, garage, available April 1. Short or long term lease $500 + deposit, pets negotiable 832-139 by appl. please.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED
Studios,1,2,2+,3&4 bdrm apts...designed with you in
Campus Place-841-1429
HanoverPlace-841-1212
14th & Mass
Orchard Corners-749-4226 15th & Kasold
Regents Court-749-0445 1005 Mass
Orcan
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-241
anglewood-749-2415 10th&Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
842-4455
Spacious 2 bedroom. Summer sublease all-utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3262
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
Park25
*2 Pools
4 Stops on Property 2 Laundry Rooms
- On KU Bus Route with 4 Stops on Property
NAISMITH Hall
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate
*Volleyball Court
Hookups
Some Washer/Dryer
*2 Laundry Rooms
*Some Washer/Dryer
Call or stop by today
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(perry knight)
(no phone)
1800 Naismith Dr
Lawrence, KS
66044
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(sorry no pets)
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1 Idbm in a 4 Idbm, pool 2, bath 819 + butl. to stop apple Lane Orthch Corner Corns B4 834-838
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rvnhone: 864-4358
LOGK-Sociable female nonmoker needed for J
dupla broch. CA, lg bath, lg backdy, DW, great
suit. LGK-COFFEE, lg backdy, DW, great
utilities CHECK US OUT 841-7246 message
quiet, mature, female roommate needed for j
bram. Spanish Crust Apartments Sublease from
April 1- July 31 Rent $135 + $139 Call 604-
Great Deal! 1 Bedroom in old house near campus.
2 Bedroom with share kitchen, bath,
TV VCK, TV unit, pool, sauna.
Female roommate wanted for 1 lbm & 4 lbm
townhouse. leave in house. Close to campus.
Roommate required: 428 sq ft.
large A4B 2 BA furnit iopt. apt, Corner Gardens.
AVAIL ASAP. No dep req. You lease Mar.-Aug. $265
+/ui\t,3 great roommates, privacy, + more fun than any dorm. A85-5199
How to schedule an ad:
Beautiful Ibth near apc university Hardware
Lab, 304 W. 12th St. Must be inibth and Kentucky 642-922-2288
Roommate needed immediately. Great place. It is located from campus at 145/mo. call 814 3865.
Roommate needed to share furnished 4 bdrm apartment; on bus line. Looking for appropriate white shirt.
- in person: 1191 Stairmaster Fifti
* skip by the Station office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepared, cash or check, or charged
by the Station office.
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Single parent would like indie to share domestic
care with their livestock. Terms: Sept.
Apr., 20th. From $150 per month.
Calculating Rates
Roommate needed to share furniture 41drm apartment. . , utilities on bus.路. Looking for a roommate
- phone number: info@yourcompany.com * Activated phone numbers will be locked to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. * Phone Number Seller: Blenet Software
- B Mail: 1191 Stairmaster Fl, Lawrence, NJ 08063
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The University Daly Kansas, 119 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
BELMONT
HOSPITAL
Gus Ferguson: Recipient of the first brain bypass operation.
16
Wednesday, March 3, 1993
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
This is a special paid advertisement to the University Daily Kansan STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Ex-Planned Parenthood president to address abortion controversy
She was named by Business Week as one of the best managers of a non-profit organization in America, and by Money magazine as one of five outstanding Americans who project the forces that will shape our lives in the year 2000.
She is Faye Wattleton, former President of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, and she is coming to KU. Ms. Wattleton will be speaking in the Kansas Union Ballroom on Friday March 5th, at 7:00 in the evening.
"Ms. Wattleton is a dynamic force in the struggle to preserve women's rights," said Margaret Hu, coordinator of SUA's Forums committee. "We're anticipating a terrific event."
Under the leadership of Ms. Wattleton, Planned Parenthood has played a major role in defining the national debate over reproductive rights and in shaping family planning policies of governments worldwide.
Dedicated to the principle that every individual has a fundamental right to choose when or whether to have children, Planned Parenthood has more than 500,000 supporters and 26,000 volunteers and staff members nationwide. Plan n e d Parenthood is now celebrating its 75th year as the nation's largest and oldest voluntary reproductive health organization.
Ms. Wattleton has also helped expand services for women and families. Planned Parenthood provides medical and educational services to four million Americans each year through more than 170 non-profit corporations with nearly 900 clinics in 49 states and the District of Columbia. Planned Parenthood also has an international division that helps meet the family planning needs of women and men in the developing world.
bachelor's degree in nursing from Ohio State University and her master's degree in maternal and infant care, with certification as a nurse-midwife, from Columbia University. She first saw the desperation and suffering that result from unintended pregnancy and illegal, unsafe abortions while working as a nurse in Harlem Hospital in New York City and as a public health administrator.
Ms. Wattleton received her
Those experiences helped establish her commitment to assuring that all individuals, particularly the poor and the young, have access to the full range of reproductive health options.
Ms. Wattleton has received many medals, awards, and a number of honorary doctoral degrees. She has also appeared on various television news programs such as "Good Morning America," "60 Minutes," and "Nightline." Interviews with Ms. Wattleton frequently appear in such national publications as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Time, and Newsweek.
Tickets to see Ms. Wattleton's lecture can be purchased at the SUA Box Office March 3rd through the 5th, and one hour before the lecture. Tickets are one dollar for students with their KU ID, and three dollars for nonstudents. This lecture is co-sponsored by KU Pro-Choice Coalition, Woman in Law, and KU Now.
Ms. Wattleton now lectures on college campuses and speaks before professional and legal organizations concerned with women's rights, civil rights, health care, social service, politics, and religion. She also consults with American business, political leaders and with heads of the state, ambassadors and cabinet ministers in a number of foreign countries on family planning issues.
Soul Asylum at Liberty Hall
The high energy band Soul Asylum will raise the roof of Liberty Hall Theater March 10 for a sold out audience as part of SUA's concert series.
The Minneapolis based foursome have been writing and performing together since the early eighties. They started out in 1981 as a band called Loud Last Rules. In 1986 they emerged as Soul Asylum with their current line-up and released their critically acclaimed full-length album Made to be Broken.
FLUCK
ROCK
Soul Asylum is known for their Funky, ragged-at-theedges brand of rock and roll and their electric live shows. These energetic performances gained them much critical acclaim and prompted Village Voice magazine to dub them "The best live band in America."
Constant touring has earned them a place in the hearts and ears of fans in every major city. Being great friends has helped them to endure the hardships of life on the road.
ABOVE Members of the rock band *Soul Asylum*. From left Karl Mueller, David Piner. Dan Murphy, and Grant Young. (Photo by David Corrigan)
Lead Singer David Pirner suggested that the chemistry
that has developed between them over the last 10 years is something that can't be taken for granted.
"We think it (friendship) is re a l l y important to the fiber of the group."
Their latest album, Grave Dancers Union, is quickly climbing the charts, fueled by the single "Somebody to Shove."
The band said that theyv
tried to do some new things in the studio for this album, but that they still managed to capture the intensity of the band's live performances.
Soul Asylum is most recently coming off a string of highly successful opening dates for guitar great and
Rolling Stone, Keith Richards.
Opening for Soul Asylum will be acoustic wonder Vic Chestnut followed by the loud, fast, power-pop rock music of the Goo Goo Dolls.
The Goo Goo Dolls music has been described by Rolling Stone magazine as "Thrash-
packed pop and well-articulated rage." Describing their latest release Hold Me Up, The Chicago Tribune says"The Goos enter and exit songs with a mighty roar, but beneath the maelstrom there's more than a hint of melancholy and yearning."
Sandler brings show to KU
Adam Sandler, funnyman for "Saturday Night Live", will bring his antics to the University of Kansas on Saturday, March 6 at 8 p.m. in the soldout Kansas Ballroom.
Sandler is in his third season with "Saturday Night Live" after joining as a writer and performer in the 1990-91 season. Sandler is known by most students as "Cajun Man," a squalking commentator on "Weekend Update." "Cajun Man" with his blistering New Orleans accent has won raves not only from the
student body but from the media as well. The New Orleans Times-Picayune wrote, "[Cajun Man is] one of 'SNL's' ever growing cast of loony cult characters whose personas often grow beyond the tube into the American psyche."
Sandler still finds some time to get away from 'SNL' and perform standup as he will Saturday at the Ballroom. Last fall, Sandler performed at Chicago's Improv, and a review by Chicago Tribute writer Allan Johnson included, "Sandler's
song parodies were amusing, especially the chicken song, which expressed a "fowl" love affair, and a hilarious impressionation of Axl Rose."
Sandler's other notable impersonations are of boxer Hector "Macho" Camacho, Guns and Roses' lead singer Axl Rose, Peter Brady of the 1970's situation comedy "The Brady Bunch" and "Opera Man."
The 26-year-old Sandler, did not always view comedy as a profession, and it wasn't until the age of 17 that Sandler got his
first glimpse of what stand-up comedy is about. After some persuasion from his brother, the high school class clown, went on stage with no rehearsal for five minutes at a comedy club in Boston.
That open-microphone stint led Sandler to New York University, where Sandler studied Fine Arts. While working towards his degree, Sandler continued to perform frequently in comedy clubs and colleges, including the Comic Strip in New York City.
SUA 1993-1994 Committee Selections
1993 - 1994 Committee Member Selection Meetings are March 17 and 18 at the Burge Union. Applications are only available at the meetings, so it is important that anyone interested. SUA's strength lies in its large base of committee members.
Prospective members have eight committees to choose from:
- Feature Films: This committee is responsible for presenting a wide variety of contemporary films on the weekend. Among this semesters movies brought by Feature Films are "Last of the Mohicans", "Singles", and "Of Mice and Men."
- Spectrum Films: Members of the Spectrum Film Committee must have a love for films and an interest in the art of classical and foreign films. They bring such movies as "A Room with a View", "Cviano De Bergerac", and "Twin Peaks Fire Walk With Me."
- Fine Arts: This committee features visiting artists, gallery exhibits, touring repertory theater productions, arts and crafts bazaars and print sales. The committee will also assist in planning and organizing Union Open Houses.
- Live Music: Live Music brings exciting musical talent to the University such as Nirvana, Public Enemy, Pearl Jam and the Lemonheads. Additionally, they coordinate and select bands to play at the annual Day on the Hill in May.
- Forums: This committee promotes and encourages student interest in lecture-oriented activities. Forums is responsible for the selection of talent and the hosting of guest speakers including Chai Ling, Peter Arnett and Faye Wattleton.
- Special Events: The Special Events Committee programs SUA's traditional annual events including Parent's Day shows, the Homecoming Parade, a variety of popular comedy acts and novelty performers. George Carlin, Caroline Rhea, Jim Carey and Adam Sandler are just a few.
- Recreation and Travel: This committee features trips for students and works closely with the Jaybowl staff in providing recreational activities and tournaments. Events that Rec. and Travel has sponsored are weekend excursions to Chicago and day trips to see the Kansas City Chiefs play.
- Public Relations: The Public Relations Committee will work to inform the university about the wide range of activities and services offered by SUA. This flexible area allows for much creativity in media relations and general promotions of SUA.
7:00 P.M.
FRIDAY MARCH 5,1993
KANSAS UNION
BALLROOM
Under the leadership of Faye Wattleton, Planned Parenthood has played a major role in defining the national debate over reproductive rights and in shaping the family planning policies of the government worldwide. Ms. Wattleton's vision and courage have projected Planned Parenthood into the forefront of the battle to preserve women's fundamental right to equality and self determination.
FAYE
WATTLETON
TICKETS can be purchased at the SUA Box Office March 3-5 and one hour before the lecture for KU students. Tickets can be purchased by the general public the 5th. Tickets are $1 for students with KUID, $3 for non-students. IDs will be checked at the door.
OF PLANNED PARENTHOOD
SUR Art Print Sale
March 8-12
9:00pm-5:00pm
in the International Room at the Kansas Union
Staffed Libraries Archives
SUIR
The University of Southern
committee members
Fine Arts
Feature Films
Live Music
Recreation/Travel
Graphic Designers
Forums
Spectrum Films
Special Events
Public Relations
Informational Meetings
Wed, March 17
6:30 pm
Burge Union / Fronter Rm.
7:30 pm
Thu, March 18
7:30 pm
Burge Union / Pioneer Rm.
(Applications only available in either meeting)
Join the Selections!
93 94
Congratulations to the 1993-1994 SUA Officers:
MARGARET HU
President
SCOTT MOORE
VP Administrative Affairs
MICHAEL TAYLOR
VP University Affairs
SHANNON NEWTON
VP Membership Development
This is a special paid advertisement to the University Daily Kansan
CAMPUS: Debate continues on how to restructure the Off ice of Minority Affairs, Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.113
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
HURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Jayhawks take conference title
Men's team wins third consecutive Big Eight crown
18
CHAMPIONS
THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES
KU
SEE YOU IN NEW ORLANS
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES
KU
SEE YOU IN NEW ORLANDS
1993
CHAMP
By David Dorsey
Kansas sportswriter
Sophomore center Greg Ostertag grabbed the net in triumph after the Jayhawks cut it down and swung it above his head like a lasso, signaling the end of this season's Big Eight Conference race.
The Kansas men's basketball team clinched the conference championship last night with a 94-83 victory against Nebraska. The Jayhawks won their third consecutive conference title for the first time since Phog Allen coached the 1952, '53 and '54 teams to championships.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
"Greg Gurley was complaining because I was too loud," Walters said. "I was happy that we at least got that. But we're the type of team that doesn't set for things being given to us."
Kansas, 23-5 overall and 10-3 in the conference, will play its final regular season game at Oklahoma State on Sunday. The Cowboys are 8-5 in the conference and would have been in contention for a co-championship had the Jayhawks lost last night. The Jayhawks clinched at least a share of the title Tuesday when the Cowboys lost at Oklahoma.
last season, the Jayhawks learned they had won the championship after losing a game at Iowa State. Missouri had lost the same night, giving Kansas sole possession of the title.
Senior guard Rex Walters left he rooted for the Sooners Tuesday night while watching the game with his roommate and teammate, sophomore guard Greg Gurley.
Senior guard Adonis Jordan said the victory took some pressure off the Jawhaves.
The Jahawks shared the 1991 title with Oklahoma State.
"If it's given to you, it doesn't mean a lot," Walters said. "We want to go out and earn everything we do. That's what we did tonight."
"It was important that we won tonight, just because we want to win every game that we play," Jordan said. "Plus, we don't want to go down to Oklahoma State thinking. We've got to win, we've got to win. But we're still going to play hard against Oklahoma State."
Roy Williams, who has coached the Jayhawks to conference championships in three of his five seasons at Kansas, said he was excited for the players.
"This was a great accomplishment for those kids," he said. "Adonis Jordan has three Big Eight championships. Each and every player pulled together for the seniors so they could go out the right way. This was a fantastic night. This was the way to go out."
As the team put on their new Big Eight Championship T-shirts, Walters told the Allen Field House crowd that the Jayhawks' season was far from over.
KU
Men's basketball regular season conference champs
The Kansas men's basketball team defeated Nebraska last night and improved its conference record to 10 — 3. While other conference games remain, no other team can now obtain a better record.
Team Record
KANSAS 10 — 3
Oklahoma St. 8 — 5
Nebraska 7 — 6
Kansas St. 7 — 6
Oklahoma 7 — 6
Iowa St. 7 — 6
Missouri 4 — 9
Colorado 2 — 11
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
TopLeft: As members of the Big Eight Conference championship team, seniors Rex Walters, Eric Pauley and Adonis Jondon accept the trophy. The Jayhawks defeated Nebraska 94-83.
TopRight: Andrew Margolio, Northbrook, III., senior and Julie Newman, Lincolnshire, III., senior hold up a sign they made to show their support.
Above: Jordan is the first Jayhawk to cut the net after the victory. Kansas clinched the championship but still must face Oklahoma State on Sunday.
Right: Waving to the crowd, senior guard Walters is introduced with his parents, Monte and Yoko Walters, in the pregame ceremonies.
See related story, Page 9.
KJ
Seniors bid their farewells to field house
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Renee Knoebeer / KANSAN
Adonis Jordan was not sure if Kansas was the place for him to play basketball coming out of high school in Reseda, Calif. In Fall 1988, during Jordan's senior year of high school, the Kansas basketball program was placed on NCAA probation.
Jordan gave serious thought of turning down a basketball scholarship to Kansas and accepting one from P.J. Carlesmo, basketball coach of Seton Hall.
"I was always a phone call away from telling P.J. that I was becoming a Pirate." Jordan said. "But Coach (Roy) Williams assured me that this was the right place, and I have no regrets."
The three seniors combined for half of the Jayawk points. Walters had 19, Pauley 18 and Jordan 10.
Jordan and fellow seniors Eric Pauley and Rex Walters capped their Allen Field House careers last night with a 94-83 victory against Nebraska. The victory clinched a third consecutive Big Eight Conference regular season championship for the Jayhawks.
Kansas coach Roy Williams was proud of the accomplishment of winning a third consecutive conference championship but was even prouder of coaching Jordan, Pauley and Walters.
"I feel privileged to be their coach," he said. "To coach people like that isn't fair."
"Those guys are better young people than basketball players."
Walters, who transferred to Kansas from Northwestern after the 1989-90 season, said the victory last night just added to the best three years of his life.
three years with the greatest group of guys and the greatest basketball coach in America," he said. "I hope to be a coach someday, and when I am, I'm going to try to incorporate 99.9 percent of the things he (Williams) does."
Pauley sat out the Feb. 22 contest at Iowa State with a strained patella tendon in his left knee. After returning to action Saturday against Colorado, the Buena Park, Calif. senior responded last night with an 18 point and nine rebound performance against the "Huskers in his final home performance."
"I can say that all my greatest memories from Kansas are in the field house," Pauley said. "I feel proud to be a part of the basketball team and Kansas basketball."
Jordan has been a part of 106 victories in his four-year career at Kansas. Only Danny Manning, with 113, has participated in more Jayhawk victories.
Walters and Pauley have been a part of 50 of those victories with Jordan in their two years at Kansas.
"Westerday I did some research, and the last four years we have been 56-4 in this building." Jordan told the Allen Field House fans in a post-game ceremony honoring the seniors. "I say 'yea' because you have been a big part of that."
Despite the loss, Nebraska coach Danny Nee had nothing but praise for the three Kansas seniors.
"Eric Pauley is a very solid basketball player, and Rex Walters is winner," Nee said. "What Adonis Jordan has done here in the last four years is remarkable. He really has given Kansas an identity."
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Senate OKs admissions legislation
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — For the first time ever, qualified admissions legislation was passed by full-chamber vote yesterday.
The Kansas Senate voted 27-13 in favor of a bill requiring students to meet certain standards before being admitted to a Board of Regents university.
Students would need any one of the following to be admitted: a 2.0 grade point average, a composite ACT score of at least 23 or a ranking in the top third of their high school class.
The bill must now move through the House of Representatives, beginning in the House Education Committee.
During floor debate, Dave Kerr, R Hutchinson, argued that the state's universities were providing remedial education for students not prepared for a university curriculum.
Qualified admissions legislation originated in 1983 but had never been to the Senate floor for debate.
Kerr said it was possible that the Senate's new members, 21 of the 40 members, were part of the reason the legislation passed.
Kerr also spoke on behalf of a separate bill that would require high school students to pass a basic skills test before graduation in order to gain admittance to a state university.
That bill also passed.
"If you can't cut the mustard, then you go back home," he said.
State Sen. Al Ramirez, R-Bonner Springs, opposed both bills. He argued that state tax payers should not be deprived of the option to send their children to state universities.
The qualified admissions bill passed with two amendments, including one that would exempt 10 percent of a university's incoming students from the admissions standards. That 10 percent "window" was changed from 5 percent in an amendment made by State Sen. Jerry Ran, R-Hays.
Moran said the state was moving in an extremely new direction with qualified admissions and should give a few more "bloom years" a chance.
The students who would be exempted are not described in the bill.
Three senators said they had children who would not have met the admissions requirements when they entered a state university.
State Sen. Don Steffes, R-McPhern, voted for the bill although he said he had a son who would not have met the requirements. Steffes said the bill would have encouraged him to stress education more as a parent.
But State Sen. U.L."Rip" Gooch said his son, who would not have met the qualified admissions requirements, eventually was graduated with a master's degree in aviation management. Gooch said he opposed the bill.
"I think it's a discriminating process we could do without," Gooch said.
we could win wibush, *GOODMAN*
Lawrence's only state senator,
Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, voted in favor of the bill.
See related story, Page 5.
INSIDE
Comic inspiration
Surveys say cheating common
Adam Sandler, who will perform at 8 Saturday night at the Kansas Union Ballroom, talks about the inspiration for his "Saturday Night Live" characters and his life on the road as a comic.
PETER GRAHAM
See story. Page 7.
Cathleen Siecha
When Lawrence Sherr, professor of business, gave his students a test on their integrity in January, more than 45 percent of them failed.
Special to the Kansan
"I conduct this survey every semester that I conduct my statistics class," Sherr said. "On the average, approximately one half of the students admit to cheating on at least one exam during their college career."
Sherr's survey, an anonymous random response survey, asked the 274 students in Business 368 if they had ever cheated on a test at the University of Kansas.
Sherr, who teaches the statistics class, did his first student survey in Fall 1985.
"I was shocked and appalled at the results." Sherr said.
Sherr used his class as a sampling for
the University as a whole. According to the 1985 survey, 50 percent of KU students had cheated on an exam.
"I kept my mouth shut, because sometimes statistics turn out strange," Sherrn said. "But when I did it again in the spring semester, it was higher."
According to the University's Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities, students could face a grade reduction, a warning, disciplinary probation, suspension or expulsion if caught cheating on an exam.
However, some students do not think of the consequences.
A student who wished not to be identified admitted to cheating on a final.
"The only way to study for an essay final is to write it out, and you can't memorize a whole essay," said the Lawrence senior. The student used a written and reduced copy of his essay for a final.
For others,the risks are too high.
Lance Wright, Salina junior, said, "I would never cheat on an exam because that's risking your entire education."
"it's not just a problem at KU; it's a problem throughout all education," Sherr said.
Sherr said he had lectured to his students about cheating and shown faculty the results of his surveys, but that they were still disturbing high.
Sherr's personal punishment for students caught cheating is an automatic F in the class and a recommendation to the dean that the student not be allowed to enroll in the School of Business for one academic year.
"A substantial number of students don't think their cheating hurts them," Sherr said. "But if society catches on to this problem, what will interviewers think when they're interviewing graduates? They don't know if you earned your degree or not."
Cheating on exams
Cheating on exams
Business 368 students responded to a questionnaire asking, "Have you ever cheated on an exam at Ku?"
0
Percent
responding
reks
Sp' Fa' Sp' Fa' Sp' Fa' Sp' Fa' Sp' Fa' Sp'
89 89 90 90 91 91 92 92 93
Sean Tenvis / KANSAM
Thursday, March 4, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Daily Re-affirmation
I pause for a moment and am thankful for the magnificence of the human body, and for the life of the good spirit within.
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
The University Dialy Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
**Postmaster:** Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 66045.
--tonight at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842 2411.
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY
$8.50
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Home of the Pocket Pizza
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY $8.50 plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Home of the Pocket Pizza
$.25 DRAWS
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UP & UNDER
---
$.25 DRAWS at the UP & UNDER
UP & UNDER
THURSDAY
401N.2nd 842-0377
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
DOWNSTAIRS
$1.25 Dom.Bottles
$1.75 Imports
Mad Gambler's Sale
THURSDAY ONE DAY ONLY!
A
9:30-1PM: Take additional 10% OFF clearance merchandise
1PM-6PM: Take additional 20% OFF clearance merchandise
6PM-8PM: Take additional 30% OFF clearance merchandise
9:30 AM-8PM: 20% OFF all regular printed merchandise
It's your Deal! Choose your own odds...but the best merchandise is bound to go first! Beginning at 9:30 AM all clearance merchandise will be reduced hourly.
- No phone calls please - No holds
THE LOFT
- 742 Mass.·841-2117
LOFT
s. • 841-2117
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring 1993
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College. Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator,and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to disclosing the DEA Graduate Distance Office, contact DEA 432. Please keep your nomination extern to one sample shared page.
ON CAMPUS
Send your nominations for Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hill, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045. Deadline is March 26,1993
Japan-America Club will hold a conversation group and brown-bag lunch at 9:30 a.m. today at Alcev C in the Kansas Union. For information, call Ben Tompkins at 865-0116.
The Religious Society of Friends will hold their Oread meeting for worship at 12:30 p.m. today in Danfort Chapel. For more information, call Kate Fawcett at 864-6299
Latin American Solidarity will hold a rice and beans dinner at 6:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Ae Haase will present "Cuba Today. For more information, call Marc a 841-6660.
Womyn's Concerns will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
KU Labertarians will hold a business and informational meeting at 7
Trathlisn and Swim Club will hold its swim practice at 7 ontight at Robinson Center Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 805-2734
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
Jaybawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an "It's Not Too Late to Apply" information table from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jeanne Brennan at 843-3742.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
BRIEFS
More KU students receive notices to appear in connection with false driver's license ring
The number of students served notices in an Oliver Hall fake driver's license operation has reached 23.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that police suspected two more people were connected with the operation but had not been able to identify
rice arrested Robert Martin, West Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, Feb. 24 after responding to a call on the KU Crimeoplasters hot line that said a student in Oliver had been making fake licenses. Martin has been charged in Douglas County District Court with dealing in false identification. Martin's preliminary hearing has been scheduled for Wednesday.
Sixteen students given notices to appear in court are residents of Oliver. The other seven live in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall. The students have been charged with either possessing a false license or attempting to possess a false license.
Martin's roommate, Clint Reiss, Plains freshman, is scheduled to make his first appearance today in Douglas County District Court on a charge of possession of false identification. Police arrested Reiss the same day as Martin.
The remaining students have notices to appear in court either March 11 or March 18.
Having a fake license is a Class B misdemeanor, punishable by a maximum of six months in jail with an optional fine of up to $1,000.
Student Senate election process gets underway as coalition becomes first to file for candidacy
The A.C.T.I.O.N! coalition became the first student coalition to file for presidential and vice president candidacy for the 1993 Student Senate election yesterday, said Diane King, elections commissioner.
Jason McIntosh, liberal arts and sciences senator, is the coalition's presidential candidate, and Marisol Romero, off-campus senator, is his vice presidential running mate.
The presidential and vice presidential filing period started yesterday and will end at 5 p.m. Wednesday. The filing office is in the Office of Student Life, 300 Strong Hall.
According to the Student Senate Elections Code, coalitions and independent candidates also must file their initial campaign activity reports Wednesday.
The filing period for student senators is March 10-17.
The elections will be April 14-15.
Family of late Alumni Association president donates $300,000 to establish two funds at KU
A gift of $300,000 from the family of the late W. W. Keeler will establish two funds for the KU faculty and students.
The money will be used for intra-University professorships that allow faculty members to study and lecture outside their fields and to support students in the M.D./Ph. D. joint degree track.
The three sons of W. W. Keeler, who attended KU with the class of 1932, and the late Ruby Keeler gave the money to the KU Endowment Association.
W. W. Keeler was president of the KU Alumni Association in 1968.
KU Fraternity, Sorority Foundation donates $3,000 to local organization that gives help to mentally ill
KU's Fraternity and Sorority Foundation donated $3,000 yesterday to Project Acceptance Inc., a Lawrence organization that provides peer support and care for the mentally ill.
The foundation, a subcommittee of the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic, collected funds for the donation during the 1991-92 academic year. The donation is the second one presented by the foundation, which gives money to Lawrence organizations, said Jay Curran, who heads the Fraternity and Sorority Foundation.
Project Acceptance will use the donation to construct a ramp for wheelchair access at its headquarters at 407 Maine St., Curran said.
St. Lawrence choir member begin preparations for August performance before pope in Denver
The St. Lawrence Collegiate Choir held a kick-off meeting last night to begin preparations for a youth gathering and mass with Pope John Paul II in August.
"The meeting is just to get the choir pumped-up," said Sally Hudnall, music assistant at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd.
Day Mass in Deliver. Ninety of the memorial plaques go to Hudson Hall.
The choir was chosen as one of nine U.S. choirs to sing at the mass.
Lynn Trapp, the choir's organist and Lawrence graduate student, was chosen to serve as co-conductor at the event, Huddah said.
All 130 choir members were given the option to attend the World Youth Day Mass in Denver. Ninety of the members plan to go, Huddall said.
One million people are expected to attend the gathering, she said.
Compiled by Kansan staff writers Vicki Bode, Mark Klefer and Brett Riggs.
Minority Affairs may change
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Office restructuring being considered
A Student Senate resolution to restructure the Office of Minority Affairs, passed last semester, has resurfaced this semester.
The resolution, which passed Nov. 18, called for the renaming of the Office of Minority Affairs as the Office of Multicultural Affairs, giving the office a position in either the chancellor's office or the executive vice chancellor's office and giving the director of minority affairs the title of associate or assistant executive vice
chancellor
Moving all minority affairs offices at Big Eight schools to executive-level status was a short-term goal on the agenda of the Big Eight Council on Black Student Government.
The council, which represents all Big Eight schools, last met during the 16th Annual Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government, held at KU last month.
James Baucom, president of KU's Black Student Union, was one of two delegates from KU at the meeting. The restructuring of the Office of Minority Affairs requires immediate attention from the administration, he said.
"KU needs to move right now," he said.
Baucom said that an executive level position holder could better represent minority students.
"It would put someone who advocates minority affairs on the chancellor's cabinet," he said. "It would have a direct impact on University activities."
The office currently is in the Office of Student Affairs.
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said that the office needs representation at a higher level in University affairs.
"Students feel that minorities need to have representation at the cabinet level for decisions that affect minority students." Thompson said.
Lance Wright, student body vice president, said the issue was imoor-
tant to the Senate. The fact that the administration has taken a action against him was made known.
The program review recommendation suggested that the administration study campus programs that benefited students, and their coordination and effectiveness.
Ed Meyen executive vice chancellor, said the administration was considering the Senate resolution, an African-American Student Concerns Task Force report from last semester and a program review recommendation. The administration will look at all three before making a decision about restructuring, he said.
A
Meyen asked the task force to suggest some students who could meet with him on a regular basis.
Renee Knoebeer / KANSAN
Carla Smith, Shawne sophomore, makes the numbers on her cadaver match her answers on the exam. The Biology 301 and 302 classes had tests requiring them to label muscles and tendons of the upper body yesterday.
Students trade books for bodies
By Terrilyn McCormick Kansan staff writer
After gagging three times on the first day of class, Schellie Payne, Paola sophomore, almost dropped her anatomy lab class.
"The horrible smell and the whole aspect of cutting into a human being really bothered me," she said.
"It has definitely got better," she says. "But I smell all day long. My roommates tend to leave when I come home."
Now, halfway through the semester, Payne says that she has become accustomed to the idea of cutting and observing the six cadavers but that she still has trouble with the smell of formaldehyde.
The pungent smell of formaldehyde fills the lab room that is home to six cadavers. They are the textbooks for the six Biology 301 and 302 classes, where cutting and probing dead bodies is a requirement.
CAMBUS SNAPSHOT
The six bodies, two females and four males, all older than the age of 62, will be used throughout the
semester for the classes.
Darrin Good, graduate teaching assistant for the classes, said the bodies came from the University of Kansas Medical Center. The donors all died of natural causes.
Now they lie on steel tables, end to end down the center of the room. Stripped of skin from the waist up, the bodies are partially covered by yellow-stained towels. Some of the hands, hanging over the sides of the tables, are missing fingernails. The remaining ones are black.
With her hand encased in a rubber glove, Teresa Reichert, Ottawa, Canada, sophomore, picks up a flayed hand and separates the arteries with the casualness of an auto mechanic changing spark plugs during a tune-up.
By semester's end, the students will have examined every part of the
cadavers' bodies. Good said.
"Ive had students tell me that they have nightmares with the cadavers in them," he said. "Then later in the semester they're not in their nightmares but just in their dreams."
Good said that only a few students each semester had difficulty working with the bodies and that only one person had fainted in the lab during his two years of teaching the class.
Payne said that she had learned more about her own body from dissecting the cadavers.
"It's easy to see what eating junk food and fast food will do to you," she said. "You can see where the fat goes. It is all over the body."
Several students have complained about eating meat after a semester of dissecting human bodies, Good said.
"They know what the veins and arteries in the meat really are," he said. "Before the class, they weren't aware of what they were eating."
After the students take their final examination, the cadavers will be returned to the Med Center, where they will be cremated.
Community unites with KU for drug forum
Kansan staff writer
A forum on drug and alcohol abuse will bring representatives from the University of Kansas and the community together to discuss the issue today and tomorrow.
"These are issues that are almost indivisible," said Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor of student affairs. "The problems associated with alcohol and drugs can't be dealt with in isolation because we're all one community and can't be considered separate enclaves."
Representatives from KU, Baker University, Haskell Indian Junior College, the city of Lawrence and the Lawrence and Baldwin City police departments will meet at the Adams Alumni Center for the event.
The forum, sponsored by Health Promotion Resources of St. Paul, Minn., will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. tomorrow. Only the representatives can attend the forum.
The forum will include discussion of the roles of public transportation, law enforcement, the media and advertising in substance abuse, and the responsibilities of private businesses that sell alcohol.
Weinberg said it was important that people in the community join efforts in dealing with the drug and alcohol problem.
"A problem on the campus can very quickly be a problem in the community," he said. "These aren't issues that are only of concern to one part of the community or another."
But the forum is not being held to imply that KU has a larger than average drug and alcohol problem, Weinberg said.
"It's unfair and inappropriate to say it's a serious problem here," he said. "It's a serious problem in all parts of our community. No one's emphasizing that it's an overwhelming problem on the college campus."
Educational institutions across the country are aware of the problem, Weinberg said.
"Every university, every college, every high school in this country realizes that alcohol and drugs are serious problems," he said. "This is a unique opportunity to look at solutions for concerns we all have."
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The University of Kansas Howard Hughes Undergraduate Research Fellowships FOR WOMEN AND MINORITY MEN
Program: Undergraduate summer research fellowships in Biochemistry, Cell Biology, General Genetics, Molecular Genetics, Physiology, and Microbiology. The program is funded through a grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
2. Undergraduates who have completed their freshman year with a minimum 3.0 grade point average
1. Women nd minority men who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents
3. Demonstrable leadership ability, scholastic ability and an interest in pursuing a career in the biological sciences.
Stipend and Allowances: $2,000 stipend for an eight week program, tuition and fees for 2 credit hours of undergraduate research, room, board and travel stipend.
Submission Format: Obtain an application from your Biology Department (or rom the address below): send an application, an official transcript, and two letters of recommendation, to the Howard Hughes Program, 2045 Haworth, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045-2106.
Application Deadline Date: April 1, 1993 For Additional Information, write to: Sylvia M. Suarez Howard Hughes Program 2045 Haworth Hall The University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66045-2106
Program Date: June 8-July 31, 1992
4
---
Thursday, March 4. 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Student Senate always takes the easy way out
Last Wednesday Student Senate passed a bill to increase student activity fees by $3 a semester. This fee increase is unnecessary. Unfortunately, Senate is like most governing bodies - its primary goal is to avoid criticism.
Faced with the increasing cost of the Saferide program, Senate went searching for places to cut the revenue code budget. Senate's first idea was to cut back on the operation of Saferide. This met strong resistance. Next, the finance committee proposed that one full-time position be cut from Legal Services for Students. Again there was an outcry, and Senate quickly tried to find funding for Legal Services.
Senate then tried to cut KU Forensics, but members of the Forensics team were present and objected. Senate then turned its attention to the Concert Series. Senate slashed its funding and gave the money to Legal Services to mollify them.
Senate realized that every group that had its funding cut was going to complain in one manner or another. Thus, Senate decided that the best solution would be to increase fees. Senators were frustrated with attempts to be fiscally responsible and thought that if they had more money they could simply spend enough to keep everyone happy. Sadly, Senate will never have enough money to satisfy every group.
Although this fee increase seemed relatively small, some senators believed the students should be allowed to vote on it in the form of a referendum. This idea was voted down easily. Opponents argued that students do not have the right to raise their own fees. They said only Senate had that right. This can be translated as: "Most students do not want a fee increase, and we probably could not convince them to vote for it, so let's just pass it now and hope that no one really notices."
Senate talks a lot about having more student involvement. But when it comes down to it, Senate would rather go about its business without being bothered by students.
Another example of this could be seen in the controversy that surrounded the attempt by students to implement the check-off plan for student activity fees last year. Student Senate formed a committee to study the feasibility of the check-off plan. This has quieted debate on the issue.
The remarkable thing about the committee is that it has never met. Student Senate's official position is that the issue is being studied, but at this rate, it will be studied forever and nothing will ever be done.
The current system of funding groups is a sad process. Any non-partisan group that forms on campus is guaranteed at least minimal funding. Community and county services also receive funds taken out of activity fees. In general, the more money a group asks for, the more it gets.
The finance committee is made up of an appointed group of students and a few senators. Attendance at meetings varies widely, and a group's funding can be determined largely by the mood of the committee They must determine among themselves how they feel money should be given. The problems are compounded by the fact that there is little contact between the committee and Senate. Senate often disregards the finance committee completely.
Senate is too much in the habit of taking the easy way out when it comes to making choices. Senators have increased student fees without first seeking out all the areas within the budget that should be cut. Senate should come up with a philosophy of funding and a system that works before it asks for more money from the students. Finally, Senate should truly give students a voice in how much of their money is taken and where it is spent. Students are tired of the same old rhetoric.
DAVID OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NOW...IS IT
'FOUR' OR IS IT
'FIVE'.
STUDENT
SENATE
STUDENT
CONCERNS
NOW... IS IT
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Column, reader's letter were full of inaccurate statements
It is not my usual practice to respond to letters on the editorial page, but someone must acknowledge and amend the unprinted print in Patricia McGowan's letter responding to Ann Jurczyk's column on anti-abortion feminists.
Yes, President Clinton lifted the ban on fetal tissue research, but no, this tissue is not extracted from living children. A fetus, according to Webster's, is an unhatched or unborn developing after three months gestation.
After the fetus is born and able to survive outside the womb it is called a baby. When an unviable fetus is aborted, it cannot live outside the womb.
The tissue of the fetus is not the fetus' brain tissue but the fetal tissue implanted into the brain of Parkinson's patients.
The third world countries McGowan referred to are so poverty-stricken that they have a practice of killing female children, selling them into prostitution or sending them out on the streets to be.
LISA
COSMILLO
We do not live in Nazi Germany. Scientists are not extracting fetal tissue from living children. This is obviously anti-abortion rhetoric, and I do not know who can, with a good conscience, manipulate people with such blatant lies.
STAFF COLUMNIST
If, as McGowan suggests, President Clinton is stopped, we may as well return to a time when women were reduced to obtaining abortions through illegal channels. During this time, many women bled to death, and many were accidentally sterilized. Legally or illegally, women have always found ways to abort unwanted pregnancies.
The idea that something will not happen if you make it illegal is simply myopic.
As for Jurcyk's column, she managed in just under 700 words to completely misdirect, misquote and missassess an entire generation of feminists.
Jurcyk's suggestion that President Clinton is a feminist is nothing short of ludicrous. And Limbaugh's allegation that feminists want to see more abortions performed is also outra-
geous.
Clinton is the first president in my lifetime who has courageously moved to pass laws that will protect women's safety and independence. Safe abortion procedures and better birth control education protect the women who choose to be sexually active but who do not wish to have a child or die because their birth control methods did not work.
I find it appalling that so many anti-abortionists argue that women casually seek abortions as a birth control method. I wonder when I hear this how many women they actually know who have had to make this tough choice? I have known several.
There is no harder decision. It is traumatic and painful. Why do I want it to remain legal?
First, it is the woman's body; it should be her choice. Second, every child born into this world should be met with love, food and safety. Third, even if it were illegal, as long as there are unwanted pregnancies, there will be abortions, and women will be in danger.
No. I do not want more abortions performed. What I want are fewer unplanned pregnancies. This could simply be accomplished, as it has been in European countries, by educating our children.
Sex, in this country, is such a dirty word that the educational system shrinks from taking any bold steps to educate young people about its dangers, pitfalls and joys.
Yes, joys. In the midst of all of this debate about condoms, abortions, HIV, HPV, Herpes, gonorrhea, etc. we have forgotten why people engage in sex in the first place, and why, no matter what we say or do, people always will.
Sex can be a healthy, joyous expression, and children discover this whether we want them to or not. We are, as a nation, suffering from a backlash of sexual repression, and the people who suffer are our children. Afraid to admit their interest in and desire for sex, they are again having to find illicit enjoyment. The punishment for which can be an unwanted pregnancy or, at worst, death.
For simply $1 at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom, students can hear Faye Wattleton, former president of Planned Parenthood, speak in the Kansas Union Ballroom. She is an outspoken advocate of sex education and a pioneer in abortion rights. And yes, Limbaugh has labeled her a feminazi. She ought to be good.
Lisa Cosmillo is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in journalism.
kansan photos misrepresented event
Newspapers have a responsibility to proclaim the news in a way that portrays it honestly.
At the Kansan, we take this responsibility very seriously.
But in regard to two photos used to illustrate the 16th annual Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government, our coverage was irresponsible.
On Page 3 of the Feb. 22 issue of the Kansan, we printed a story and two photos that were intended to summarize the events of the three-day conference.
KANSAN EDITOR
GREG
FARMER
To summarize a three-day conference in one story and two photos is nearly impossible, but sometimes space limitations force newspapers into tough situations. This fact is never a good excuse for representing an event inaccurately.
The conference brought about 750 university and high school students to the University of Kansas. The conference was scheduled to include about 45 hours of activities.
During most of that time, the students either participated in workshops that focused on issues affecting African Americans or listened to speakers such as Sonia Sanchez, poet and professor at Temple University.
and Leonard Jeffries, professor of Black studies at the City College of New York.
But the photos used by the Kansan to illustrate the event were not of the workshops or the speakers.
The photos we used were of the Greek step show and gospel extravaganza, events that lasted a total of four hours. These events were the evening entertainment for conference participants.
By including photos that represented only four hours of a three-day event, we misrepresented the conference.
But even worse, we perpetuated a stereotype.
The photos were of African Americans dancing and singing. On the sports page that same day, five African-American athletes were pic-
tured. Those were the only photos of African Americans in that issue.
Dancing, singing and slam dunking. These are too often the only images of African Americans that newspapers provide to their readers.
1 or someone else in our newsroom should have realized before the photos were printed that we were perpetual witnesses to a stereotype of African Americans.
I am sure many of our readers looked at the photos and did not perceive a problem. My goal for this column is to help our readers understand what we did and why we were wrong for doing it.
At the Kansan, we have learned from our mistake. We hope others will learn from it, too.
Kansan Editor Greg Farmer is an Oatle
senior majoring in Journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
STEVE PERRY
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Asat Managing
News
Monique Guilain
David Mitchell
Editorial
Stephen Martino
Campus
KC Trauner
Sports
David Mitchell
Photo
Mark Rowlands
Featurette
Lynne McAdobe
Graphice
Dan Schauer
JEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TATERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Business Staff
Campus sales
Regional sales mgrs
National sales mgrs
Co-op sales mgrs
Production mgrs
Marketing director
Creative director
Art Director
Broad Braun
Wade Baxter
Jennifer Perrier
Ahsley Hesselman
Ashley Hesselman
Ashley Langdorf
Anglo Cleverenger
Holly Parry
Bella Parry
Dave Halpern
David Halpern
1906 FM
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kawaii must include a class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. **Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be required to answer the right to reject or edit letters, great columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Sanders Flint Hall.
2
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Thursday, March 4, 1993
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
STATE BRIEFS
New definition of drunk may be.08
TOPEKA — The Kansas House of Representatives yesterday voted to make the state's laws on drunken driving tougher, especially for underage drinkers.
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The House bill would lower the blood alcohol content level at which drivers are considered legally drunk from.10 to.08.
The bill now will go to the Senate.
Anyone under age 21 would be considered legally drunk at .04.
The bill will go before the
Representatives Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, and Forrest Swall. D-Lawrence, voted in favor of the bill, but Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, did not.
Charlton said she was in favor of the .08 legal limit but not several other provisions, including the provision for underage drinkers.
"I don't think they would be asked to take the tests anyway unless they appeared drunk or were driving erratically," she said.
Another provision would make it legal for passengers to have open containers of alcohol in cars.
"The designated driver is supposed to drive drunk people home,not people who are drinking,"Charlton said.
The federal government threatened to reduce states' highway funds if they did not lower the legal level to.08.
Senate passes fellowship legislation
TOPEKA - A bill that would create a fellowship program for minority graduate students passed the Kansas Senate yesterday.
The bill could establish as many as 40 fellowships of $8,000 each for Regents universities. Sixteen of the fellowships would go to KU students.
During floor debate, Senators discussed the definition of minority. State Sen. Alicia Salisbury, R-Topeka, said she thought the bill's definition of minority was loosely worded.
State Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, who heads the Senate Education Committee, agreed.
"Basically, if someone meets the requirements for the fellowship and claims to be an ethnic minority they would be considered for this," he said. "The fellowies come to the House."
Legislation would stiffen rape law
TOPEKA — Drug and alcohol use will no longer be accepted as defense for persons accused of rape according to two bills passed yesterday in the Senate and House of Representatives.
State Sen. Lillian Papay, R-Great Bend, said the rape definition bill she introduced to the Senate had influenced the success of the House bill, which had been stalled in a conference committee for more than a month before being moved to the House floor. It passed 124-0.
Her message to young men: "I wouldn't be having sex with anyone who has had anything to do with drugs or alcohol."
The House and Senate will exchange bills and debate them further before deciding whether the bills should become law.
Compiled by Kansan staff writer Ben Grove.
Students will participate in leadership conference
HALO goes to Wichita
Bv Jess DeHaven
Members of KU's Hispanic American Leadership Organization plan to expand their horizons this weekend at the fourth annual Hispanics of Today Conference.
Kansan staff writer
suzanne Racine, Arlington Heights, Ill., junior and HALO co-chairperson for recruiting, said 10 members of the KU organization would attend the conference at Wichita State University along with students from other Kansas colleges.
The conference will begin with a reception tomorrow evening and will wrap up Sunday, Racine said.
"This is our version of the Big Eight Conference," she said, referring to the 16th Annual Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government held at KU in February. "There will be speakers and workshops. Last year they had workshops that dealt with AIDS, gang violence and fund raising. There's a real variety."
leges
Larry Ramos, faculty adviser for the WSU
chapter of HALO, said about 60 people had
registered for the conference.
Racine said the conference held a special sig.
Victor Lopez, Kansas City, Kan., freshman and HALO co-chairperson for recruiting said he thought the speakers would be the most important part of the conference.
nificance for the KU HALO chapter.
"KU was the first HALO to start this four years she said. "So it's kind of like our baby."
"I'm really looking forward to listening to the messages the speakers give to the people attending," he said. "The experience, knowledge and issues of the Hispanic community that will be discussed will tell us how we can help. I think I could contribute a lot."
the keynote speaker at the conference will be Tom Sawyer, minority leader in the Kansas House of Representatives.
Ruben Patino, Kansas City, Mo., freshman,
said he was looking forward to the conference.
He said it would be the first he could attend.
"I think it will be very interesting because I've never been to anything like this before," he said. "I really want to have the experience to learn more about Hispanics because it's important to me."
Racine said the conference involved more than education.
“It's an opportunity for all Hispanics to get together and learn from each other and our experiences,” she said. “The networking is one of the best parts about it. We get to discuss things with each other and help each other figure out what's going on.”
SenEx task force to review academic advising process
By Dan England
Kansan staff writer
"We're looking into some creative ideas," he said.
separate open hearings may be held for graduates, undergraduates, students who live in residence halls and students who live off campus. Thompson said he had heard many suggestions of ways to study academic advising and hold the open hearings.
University Senate Executive Committee formed a task force yesterday that will examine the quality of KU's student academic advising program.
"John asked SenEx to form the task force.
"We wanted to see if the University was really getting to the problem of advising students," McIntosh said.
The task force will study the advising process and decide whether it needs to be improved.
SenEx asked the task force to identify the needs of students through open hearings, research advising programs at other Big Eight universities and KU's peer institutions, and work with the Office of Academic Affairs on a study of the academic schools within the University.
He said the study of the schools would give
SenEx members Jason McIntosh and Robert Thomas asked SenEx to form the task force.
the university a better idea of how students feel about academic advising. The hearings may attract only those who are upset with the advising process, he said.
"We want to hear from students who may not have had either terrible or outstanding experiences with academic advising." Thompson said.
The task force will report back to SenEx before its last meeting of the semester, but Nancy Dahl, who heads SenEx, said she would like a report before April 1.
In other business:
President Clinton responded to a letter sent by University Council in February expressing support for him in his attempt to lift the ban on gays in the military. In the letter, addressed to Dahl and Dick Tracy, who heads Council, Clinton thanked Council for sharing its views and said he appreciated its support.
- SenEx send a statement on hate speech back to the Human Relations Committee for approval after making minor wording changes. According to the statement, it is "a means of promoting more civil and more effective speech that may reduce the tensions and conflicts that result from hateful/harmful speech." The statement is not a policy or a rule intended to have a legal effect.
'... not some diva manque with a pallid little pianist padding behind. ' Serkin plays with the piano all the way up, and is able to match it in idea and imagination. ' The Boston Breeze, August 1992
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office, KU student tickets available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats are reserved; public $15 & $13, KU and K-12 students $7.50 & $6.50, senior citizens and other students $12 & $14; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
PAMELA PETER
frank serkin
violin piano
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Swaydun School and the Karsa University Endowment Association, special thanks to the key words 'Very Important Partner': *Bristol-Myers Squibb Science Center*.
3:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 7, 1993
Crofton, Prever Theatre
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SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1993, 2 P.M SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART AUDITORIUM
The Blind
a play by MAURICE MAETERLINCK (Belgian, 1862-1947)
Performed by THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI THEATER DEPARTMENT
No admission. Supported by a grant from the Institute of Museum Services, a federal agency.
In conjunction with the exhibition Les XX and the Belgian Avant-Garde, Prints, Drawings, and Books ca. 1890 at the Spencer Museum of Art, January 25-March 21, 1993
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Nominated For 6 Academy Awards
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THE CRYING GAME (R) (Th.2)
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NATURAL WAY
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Latin American Solidarity
Ed Hasse
"Cuba Today"
Thursday, March 4
6:30 p.m.
ECM-1204 Oread
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serving a Rice and Bean Dinner
beginning at 6 p.m.
Religious cult leader continues Waco siege
Koresh tells agents he received message from God to wait
The Associated Press
WACO, Texas — Federal agents setted in last night to wait for the end of a standoff with a heavily religious cult whose leader claims he is Jesus Christ and is waiting for God to tell him what to do.
As the siege continued for a fourth day, officials said Branch Davidian leader David Koresh might have more than 100 followers and a "massive weapons cache" inside his fortified compound.
Two elderly women who left the compound Tuesday had fired machine guns and other weapons during battles Sunday that left perhaps 14 people dead, authorities said. Charges were filed against the woman but later dropped, though they remained jailed as material witnesses.
Negotiations continued yesterday. A day earlier, Koresh had promised to immediately, peacefully end the deadlock after a 58-minute taped statement he made was played on radio stations.
"Koresh refused to honor his promise and has indicated he will keep his promise to come out when
he receives further instruction from God," FBI Agent Jeffrey Jamar said during the first briefing for reporters since Monday. "Korehs stated he had received a message from God instructing him to wait."
Jamar said officers aren't contemplating storming the compound.
"The goal is to resolve this situation ultimately in federal court with no further bloodshed," he said.
The cult is a well-trained, committed fighting force with a massive weapons cache at its disposal, Special Agent Earl Dumagan of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms in an affidavit.
Koresh has told federal law officers that his group would fight to the end, Dumagan said.
In his affidavit, Dunagan said the two women who left the compound Tuesday "did knowingly and willfully use weapons, including machine guns, to commit the violent crime of federal law enforcement officers."
In addition to four dead federal agents, at least 10 cult members were killed, a federal law enforcement source said on condition of anonymity.
Newspapers have reported the death toll may be even higher. Officials have confirmed only two deaths inside the compound; Koresh said he was wounded and his two-year-old daughter was killed.
BRIEFS
Concerned citizens across the nation get cooking in effort to help take bite out of federal deficit
Can just a spoonful of sugar, a cup of flour and a pinch of salt make the deficit go down?
Inspired by a North Dakota teenager who donated $1,000 toward paying off the nation's around 4.2 trillion debt, optimists around the country are rolling out the dough, holding bake sales for the U.S. Treasury.
And the Eskimo Pie Corp.. smelling a sweet opportunity, said yesterday it will give the government 5 cents for every box of its chocolate-coated vanilla ice cream snacks on a stick sold between March 8 and April 4.
after Larry Villella sent the government $1,000. Villella made the money selling a gizmo he invented to water trees.
Fifth graders at Stewart Elementary School in Oxford, Ohio, reported raising $278.50 this week peddling trays of Bill Brownies, Gore Goodes, Capitol Hill Cookies, Tipper Toffee and Oval Office Oatmeal.
The staff of the Divide County Journal, a weekly newspaper in Crosby, N.D., analyzing news developments over coffee, decided to hold a bake sale Saturday and send the proceeds to Washington.
Such public spirits were stirred
World Trade Center to remain closed for at least one month: FBI examines several terrorist groups
NEW YORK — The World Trade Center will remain closed for at least a month while repairs continue and investigators look for clues to the bombing of the twin towers, an official said yesterday.
"Our target date to be moving people back into the towers is about a month from now," said Anthony Shorris, the Port Authority's deputy executive director.
delay in reopening the towers could cost businesses $1 billion. The landmark twin towers have been shut down since Friday's bombing.
The FBI said it is examining several terrorist group groups, including two Palestinian organizations. CNN reported that investigators suspect the bomber was from the Yugoslav republic of Serbia.
By one estimate, a month-long
Briefs compiled from Associated Press reports
The most selfless act of kindness-
Give Blood
Your single donation can save the lives of three people.
Register to donate in front of Wescoe or in the Student Union. Hurry--Friday is the last day.
Donation will be March 8-11
Come see the special acoustic performance by the Wallflowers. Streetside Records
1403 W. 23rd
Sunday, March 7, 3:00 pm
The Wallflowers
started out about three years ago,
jamming at the now-trendy Kibbitz Room at Canter's in Los Angeles.
Their musical influences range from Neil Young to The Band and Bob Dylan (father of The Wallflower's lead singer Jakob).
They recently toured with Cracker, The Spin Doctors and 1950s Maniacs in support of their debut album THE WALLFLOWERS, described by Musician magazine as "an impressive debut by a real rock'n'roll band."
BOTTLENECK Lawrence 9:00 pm Sunday, March 7
55.00 admission Purchase at venue
Come see the special acoustic performance by the Wallflowers.
Streetside Records
1403 W. 23rd
Sunday, March 7, 3:00 pm
The Wallflowers
The Wallflowers
STREETSIDE RECORDS
1401 W.23rd
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comedy
101
Photo Illustration by Sean Tevis / KANSAN
Live from Lawrence...
Saturday Night Live comic Adam Sandler turns goofing off into a job with characters such as Cajun Man and Opera Man
By Traci Carl Special to the Kansan
A
dan Sandler was 17 when he first got up on a Boston comedy club stage and tried to make people laugh.
"It was a bad time," said Sander, who is now a writer and performer for Saturday Night Live. "Nobody laughed. I was a goober. I had braces. I wasn't funny."
Now 26, he will be performing at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. And he's not too worried about whether students will laugh.
Most of them have already laughed at him on Saturday Night Live. They also may have thought he was funny on MTV's "Remote Control" or when he did stand-up on MTV's "Half-Hour Comedy Hour."
So soon they will see him in the Paramount Pictures' movie "Conehead," where he sells Dan Akroyd a fake ID so that Akroyd's alien character can become a citizen of the plane.
But just as Akroy was famous as a conehead, Sandler makes people laugh with characters like "Cajun Man" and "Opera Man." He also uses improvisations by goofing off with friends.
"Opera Man was something I just did around the office," Sandler said. "Then the writers picked it up. I just like to be funny."
Last week Sandler turned a string of stand-up appearances at East Coast colleges from Penn State to Dartmouth into a road trip with two of his friends. The three of them entertained each other on the endless stretches of highway by talking in funny voices.
"I felt like Bon Bion," Sandler said. "I was a cowboy. It was me and a couple of guys who write for Saturday Night Live. We were just talking in character all through the trip. It's not like work, it's fun."
When he's on the road, Sandler said, he feels like a rock star. That may be the inspiration for his impersonations of heavy metal stars, such as Axl Rose.
He said he was in a band in high school and thought about being the next "Alice in Chains."
"It itdon't go that way," Sandler said. "I turned out to be a goodball, not a star."
But his parents are still proud, and his father thinks he is funny, Sandler said. And, on major holidays, he sets up a dinner place on SNU's "Weekend Update" and has a one-sided conversation with his parents, who are supposedly watching the show at home and talking to him. The skits usually end with Sandler pretending to yell at his father and his mother supposedly crying.
Along with Rodney Dangerfield, his father is one of his heroes, Sandler said. He said he admired his father because his father had a dry, intelligent sense of humor.
"I'll commit to anything to make someone laugh." he said. "I don't think my father
would wear the Opera Man wig and sing." Sandler also dressed up in drag to play a female salesclerk at a Gap clothing store to work with his customers, salesclerks don't make him laugh, he said.
"There's something about them that draws my attention," Sandler said. "When they don't have anything to do, they just look so lost. I like Gap girls. They're sweet and when I need stuff, like loose-fit jeans, they help me out."
Alex Sulzer, Student Union Activities special events coordinator, said Sandler's stand-up made him laugh.
"Some of his impersonations of Jewish mothers are very well done," Sulzer said and then laughed as he thought of an example. "I think the best stuff is when he does his bits on the news and is just himself."
Apparently, KU students think Sandler is funny. The $8 tickets for Saturday night's show at the Union sold out Friday. They had been on sale for only five days, Sulzer said.
"That's phenomenal." Sulzer said. "I had a good feeling about it, but I had no idea it would sell out that fast."
It's been awhile since Sandler bombed in Boston. Sandler said that after years of practice, he was more comfortable on stage and thought Saturday at the Union would be a success.
"I'm going to try and be funny," Sander said. "I might do some characters. I'm going to sing some songs at the end. I think it'll be fun."
music
Festival offers jazzy alternative
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansan staff writer
108
Don't let the winter do drums or a boring rock 'n' roll band ruin another weekend. Drive up to Kansas City this weekend and check out the Winter Jazz Festival. There are lots of musicians scheduled, and its cheap.
Gary Foster
The Kansas City Jazz Commission and the University of Missouri — Kansas City are the co-hosts for the festival, which begins
I will not tell the truth.
Karrin Allyson
oday and concludes Sunday
Karrin Allyson, a Kansas City jazz singer and pianist will perform the opening night. Allyson will sing, but not play the piano at the Theater at Waldo, a former dinner theater never before used for jazz performance.
"We're really looking forward to it
because it looks like a great acoustical space," she said.
Alkison, who has been a professional musician for 13 years, said she would sing mostly standards and some popular modern jazz tunes.
On Friday night, the festival will feature a performance by an all-star high school band and Saturday's events include a jazz band competition.
The band competition gives high school jazz bands the opportunity to perform and be judged, said Doug Alpert, director of the festival.
Allyson said she had attended similar clinics as a college student in
"They really open your ears up to music," she said. "But the most important is to get out and play."
"Gary Foster is one of the most asked for session players in Los Angeles," Alpert said. "And Ahmad Alaadeen and Kerrin Alison are two of the more prominent players on the local scene." he said.
be a clinic as well as a performance." At the clinic, professional musicians will provide instruction about playing jazz. Abert said.
Other musicians performing at the festival include Gary Foster and
"Jazz education is a strong theme of the festival," said Alpert. "There will be a clinic as well as a performance."
Check out this jazz
Beginning jazz listeners may want to check out these suggestions from Dan Galley, director of jazz studies at KU and Dick Wright, associate professor of music history.
- Miles Davis Kind of Blue and "Perry and Bess"
* Bob Cotton Gig Stops
- Oscar Peterson Trip - We Get Requests
- Louis Armstrong — "Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five"
- Dekker Elison The Blanton Webster Band
Duke Ellington Gambone and Colton
- Cannonball Adderly — Cannonball and Coltrane
Berry Shields — "No birth of the Cool"
Stan Getz — Stan Getz Plays
Weather Report — Heavy Weather
Charlie Parker — "Bird, The Savoy Recordings"
Jon Hendricks — "Freddy the Freeloader"
Kansas City Winter Jazz Festival Schedule
Today
Karrin Allyson and
Sharon Thompson
with Bob Boewen,
Paul Smith and Todd
Street, 7:30 p.m. at
the Theater at Walbo,
619 West 45th Street,
$10. Call 333-9200
for tickets.
Tomorrow
Kansas City Jazz Band
Festival, featuring Gary
Foster and the Kansas
City Jazztet with Ahmad
Alasdeen and Kerry
Williams.
White Recalctal Hall at
UMMC. $5 or $6. Call
215-2700 for tickets.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sean Tevis / KANBAR
MARCH 4,1993 PAGE 7
KULife
Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area.
calendar
Nightlife
Benchwarmers Sports Bar And Grill 20th St.
1601 W. 23rd St.
🌙🌙🌙
The Wake and Milhous Nixons, Today, Tomor
Jack-O-Pierce, Saturday
Bottleneck
The Urge with Sinister Dane, $4
Shindig Shop with Pumpkin Head, Tomorrow $4.
Lonesome Hounddogs and Savoy Truffle,
Saturday, $4
New Fast Automatic Daffodils and The Goats,
Monday
The Wallflower with Which Doctors? , Sunday Consolidated, Monday
Allgood with Salty Iguanas, Tuesday, $4 Freddie Johnston and Bean Land, Wednesday
Dos Hombres
815 New Hampshire St.
Dixie Cadillacs, Today, $2
Gusto's
925 Iowa St.
Cowherwell with Teramakras, Tomorrow
Cawcauns, Saturday, $3
Harmony Hall
Dr. John Walker, a professor of philosophy,
singer, songwriter, guitarist evocative of
greats such as Woody Guthrie, Hudie Ledbetter
and Bob Wills
8 p.m., Friday, $6 at door
Hockenberry's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Baghdad Jones, Today, $4
L.A. Ramblers, Tomorrow, $3
Chubby Smith and His Orchestra, Saturday,
Acoustic open mike, Sunday
Evergreen and Covote Dreams, Wednesday
Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusettsets, Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam, Today Soul Shaker, Tomorrow Cato Trio, Saturday
Johnny's Tavern
Johnny's tavern
401. N. Second St.
Fast Johnny, Tomorrow, Saturday
The Stringers, Wednesday, $2
Continued on Page 8.
8
Thursday, March 4. 1993
KULIFE
Jayhawk Bookstore
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Continued from Page 7.
806 W. 24th St.
R.T. Faxx, Tomorrow, Saturday
Just a Playhouse
Movies
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
The Imagination Workshop
8 p.m., Saturday, $8 floor, $6
balcony
Rick's Neighborhood Bar and Grill
623 Vermont St.
Foodhead, Saturday, $3
Riverside Bar and Grill
Riverside Bar and Grill
520 N. Third St.
Blue Fuse,Today
Southwind Express, Tomorrow,
Saturday
Black Pearl, Sunday
Blues Jam, Wednesday
$3 per person, $5 per couple
12:2 and Greal
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Law of Desire (R), Wednesday 7 p.m., Spanish with English subtitles
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A River Runs Through It (PG), 5,
7:30, 9:45 p.m., with 2:30 p.m.
show on Saturday, Sunday
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Shadow of the Wolf (PG13), 2:10,
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Groundhog Day (PG), 2:30, 4:45,
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Untamed Heart (P013), 2:20,
4:45, 7:25, 9:20 p.m., Sunday at
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Hillcrest Theater
Untamed Heart (PG13), 2:20.
Amos And Andrew (PG13), 5,
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Homeward Bound (G), 5, 7, 9 p.m., Saturday, Sunday 2:15 p.m.
Best of the Best (R), 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p.m., Saturday, Sunday 2
p.m.
Aladinth (G), 5 and 7 p.m., only
Saturday, Sunday 2:15 p.m.
A Few Good Men (R), 9:15 p.m.
only
Mad Dog and Glory (R), 5:15,
7:30, 9:45 p.m., Saturday, Sunday
2:15 p.m.
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
42 Massachusetts St.
The Crying Game (R), Tomorrow
4:30, 7, 9:30 p.m., and 2 p.m.
Saturday Sunday
Johnny Suede (R), Friday at 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 p.m.
Varsity Theater
1015 Massachusetts St.
Falling Down (R), 7; 30, 9:45
p.m., plus Saturday, Sunday
2:30 p.m.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 4, 1993
9
Jayhawks say goodbye to Cornhuskers
Woodberry, seniors lead 94-83 victory
Bv David Dorsev
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
An emotional surge hit Allen Field House last night as the Kansas seniors wrapped up their home careers by leading the Jayhawks to a 94-83 victory against Nebraska. The victory clinched a third consecutive Big Eight Conference regular season championship for the Kansas men's basketball team.
-- center Eric Pauley and guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan -- who stood in the spotlight for the final time in front of a capacity crowd of 15,800. Pauley scored 18 points and pulled down a season-high nine rebounds.
Kansas junior forward Steve Woodberry led all scorers with a career-high 26 points, but it was the seniors
Walters struggled from three-point range but took the ball inside, getting many of his 19 points from scoop shots, reverse lays and free throws.
Jordan scored 10 points and fed his teammates with a game-high six assists. He also contributed three steals in 33 minutes of play.
Kansas coach Roy Williams praised the team for its constant effort.
"We fought our tails off in the first half." Williams said. "We're up 10 at halftime. We figured what we've got to do was play hard the second half. We got the ball inside more and penetrated to the basket more. That helps us get to the to the free throw line more. It's just a total basketball effort, and the three seniors led the way."
Jordan scored a three-pointer on his first attempt, giving Kansas an early 5-10 lead, but the Cornhuskers would not give up.
The teams traded baskets for the
first 10 minutes of the game until Nebraska freshman guard Andre Woolridge tied the game at 24 points with a jump shot.
After that, the Jayhawks took off on a 17-3 run that began with a Walters' reverse layup and ended when Nebraska junior guard Jamar Johnson hit a jump shot. Woodberry and Walters combined for 10 points during the run.
But beginning with Nebraska senior center Derrick Chandler's alley-oop dunk from junior guard Eric Piiatowski, the Cornhuskers went on a run of their own, scoring eight points in the remaining 2:45 of the first half.
Nebraska trailed 48-38 at halftime, but the fired up Jayhawks continued to soar in the second half, shooting 59 percent from the floor.
Piatkowski led Nebraska with 26 points, followed by Johnson, who scored 18.
Jordan finished the game doing for the final time in the field house what he has done for four years as a Jayhawk. As the buzzer sounded, Jordan brought the ball up the court.
"Adonis is a great threat," he said. "I can't stand the talk about Adonis not be the best point guard in the Big Eight, because he is. When you talk about leadership and winning, he's done both. He has three Big Eight championships. He's the best point guard I've ever played with, and I've played with a lot of them."
Walters had nothing but praise for Jordan after the game, who is the first Jayhawk to play four years under Williams.
Walters, who was 1-for-8 from three point range, wasn't pleased with his performance, but relished the victory.
"I didn't shoot the ball very well and kind of struggled," he said. "I expect more out of myself, but I'm playing with the greatest group of guys and the greatest coach in college basketball. The last two years is exactly the
NEBRASKA (19-9, 7-6)
Kansas 94, Nebraska 83
Player fgm/fga tfm/fta tp
Badgett 4-9 1-3 10
Chubick 2-6 0-0 4
Chandier 3-12 0-0 6
Johnson 8-10 0-0 18
Platkowski 9-18 2-2 13
Best 2-3 0-0 5
Strickland 4-9 0-0 9
Gregory 2-3 2-4 6
Boone 0-0 0-0 0
Woolridge 1-2 0-0 2
Totals 35-72 5-9 83
KANSAS (23-5.10-3)
KANSAS (23,5,10-3)
Hancock 2-3 2-2 6
Scott 3-8 1-2 7
Pauley 8-11 2-3 18
Jordan 6-15 6-9 19
Jordon 4-9 0-1 10
Woodberry 7-14 11-12 26
Rayford 0-0 0-0 0
Richey 1-2 4-4 6
Ostertag 1-3 0-0 2
Totals 32-65 26-32 94
**surtire** Kansas 48, Nebraska 38,3-point
goals Nebraska 8.15 (ikatwkts 36,4) John-
son 2.3, Best 1.1, Badgett 1.1, Strockle 1.1,
Walters 1.9, Katsuba 1.3, Walters 1.8, **Rebounds** Nebraska 18
(Chandler, Best 9), Kansas (Pauley, Wood
7) **Asses** Nebraska 18 (Pathkowski 5),
Kansas (Jordan 6, Watkins 5) Total 5
(Johnson 25, Kansas 13) Attend
dance 15, 800
way I've wanted to play basketball." Williams thanked the seniors.
"It is a great accomplishment," Williams said about the conference championship. "It was a fantastic night for a lot of people, and I think you can go down the line. The seniors are so important to our team. And I'll say this, they're better young people than they are basketball players."
The victory was the 10th consecutive time Kansas has won its last home game of the season.
COURTSIDE:
Woolberry's 26 points were the most by any Kansas player this season.
KANSAS 21
KANSAS 11
30
Kin Chin / KANSAN
Kansas senior guard Rex Watters tries to block a three-point shot by Nebraska's Erick Strickland during the Jayhawks' 94-83 victory. Walters had two blocked shots and 19 points in last night's game.
Senior pitcher enjoys starting role
KANSAS
31
BASEBALL
Rv Rradv Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
Both of them.
Kim Buche / KANSAN
Kansas senior pitcher Tom Stewart has won every game he ever started for the Jayhawks.
Baseball KU
The former relief pitcher is 2-0 this season, after asking Kansas coach Dave Bingham to move him from the bullpen to the starting rotation before the season began.
Senior pitcher Tom Stewart makes his delivery toward the plate in practice. Stewart, who was a relief pitcher until this year, has won his first two starts this season.
"It's what he wanted to do," Bingham said. "Tom approached us all along with the intention of becoming a starter. He has shown great competiveness and has just done a wonderful job."
In 11 innings against Grand Canyon and Arkansas, Stewart gave up a total of four hits and one earned run, while striking out seven. He has a o 0.82 ERA.
The six innings he pitched against No. 30 Arkansas serve as the longest outing of any Kansas pitcher this season.
"He is tough on a hitter," Bingham said. "He is extremely effective with what he has."
The Scottsdale, Ariz., native, at 5-foot-9 and 165 pounds, plays a position traditionally occupied by the taller members of a team. Instead of overpowering the hitters, the left-hander relies on off-speed pitches to disrupt their timing.
don't throw hard," Stewart said. "I need to get all three of my pitches over the plate to be effective."
"I don't fool a lot of people because I
In a seven-game span last season as a reliever, Stewart did not allow a run. But he said he is comfortable with the transition to the starting rotation
"It feels like there is not as much pressure on you," Stewart said. "When you are a starter, sometimes you can afford to make mistakes that you can't get by with as a reliever. You are in control of what goes on out there. You don't have to keep as tight of a focus all the time, and you learn to relax more."
However, Stewart said that if the coaching staff returned him to the bullpen he would be equally happy there.
His success could help fill the pitching void left by last season's team victory leader Curtis Schmidt, a two-time All-Big Eight Conference selection who completed his eligibility.
Stewart and senior right fielder Taryn Tarquino transferred to Kansas last season after playing for Scottsdale Community College. During
their freshman season there, the team came within one game of qualifying for the junior college World Series.
While a closer for Scotsdale, Stewart earned junior college All-Arizona All-Star honors. He also had the unique distinction of playing for a team picked by Sports Illustrated as having one of the top 10 worst collegiate nicknames.
"You would say, 'I play for Scottsdale—they're the Artichokes,' " Stewart said. "It was good for conversation."
SPORTS BRIEFS
Stewart's pitching record early this season also is good for conversation, but he is quick to shift the accolades to his teammates.
"Baseball is such a team sport," he said. "As a pitcher, you rely on so many people. You rely on eight other guys to do the job, and they have. I try not to look at it so much as my own success, but as the team being successful."
Kansas diver places third in competition
Kansas diver Tim Davidson placed third in the one-meter diving competition last night at the Big Eight Swimming and Diving Championships in Oklahoma City. Davidson had an 11-dive score of 480.75.
Nebraska took first and second place in the event. Kevin McMahon won the event by 1.15 points over teammate Matthew Eastin. McMahon had a score of 509.40, and Eastin had a score of 508.25.
Competition continues today.
Hurley sets assist mark as Duke beats Maryland
Iowa State beats Buffs with Thigpen's basket
Hurley, who finished with 12 assists for a career total of 1,046, took the record away from Chris Corchiani, who had 1,038 for North Carolina State from 1987-91.
DURHAM, N.C. — Bobby Hurley set the NCAA career record for assists and scored 19 points in his final home game as Duke beat Maryland 95-79 last night.
BOULDER, Colo. — Justus Thigpen's three-pointer at the buzzer gave Iowa State a 67-66 victory against Colorado last night. It was the Cyclones first road victory of the season.
The Blue Devils improved to 23-5 overall and 10-5 in the Atlantic Division, but the Tortugas, 11-14 and 2-13, have not bested Duke since Jan. 1988.
Iowa State improved to 18-9 overall and 7-6 in the Big Eight Conference. Colorado dropped to 10-15 and 2-11.
With 2.2 seconds left Colorado led 66-64. Thigpen took an inbound pass, dribbed to the three-point line and tossed up his successful prayer shot.
No.1 North Carolina pounds Wake Forest
The Tar Heels, 25-3, top-ranked for the first time since the 1987-88 season, beat the Demon Deacons for the 11th straight time at home and avenged their worst loss of the season.
Wake Forest, 18-7, has lost three of its last four.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Eric Montross scored 17 points, and No. 1 North Carolina used a 19-1 first-half run to race past No. 14 Wake Forest 83-65 last night.
compiled from Associated Press and staff reports.
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Thursday, March 4, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Johnson faces lifetime ban
Canadian sprinter reportedly tested positive for drugs
The Associated Press
LONDON — Ben Johnson could be banned for life by the doping commission of world's track and field governing body, which will meet in Paris tomorrow to discuss his latest alleged incident of drug cheating.
Johnson, stripped of the gold medal in the 100-meter dash and banned for four years after testing positive for steroid use at the Seoul Olympics in 1988, reportedly failed tests in January while competing in Canada.
The International Amateur Athletic Federation said yesterday the commission will convene to discuss several issues, including a positive test on Johnson at a Montreal meet Jan. 17. Johnson finished second to countryman Bruny Surin in the 60 meters at that meet.
"They're meeting Friday in Paris to discuss Ben Johnson," said Jayne Pearce, IAAF representative. "That's all I can say."
The commission can decide tomorrow whether to impose a ban, which would be for life because Johnson
already had been suspended.
"Neither Mr. Johnson nor his representatives have been notified of any positive test," said a release from the Toronto law firm of McMillan Binch. "Mr. Johnson denies taking any prohibited substance or engaging in any improper practice since his return to competition."
According to unnamed sources quoted in the Toronto Star and Toronto Sun, one of Johnson's urine samples produced a positive test for high testosterone, a symptom of performance-enhancing drugs, or was suspicious enough to prompt officials to ask Johnson to undergo another test, which was positive.
A positive test does not necessarily mean an athlete has been using performance-enhancing drugs. The athlete could argue there were other, extinguating circumstances.
About 20 reporters gathered yesterday on the front lawn of Johnson's home in Newmarket, Ontario, north of Toronto. But the sprinter didn't sneak to them.
In Ottawa, Athletics Canada said the matter was in the hands of the international federation.
"Athletics Canada has repeatedly stated that it has not received confirmation of any positive test for this athlete," it said in a news release. "We have been informed that the ultimate
authority on such matters for the IAAF, it's doping commission, as for now has no positive test to communicate to this federation for any Canadian athlete, including Ben Johnson."
When Johnson returned from Seoul, he denied knowingly taking banned performance-enhancing substances, sparking the two-year inquiry into amateur sports.
When Johnson testified, he recanted his earlier story, breaking down in tears and admitting to long-time use of steroids.
His world records erased, the disgraced spinner continued training. When Johnson returned from his two-year ban, his times were dismal. Though he made the 1992 Canadian Olympic team, he failed to qualify for the final in the 100-meter dash, his specialty. He stumbled in a semifinal.
This winter, he ran the fastest 50 meters of the season. 5.65 — just 04 seconds off the world mark — at a meet in Grenoble, France.
"In my mind, what I was seeing was his explosive start was beginning to emerge once again," said Cecil Smith, executive director of the Ontario Track and Field Association. "Over 50 and 60 meters, he was beating the best in the world again. I did not put this down to drugs. I thought Ben was getting his back start."
BRIEF
1994 Final Four ticket applications available
The Associated Press
OVERLAND PARK — Ticket applications for the 1984 Final Four in Charlotte, N.C., are now available, the NCAA said yesterday.
Applications can be obtained by calling 1-900-646-1948 or by writing the NCAA at 1944 Final Four Tickets, 6201 College Boulevard, Overland Park, 66211-2422.
The telephone number is open 24 hours a day. Calls will cost $1 for the first minute and 50 cents for each additional minute.
All tickets are $65 and will admit the bearer to the semi-finals April 2 and the championship game April 4.
Applications must be received by April 30. A random computerized drawing will be held in May and applicants will be notified on or about June 30.
Interest income generated by the ticket applications will be used for NCAA youth programs and drug education efforts.
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Playing at
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Upcoming Bands:
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232-9800
KANSAS
Sweatshirts...$27.99
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The Kansan will not knowingly accept any aid, vantageism for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, religion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate Roommate Wanted
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
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Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Lease up in 30 Min. in 30 days for $850, 1999席位.
423-642-9877
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120 Announcements
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140 Lost & Found
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200s Employment
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205 Help Wanted
**DOLLARMAN:** The KU Department of Student Housing announces Scholarship Hall Director (SHD) vacancies for 1993-94. The SHD has a 75% livin-in rate and will accept students with a balanced diet by purchasing food items for residents, coordinate physical maintenance, and help maintain the community's health in the community. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree or demonstrated equivalent experience. Experience in menu planning, food preparation, budgeting, financial analysis, assistance to facilitation skills and skillness. Ability to assist in development of a supportive academic/cosperity relationship. Requires $4,590 for first-year staff. A furnished apartment including utilities is provided as well as a room for the residence of an education salary is $4,590 for first-year staff. The period of employment extends from August 1, 1998 to June 30, 2002. Spouses are eligible for KU staff tuition rates. The period of employment extends from August 1, 1998 to June 30, 2002. Spouses are eligible for KU staff tuition rates. Submit a letter of application outlining interest and scholarship details to the KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W.11th, Lawrence, KS 65645. Applications must be postmarked by April 11, 2003. EEO certification is required to the KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W.11th, Lawrence, KS 65645.
Self-employed mom needs someone to care for 5 months old child in my home weekday afternoons. Must be a Christian, willing to work full hours, and have references. Please call 864-8044 for interview.
SPORTS OFFICIAL NEEDED! Anyone interested in uniprim student baseball/softball or adult softball for Lawrence Parks & Recreation Department. Contact Bob Stanton 845-721-1123
Students needed to work w/ young child w/ autism
Initial training required. Possible independent study credit/employment over summer Call 832-001-796
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
The KU Department of Student Housing announces an addition a Academic Program Coordinator, the Academic Program Coordinator holds a half-time position with the Department of Student Housing, working with students to provide support and progress, to encourage good study skills, and to promote an environment of intellectual inquiry. Required Qualifications: Graduate student in good standing at KU, taking no more than 10 hrs/s semester. Preferred Qualifications: Resident supervisory experience. Working knowledge of educational programming; and, Knowledge of engineering. Supervised supervision experience. This position does not allow for regular student teaching, out-of-town practicum or internships duties. Significant extracurricular activities are able to commit two evenings per week to the position and preference will be given to candidates who are able to commit two evenings per week to the position and salary is $500/mo. The period of employment extends from August 1, 1983 through May 31, 1986 (excluding holidays). Contact the Department of Student Housing for further info. and application materials. Application deadline: April 1, 1983.
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries.
Earn $$$+ week in canvases or $4,000 +/mo on fishing boats. Free transportation! Room & baths!
电话 1-855-232-3965 call 1-855-232-3965 ext. A7653.
All it takes is a small group with a little energy and a lot of excitement to earn $$$+ $$$ in just one week.
*ASSETFANT RESIDENCE HALL DIRECTOR*
The ASSETFANT Residence Hall Director (ARHD) holds a ten-month, half-time position with the Department of Student Housing in the Division of Residence Life Complex Director (CD) in coordination of all student functions of a residence hall and the ARHD manages the operation of the half's main desk and its student hourly workers and/or half security monitors. Required Qualifications: a master's degree in an engineering discipline. Enrollment at KU for 1990-84 as either a graduate student in good standing taking no more than two semesters. Preferred Qualifications: Residence Life staff & supervisory experience. Experience with computer systems, means provided by a Computeriemputer experience. Salary & Benefits: $2,800 for first year furnished apartment, utilities, and meals provided. ARHD's and their supervisors are responsible for the Period of employment from August 1, 1995 through May 31, 1994 with the possibility of being hired later. Three letters of reference to the KU Department, and three letters of reference to the KU Department KU 8003. Applications must be postmarked by April 1, 1992. EOE Employer.
Baldyaller unit or 2x 1/4 inch a week, occurrences
almost 1 year; 1 x 1/4 inch a year and after 3 yrs
almost 1 year.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. March 4. 1993
11
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan-boys/girls summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, water sports, gymnastics, archery, rifle training, camp crafts, dramas, or riding. Also offer office maintenance, office Salary $101 more or plus R&R. Seerger 785 Maple, Nil, IL 8099, 8096-746-2444
Child care needed some afternoons. Light housework. Need work, references. 841-7063 evenings.
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people, bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen helpers, housekeeper, maintenance person CAMP, Camp Box 71, Boulder. BC 8030 (303) 425-4557
study* children* camp/northeast top salary, rm/br//dainty, travel allowance. Must have skill in basketball, lacrosse, gymnastics, basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama, drums, fencing, field basketball, golf guitar, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, sailing, sailing, tcuba, tennis, track, waterks, weights, wood, Support kit/staff steward/ and maintenance nurses, secretaries, Men call, Winsta, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10543 (451) 988-3988, Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 641-838-2988
Drivers needed for a job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old and have a good driving record. We will train you in the skills required by License: 8-20 wks/wk. Very helpful $f/.r Call M.B. 842-354-3000, 3-mm-6m-8m. M-F EFO.
Evening wait person(s) wanted. Chinese restaurant. Experience required. Minimal knowledge of Lawrence areas. Must be dependable. 768 hours of farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience necessary, cattle and maintenance experience preferred. Send resume to Wakara Partners, P.O. Box 1761, Lawrence
Full-time position opening for Employment Training Specialist work with adults and older adolescents who have severe and persistent mental illness. Requires minimum of 9 years experience, a bachelor's degree in psychology, writing or a B.A. in a social service field, business, or special education with emphasis in work with children. Employer must provide interpersonal relation skills strong written and interpersonal communication skills, and team involvement. Send letter of interest and resume to the attention of the Health Center, Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 202, Health Center Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 202,
of Date Creamer of Bert Nash Community Mental
Health Center, Kansas City, Kansas 60454, by march 15, 2001 EOE
University, Kansas City, Kansas 60454
Grad RADI hold live-in, 10 month, half-time positions, managing student personnel aspects of a residence unit housing the four students in the Complex Director with student personnel functions including
1989-94 as either a graduate student in good standing no more than 10 hrs/tsr, or a fifth-year student with a 2.8 GPA. Preferred: Residence Life staff experience. Residence hall supervisory role.
facilitating resident's personal and academic development, adjustment to university life, and preparation for employment. Referral services to university and community residential groups live experience. Engagement in individual group living experience. Emphasis on leadership.
term of appointment extends from August 1, 1983 to January 25, 1986. Apply for the following academic year. To Apply: submit a letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience a resume and three letters of recommendation from your school or House, 422 W. 11th, Corbion Hall, Lawrence, KS 80545. Applications must be postmastard by April 11.
**Help Wanted!** Recreation Services is hiring intramural soccer officials. 4-0, 5-0 to 5-0 per /r/ Any interest should attend an organizational meeting March 8, 1995 at 8:00pm in 150 Ribbons Dr.
Jacques a Restaurant and Ultimate Sports Bar is available at staff discounted rooms and cocktails.
Apply to us at www.whitworth.com and 4m F.M at
D102. Westridge Shopping Center, 6th and
Kasai.
Manual labor hours daily 7-9am m-M-F Bowersock Mills 843-185
Line up your summer job now. We are currently hiring a full-time Naegele Combining Inc. Only drug-free, nonsmoking individuals need apply. Call 915-523-6852. Naegele Combining Inc. Manual labor day 2% daily 7% M-F. BOWERS Center
MARKETING INTERNSHIP - Part time now- full time this summer. New progressive Printing Co. has a ambitious self-starter for commissioned printers. Apply in (apply on) 611 Vermont, 8:30-4:30 M-F
Models needed pro $175-300 day & TV/FM1
extra $175-200 day. no exp required. 541-9009
Namity positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii summer/yr. round Great pay.
Pay is based on position offered.
Naisimh Hall RA applications for Fall 1998 are now available at the front desk. All interested students may apply. Applications due back Mar. 18.
NANNIES NEEDED NEAR NYC We offer great
opportunities for new graduates,
NAMED INC, 1-800-875-1871 any time
Models wanted for Redken international hair show in Kansas City at Males and Females. Must be available 1/9 - 3/21 1998 If interested call Dahl Chester at 865-683 or Jerroy Proctor at 843-0334
Nanny positions available nationwide including
y/o round Great pay
free travel 412-643-8399
Part time Secretary position. Must have Macintosh Microsoft Word processing experience. Position available from May. 1 for 6 months. Hours are 8:00-5:00 Tues. & Thurs. no to 5:00 Wed. plus additional days as needed. Send resume to Teresa Rumelia, 63027 Parkway Club, Lawrence, KS 63027
SPRING/SUMMER OPENINGS
*10-40 hrs. weekly* *Flexible around classes*
*$10 to start* *Call 842-8035*
30% SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS IN NY, PA,
MASS., & MAINC. Need skills in: Tennis,
Gymnastics, Equestrian, Baseball, Basket-
ing, Gymnastics, Equestrian, Baseball,
Basket-ing, Rifley, Archery, Rocketry, Woods-
top, Ceramics, Fitness, Dance, Piano, Guitar,
Pioneering, Nurses, Food Services, Upper
Classroom.
Business Students, internship program that offers great resume experience, money and future business employment connections
*Call 841-5327*
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BYDONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Youth Ministry Coordinator
Students needed to work with young children in their daycare. Students need to study summer employment. Call president study credit/employment contact number.
SUMMER JOB 101! Camp Birchwood, a Minnesota camp for girls, seeks college students to work as counselors and instructors in tennis, archery, horseback riding, water skiing, water and water skiing. Employment June 8th to August 13th. For an application call 1-400-631-5270. Female juniper-summer children's camp-northeast men and women with good tennis background with room & board, travel allowance. Women call Jenner wheeler at 441-6801. Men call哭; camp Windoach, 5 Glue Lake, Mamarock, N. V. 10-142.
Waterfront, John SWS summer children’s camp, baithead men and women who can teach children to swim, waterwars team, waterwars (challenge) team, and waterwars team pool and leaks. Good masonry, room & board, travel allowance. Men call or write. Camp Gandhi, 120 Gloria Lake, Middletown, NJ. Camp Williams, 841 Gloria Lake, Middletown, NJ.
Emergent, enthusiastic person needed to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during school year, full-time during summer. Must be 18 years old, 90% yr. Will send resume to Trinity Lutheran Church, 2425 New Hampshire, Hampshire. KS 65004 Deadline: 03-21-17
225 Professional Services
CC Desktop Publishing Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochures, Flyers, Term Paper, Newsletters.
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial
Write to ESMS Co P.O. Box 3249, Law KS 60046
Model Portfolio photography. Call Rochi 841:
9699. Student rates. Don 'de l'ayex
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-BOOTS
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Need person. Mon Wed & Fri. mornings. Full-time in summer. Showing apts, answering phones & general office work. Must be a Kansas resident, in at least 4 months, and be willing to work in at least 19 at kU! call 847-608-M P. W.
Operations manager at St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center. Duties include supervising staff, monitoring the budget and the annual fund, and overseeing all administrative operations of the center. Visit www.stlawrence.edu by March 1st to search St. Lawrence Center. 1631 Crescent Road, Lawrence KS 60442
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 834-4023
Promo Photos and Headshots. B&W Darkroom Fast Service. Firstlight Photography #441-4234
235 Typing Services
$1./Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check
rush jobs. Call 749-4648
-der Woman Word Processing -Former editor transforms scraps into pages of letters from a word processor.
FORTABLE TYPING & EDITING Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 brs.
a day Tutoring avail, near campus. Lowest rates in town. 832-1296
Experting type by experience secretary IBM Corp.
Expanding position in page IEP. East Lawrence Call Mrs. Matliali 841128.
$PRING SALE 50,000 + files for $40,250 mimes
Eldiza the "Psychologist" L'awrence Online
www.pring.com
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Corners. No calls AFTER 9pm. 843-8568
word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribution of information, job role, job
workable. Masters Degree. 841-9234
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
writing. Experience as Call员 at a research
experience. Call员 at a research
experience.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1991 Burton Snowboards, BurtonAir Airl, like w/n freestyle bindings, retention leashes, &
Airline credit worth $200. Selling for $150. No Restrictions. Call Trina 794-7456.
BUS staff for Spring Break trip to Texas $225 for internship. Intermediate International Student Services. 2 strong, 481-6797
boston, Dallas. San Antonio, Austin, Mexico.
International Student Services. 2 Strong 4-8177
CABLE DESK CRAEMBOLT】Flight high costs
for equipment. Flight time must be
will describe ANV cable signal. Send $10 for
complete manual, plans, and parts list
for describes ANV cable signal. P.O. Box 21243, Corpus
Christ, TX 76871
Computers: New and Used
P. C. Compatibles
P. C. Source 832-1126
IBM compatible 286, 40 mg hard drive, 3.25 kg
monitor DSN included, DUEDISCARD, Call DSN 8214,
DSN included, DUEDISCARD, Call DSN 8214,
Must sell 1866 Ford LTD. Red. P.S.W. $1200
Call 841-5841 1:00 p.m.
LXH Home Stereo System In its own cabinet with 2 speakers. AM/FM stereo, cassette, turntable, CD ready. $200 Realistic receiver $50 865-1567 leave message
1980 4-door/hatchback Nissan Datsun 510
/um/fm/tape, A/C. Good condition 832. $24.80
1980 Citation for sale. Runs well. $75 O.B.O.
Convenience.
Used Book Sale, March 13-14 Merton裁售 Shopping Center of the Americas American Association of University Women
340 Auto Sales
370 Want to Buy
1966 Marza 658 GT. Power everything 4 door.
$3000 must sell. Call 842-4066.
88 Suhara DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/FM Cass,
A Great Winter Car Fund Call 824-3243 Lease
WANTED LEVYS 501'S JEANS WE PAY UP
$10.00 alsobuy Jean Jackets 814-406-946
405 For Rent
Four tickets to Adam Sandler this Saturday night
will pay $4.95 per each for. eam418.8172
Wanted: Keyboard for Tandy 1000SK personal computer, (482)-4621
1900 NAISMTH 3 6 4 BR 2 Bath. Lg rooms
micro, etc. Cable tv paid, coin operated laundry
storage, variable leaves. 1286-7697.
Wanted: Tickets to Soul Asylum concert. Call Jake
865-2490
WANTED LEV'S 5 S WE'LL WE PAY UP TO
491-807-6100
400s Real Estate
computer, 841-4021
Mail and Answer Support Call No.
Boardwalk
Apt. Sub-base thru July 2 BR, very close to cam
Apval Now, March free rest 149-3500
Quail Creek
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
2111 Kasold843-4300
Bird
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open6 days a week for your convenience.
524 Frontier 842-4444
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apses for August, 14. They will be in need of a new building to KR unfurn. apses, in the new buildings at West Hils Apss. 100 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS. 811-380 or 390-672.
---
Naismith Place
2*BR from $395
- Jazzy iux app ipt
- Jazzly iux app ipt
- Private backdoor Patios
- Pd cable TV/Pipes
- Backyard court TV/Pipes
- Outside 02#84.71-8415
Outside 02#84.71-8415
5:15pm - FT 10-25a
Or Call for Appointments
HEYUK Med Students, Rainbow Tower Appliances is now leasing. We can provide Limited Entry, Heat & Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa garage from KU Med Center. CK-9368. 6146 Arrive from KU Med Center. 831-308.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
Large 2.8m ltr, 4 blocks from campus $180/mo.
Large 3.9m ltr, 5 blocks from campus $250/mo.
198 and option to renew. Big yard, private,
roommate responsible, quiet, like living alone.
Pets allowed. Off street parking. Contact Jennifer
9th & Avalon 842-3040
LORIMAR TOWN HOMES
All amenities
•Fireplace
•Dishwasher
•Microwave
•Washer/Dryer
•Free Cable
Now accepting
Now accepting applications for Fall
1,2,3 Bedroom
Call Dave 841-7849
3801 Club
Mackenzie Place now leaving for Aug 5 3 yr. old, luxury laptops, close to campus. All 3 BH, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appliances. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1168
Each apartment features:
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- Carport available
1 bedroom $340, $365
2 bedroom $460, $470
3 bedroom $525, $585
Nice, quiet. 3 BR bhps in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A/ gas; heat 1/2 BA, W/D hookups, garage No pets. References $450/mn.
843-2888.
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Most sublease immediately 2 bdrm. $800 very low
til central heat/air. Please call 834-7561
Please call Kelly for appt.
Mon. Wed. & Fri.: 12:00 - 2:00p.m.
Tue. & Thurs.: 6:00 - 8:00p.m.
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS.
West Hill APARTMENTS
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
office
Now leasing for June & August. Nice, quiet. 2 BR apartments. Low utilities, central air, gas, heat. all kitchen appliances on bus route. beautiful pool and tennis court. 100 sq ft. m2 (meso Spanish Creat Apents. Call 841-4684 for amps
660 Gateway CT.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon-Fri 10-5 Sat 1-5
Bedroom TownHomes
Garages,27 Bath Microwave Oven
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with Fireplaces
*Luxurious 2,3, &4
*1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
Bedroom TownHomes
Carson C/Butte
841-8400
841-128
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KHD Run Route
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
WATERIDAONAL APTS
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(rother times w/appt.)
GREAT LOCATION - Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed. Thurs.
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
$305 to $365 per month
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for information.
info or appt.
Plan Early. One or two female, non-smoker needs room. Pool, laundry, bus route 846, utilities Room in historic home on edge of campus. Kitchen and laundry room privilges. Vacant now.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
South campus location 180. Maine. Nice 2-bedroom house, hardwood, AC, garage, available April 1. Short or long term lease $500 + deposit, pets negotiate 832-139 by appl. please.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED
Studios,1,2.2+,3&4 bdrm apts... designed with you in
Campus Place-841-1429
mind! Cote
HanoverPlace-841-1212 14th & Mass
1145Louisiana
Regents Court-749-0445
Orchard Corners-749-4226 15th & Kasold
HardCoffers
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
10th & Arkansas
Equal Housing Opportunity
842-4455
Spiacious 2 bedrm apn. Summer sublease all-utilities paid excess electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings: 749-3923.
NAISMITH
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
Part25
*2 Pools
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
- On KU Bus Route with 4 Stations Property
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
1800 Naismith Dr
Lawrence, KS
66044
(913)843-8559
Hookups
*2 Laundry Rooms
*Some Washer/Dryer
Call or stop by today
2401 W 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry pets)
NOW LEASING FOR FALL
"We'll make life easier for you"
SPRING BREAK SOUTH FADEE. BEACH
Parking. Resort Rosemont.
Parties on the beach. J2RJ 218-6350.
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer
friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or
841-0849. Step by 106 Tennessee.
Two bedrooms available now! A/C, cable. $325 per month, on bus route. B89 016-8316.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1 Bdmrn in a 4 Bdmrn, pool 2, Bath 818+. Inl. Usr.
Apple Line Land Church Corners. Call 843-362-8318.
Beautiful l bbm 1 apt near campus Hardwood
Mall. Must have high school diploma. Must
must see 10 and Kentucky. Call 842-2288
How to schedule an ad:
Great Deal! 1 Bedroom in old house near campus
$185/mo +/- 10% share kitch, bath, locker
$249/mo +/- 10% share kitchen, bath, locker
Female roommate wanted for 1 tbrm & 2 bdrm townhouse. Start leave in March. Close to campus.
Roommate needed share furnished 4 bmr
undergraduate white female. 799-253
Looking for
roommate.
Roommate needed to share furniture 4 Edrim
apartment + utilizes on bus路 Look for
roommate to share the bathroom
Roammate Wanted NOW! $200/no. water, gas,
and cable paid. Call Brian at 842-5323
Large BIR, 28A furn. loft ap, Orchard Corners.
Avail ASAP ND. no req.驻店 May-Aug 2025 +
/+uiult,3 great roommates, privacy, + more fun than any dorm. 865-5199
LOOK-ONSabile female nonsmoker needed for 3 bfm duplex apartment. Book a room, $1,900/room, live on land. On bus route 1802 utilities CHECK US OUT 841-7238 leave message. quiet_maiture_female roommate wanted for 2 bfm Spanish Crust Apartments. Sublease from 1 - July 3. Rent $13 + 4 utilities. Call 642-4348
Save Money - Third Room Needed to share a
room in Campus. Lies Alive and Utilizes Closet to
Campus Leave Msgue 842-879-9301
Single parent would like individ to share domestic choices in exchange for living accomodation Terms are set by the school.
Ads shown in may be fitted to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**149** Stiffler File. **148** Stiffler File.
Stop by the Kansan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charge,
on MasterCard or Visa.
Calculating Rates:
You may print your classified list on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. You may choose to have it shipped to your MasterCard or Visa card. Ads that are issued to VISA or MasterCard for a reward of unpaid days may be printed as follows:
Classified Information and order form
Calculating faces:
Classified rates are based on the number of connective day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of姑妹 lines the ad occupies). To calculate cost, the multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost to the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of 54.00
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser a bill will be credited for it unpaid days. Refunds on canceled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available.
Imes:
line for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to
Classifications
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
1X 2-4X 4-7X 6-14X 10-28X 30-X
1.95 1.50 1.90 0.80 0.70 0.45
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.50 0.50 0.40
1.75 1.00 0.70 0.50 0.50 0.35
1.67 1.00 0.70 0.50 0.50 0.35
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper
_Classification:
---
Phone:___
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kasan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University of Dalmatia Karnan. 11$^a$训 Staffer FIH Hall, Lawrence KS. 68045$^{b}$
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Tower 3-3
© 1982 Getty Images, Inc. (Created by Kenneth Rosen).
"Oh, the box of dead files? Ramone gave them to me
Saturday night during his courtship display...
Of course, they were already sucked dry."
12
Thursday, March 4, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Have you Heard?"
OPEN HOUSE
Mastercraft is having an Open House!
Saturday, March 6
1-5 p.m.
Don't be left in the cold!
Mastercraft offers studios,
1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments. All are completely furnished with many locations and floor plans to choose from.
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana 841-1429
Hanover Place
14th & Mass. 841-1212
Regents Court
1905 Mass. 749-0445
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold 749-4226
Sundance
7th & Florida 841-5255
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
- Washer/dryer*
- Designed for privacy
- Energy efficient
- Many built-ins
- Affordable rates
- Private parking
- Locally owned
- Laundry facilities
- Close to campus*
* Locally managed
* On bus route*
* Close to shopping
* Central A/C
* On site managers*
* Pool*
* Microwaves*
MASTERCRAFT
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Professional Management and Maintenance Company*842-4455
Home of
Mac's Diner
Powerful Values
Macintosh LC II
$950^{00}
Macintosh LC II 4/40
$950^{00}
Macintosh LC III
Macintosh LC III 4/80
$1170^{00} • $1300^{00}
BOSCH
Apple StyleWriter II Printer $299no
Macintosh
LC III
图
Apple LaserWriter Select 310 Printer $955$^{00}$
Complete your system with a keyboard, monitor, and any printer!
$955^{00}$
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
1045
Macintosh LC III
Macintosh LCIII 4/80, 14" Color Display,
Standard Keyboard, and LaserWriter 310
$2584®
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-5697
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union Level Two
864-5607
V7SA
8
6. Fluorine add 3.5% water to
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Hawks get one last chance
Eight track team members to travel to Lincoln, Ames
By Blake Spurney
Kansan sportswriter
Eight Kansas track athletes will be making their final attempts Saturday to qualify for the NCAA Indoor Championships, which will be held March 12 and 13 in Indianapolis.
The athletes will compete at two separate NCAA qualifying meets, one in Ames, Iowa and one in Lincoln, Neb.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said the athletes had the option to compete at whichever facility better suited their events. The Ames track is faster than Lincoln's, but Lincoln's facility is better for most field events.
Each event in track has a benchmark that an athlete must meet in order to automatically qualify for nationalists. If not enough athletes meet that standard, then the athletes with the top provisional marks are invited.
Schwartz said that senior high jumper MaryBeth Labosky and junior milder Michael Cox are all but assured
an invitation to the NCAA championships, but others have a chance.
Labosky won the high jump with a leap of 6-1/2 at last week's Big Eight Conference Indoors in Amnes, but missed the automatic qualifying mark by a little less than half an inch.
Cox, who has a 4.01:39 mile to win the conference meet, is gambling that his time will be good enough to make him a No. 1 pick. He is not going to race this weekend.
"As it is now, I'm letting my time stand to see if I can make it to nationales," he said.
Labosky will compete in Ames, as will junior middle distance runner Dan Waters and two junior shot putters, Cheryl Evers and Teresa Sherman-Reichert.
Another group will be heading to Lincoln, Neb. They are junior long jumper Harun Hazim, sophomore high jumper John Kis汗曼 and two triple jumpers, sophomores Heather Hogan and Cassandra Bryant-Wants.
Schwartz said that Labosky was competing this weekend to maintain her timing, which was crucial in field events.
K
PETE SMITH
"She feels she needs to compete this weekend to get ready for nationals," Schwartz said.
Renee Kroenier / KANSAN
Nick Johannsen, Kansas high jumper,
practices his approach to the high
jump. Johannsen will be one of four
top competitors in Nebraska, (Neb),
for an NCAA qualifying meet.
Commissioner, playoff changes considered
The Associated Press
PHOENIX — Baseball owners continued yesterday toward expanded playoffs and interleague play, and a significant number appeared to favor stripping the next commissioner of authority over the current labor negotiations.
John Harrington of the Boston Red Sox, who heads the schedule-format committee, said he will ask owners today for their opinions on the changes before going to baseball's schedule-makers. He said draft
schedules with three divisions were being prepared for 1904, but it was more likely changes wouldn't be made until the 1905 season. He said fans supported geographical realignment within leagues, but were strongly against teams switching leagues.
As owners gathered for their two day quarterly meetings — their seventh session in a six-month span — they continued their internal debate that began with commissioner Fay Vincent's forced resignation last Sept. 7.
"There's a stagnancy in our game and we're going to have to address it," George W. Bush of the Texas Rangers said.
There is a split among owners on whether to hire a commissioner before a new labor agreement or to wait. A compromise would be to hire a commissioner, but not let the commissioner participate in these labor talks.
However, many candidates probably would turn down the job under those conditions.
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SPORTS: The Kansas women's basketball team will play Missouri tomorrow in the first round of the Big Eight Conference tournament, Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102,NO.114
FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1993
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
FBI arrests suspect in bombing
Agents identify van that housed explosive
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A man described as a follower of a radical Muslim cleric was arrested yesterday in connection with last week's World Trade Center bombing when he coolly tried a third time to reclaim a rental deposit on the van determined to have housed the bomb.
Other suspects were being sought in what prosecutor Gilmore Childres called "the single most destructive act of terrorism ever committed on American soil." The motive remained unclear.
"This investigation clearly is not finished, but a large first step has been taken," said James Fox, FBI chief in New York, at a news briefing yesterday.
Mohammed A. Salameh, 25, was charged with aiding and abetting the bombing and the fire that followed and with transportation of explosives across state lines. The Jersey City, N.J., resident was ordered held without bail and faces life in prison if convicted.
Federal investigators said they expected other people might have helped Salameh.
The arrest was a sudden break in the most notorious U.S. bombing in years. Just a day earlier, the FBI had said that it could take months to crack the case.
The van that Salameh had rented was the one that carried the bomb, said the FBI in
an affidavit filed with the court. Charred fragments of the van, including an axle with a traceable identification number, were recovered at the blast site.
The affidavit also said that a search of a Jersey City apartment done with a bomb-sniffing dog turned up bomb-making equipment, including wiring and manuals on circuitry and electromagnetic devices. On the rental agreement Salameh had given the phone number for that apartment. It was not immediately clear whether Salameh lived there.
Salameh, in federal court in New York City last night, appeared calm and relaxed as an interpreter read the charges to him in Arabic. The bearded man nodded to his attorney but didn't appear to speak. The court-appointed defense lawyer, Robert
Precht, asked for $5 million bail.
Papers that the suspect presented the rental agency several days ago were covered with nitrates, an anonymous government source told the Associated Press. Nitrates are found in some explosives; traces of nitrates were found at the blast site.
Last Friday's blast in a garage beneath the twin twins killed five people, injured more than 1,000 and left one missing. It caused a crater four stories deep. The 119 storytowers — home to hundreds of businesses and more than 50,000 workers — are not expected to reopen for a month.
The arrest came after an army of investigators spent the past week combing through piles of rubble at the blast site and pursuing scores of leads.
FBI Protection Foothold FBI
Knight-Ridder Tribune
One arrest was made yesterday, but the investigation into the World Trade Center bombing continues. Federal investigators said they thought others might be involved.
Haskell's expanding vision
S. W. ROBINSON
South of Haskell Indian Junior College, Dan Wildcat, chair of natural and social sciences at Haskell, stands atop the bear claw that is part of the medicine wheel formation. Although it is a typically northern concept, the wheel includes elements from tribes across the country.
Professor says junior college has something to share with KU, Lawrence
By Mark Martin Special to the Kansan
I
n a field on the southern edge of the Haskell Indian Junior College campus, a brisk March wind whips through the prairie grass that outlines a medicine wheel. Four-3 foot high stones within the circle mark the cardinal directions.
Trees enclose the field except on the side facing the Haskell campus. It is a peaceful setting, meant for meditation and contemplation.
Haskell's medicine wheel was carved into the land last fall, and in many ways it symbolizes a new cycle in the school's long history. The Haskell of 1993 is an institution in transition: A new residence hall being designed this year will house 300 more students, and in the fall, Haskell will begin a baccalureate degree program in education.
As with much in American-Indian culture, the medicine wheel is a symbol. It represents the cyclical nature of time and the continuity of life. The first people to inhabit the continent used medicine wheel sites as a place for reflection and healing.
Haskell administrators and faculty hope that along with internal growth, the school also will become a larger part of Lawrence. But history, prejudice and cultural differences have continually separated Haskell from mainstream life in Lawrence. Aside from those attending Lawrence High School football games, few have set foot on the Haskell campus. And many Haskell students say discrimination against American Indians in town is a fact of life.
Haskell is growing.
"As Haskell grows in its role as a national leader in Indian education, we, meaning everyone in Lawrence and at KU, should be able to take pride in that," said Dan Wildcat, chair of natural and social sciences at Haskell. "Haskell's growth is something to share."
City within a city
Located on the eastern edge of Lawrence, Haskell sometimes seems to be in another country. Almost 70 percent of Haskell students live on campus, and many students say that Lawrence's prejudices run too deep to make them feel comfortable off campus. They talk of being followed in stores or stared at in bars. They say prejudice is the norm, not the exception.
"This town has a lot of problems with perception,"
Story continued, Page 7.
Education to move to vacant JRP
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
Joseph R. Pearson Hall will change from a residence hall to an academic building, the University announced yesterday.
The 103,000-square-foot residence hall will be the new home of KU's School of Education, the Child Clinical Psychology program of the department of psychology, the Division of Continuing Education's academic support and instructional services and the Academic Systems for the Training and Use of Technology in Education program.
The Student Housing Department closed the residence hall in Fall 1992. It was no longer needed because of declining occupancy in the residence hall system.
Robert Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said the School of Education was having problems with space at its present location in Bailey Hall.
In a statement, Budig said, "There is no better location on campus for academic programs. It would meet the long-term needs of one of our important professional schools."
The preliminary plan must receive approval from the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature, said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor and former dean of education.
He said the fate of Bailey had not yet been determined.
Richard Whelan, acting dean of education, said the new location would allow the school to add new services.
"The instructional facilities, when they're constructed, will be state-of-the-art," he said of the new programs, laboratories and learning resource centers the building will house.
JRP will be renovated before the move. Renovating the building and transferring the departments into JRP will cost an estimated $10 million.
Bearse said JRP would not see the changes for a few years because Hoch Auditorium and Murphy Hall renovation projects needed to be financed first.
"We're not talking about this taking place immediately," Bearse said. "My theory is that it will be occupied in 1999. That's the back-of-the-envelope prediction I came up with."
INSIDE
Standoff continues
Tournament ticket prices force some to stay home
PRESENTED BY THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
Security in Waco, Texas, tightened as the standoff between federal agents and a religious cult continued. Agents are prepared to wait the cut out, they say.
See story, Page 5.
Athletic director says he knows increase is restrictive to students
Anne Taylor, Leawood sophomore,
wants to see the KU men's basketball
team play in next weekend's Big Eight
Conference postseason tournament
By Todd Selfert
Kansan staff writer
But Taylor will not be going to Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., to watch the Jayhawks play in person. She said the ticket prices are too expensive.
"I don't have the $110.1 would need to cover the cost," she said. "People have got to realize that a person paying for school can't afford to pay that much money to watch a game."
Ticket prices for the tournament range from $110 to $130 depending on the seat's location and are valid for all tournament games.
Tickets last season cost between $80 and $100.
Bob Frederick, athletic director, said the conference's athletic directors decided last spring to raise ticket prices because of increased costs and Missouri state taxes that the conference had to pay.
The directors compared the tournament's ticket prices with tournament prices from the Big East, the Southeastern Conference and the Atlantic Coast Conference in determining the Big Eagle's price structure.
Tickets for the ACC and the SEC tournaments each cost $140 this season. Tickets for the Big East tournament cost $135.
Fredrick agreed the price increase was unfair to students.
"The price is prohibitive," Frederick said. "That's unfortunate. Ideally, we'd like to be able to offer student ticket prices. The economic reality is that we can't."
"I agree that it does squeeze a lot of students out of the picture, though."
Aaron Kline, Huntington, ind. freshman, said he thought the conference did not care about the students who support the teams.
"The conference tournament is for nothing more than money," he said. "What makes Allen Field House and the other arenas fun is the students, but the students can't afford the tickets for the tournament."
Ticket prices climb
1992 ticket prices
Upper level $80
Lower level $100
1993 ticket prices
Upper level $110
Lower level $130
Upper level . $80
See related story. Page 3.
Increased Big Eight basketball tournament costs resulted in higher ticket prices this year.
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
Upper level: $110
Lower level: $131
Source: KU ticket office
Andrew Holmes / KAMANIKA
2
Friday, March 5, 1993
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The Office of Study Abroad will hold an "It's Not Too Late to Appl" information table from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jeanne Brennan at 864-3742.
**Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jennifer Roth at 832-1511.**
International studies and programs will hold an international careers conference from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union. The conference will present international career opportunities and options in several occupational fields. The registration fee, which can be paid at the door, is $8. The keynote speaker will be William Chapman, president of International Operations for Butler Manufacturing Company. Chapman assumes strategic and operations management responsibilities outside the United States. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-1411.
Triathlon and Swim Club will hold running practice at 10 a.m. Sunday outside Anschutz Sports Pavilion. The club will hold swimming practice at 2 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
WEATHER
Omaha: 44°/22°
LAWRENCE: 50°/33°
Kansas City: 46°/29°
St. Louis: 43°/29°
Wichita: 51°/28°
Tulsa: 56°/33°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 59°/40'
Chicago: 38°/27'
Houston: 66°/42'
Miami: 76°/59'
Minneapolis: 39°/19'
Phoenix: 77°/49'
Salt Lake City: 52°/32'
Seattle: 53°/42'
TODAY
Sunny sunny with NW winds at 10
High: 50°
Low: 33°
Sunny.
High: 55'
Low: 33'
Mostly sunny.
High: 55'
Low: 36'
Source: Bohan Weeks, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
Andrew Hostes / KANSAN
Cloudy
ON THE RECORD
A student's portable compact disc player valued at $250 was taken Feb. 25 or Feb. 26 from a room in Marvin Hall, KU police reported.
Send your nominations to: Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas,
A student's KUID, bus pass, driver's license and credit cards, valued together at $70, were taken
Tuesday from a men's locker room in Robinson Center, KU police reported.
Two hubcaps valued at $40, were taken Tuesday or Wednesday from a car in a parking lot near Oliver Hall, KU police report.
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749-2424
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The University Daily Kansan (USFS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawn, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
928 Massachusetts
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The Woman's Fitness Facility
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60454.
DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office, 864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to one single-spaced page.
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College. Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator, and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring 1993
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
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Crafton- Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; KU student tickets available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats are reserved; public $15 & $13, KU and K-12 students $7.50 & $6.50, senior citizens and other students $12 & $14; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 5, 1993
3
BRIEFS
Lawrence area bus businesses to exhibit at Riverfront Plaza
More than 57 Lawrence companies and organizations will display their products and services this weekend at a home and business show in the Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlet Mall. I Riverfront Plaza
The show, which is sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, will include how-to demonstrations on moving by Coleman American Moving Services Inc., 721 E. Ninth St., and on make-up by Avon Products, 1836 W. 27th Terrace.
"This is a chance for businesses to display their products so the public can see what they have to offer," said Mary Jo Doherty, owner of Expositions Inc., the firm coordinating the show.
John Ralston, an internationally known chef who has prepared meals for Queen Elizabeth II of England and opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, will conduct three, 30-minute cooking demonstrations during the weekend.
The show will be open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Career conference to provide information about jobs abroad
Representatives for international companies will provide information about careers abroad tomorrow at the International Career Conference in the Kansas Union.
The conference runs from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The cost is $8, which does not include the lunch featuring a keynote speaker.
Cathy McClure, conference coordinator, said the conference mainly was for students to gain ideas about working outside the United States.
She said the representatives would answer students' questions, such as how proficient they must be in a foreign language, the importance of study abroad, and what skills were necessary for a job outside of the United States.
"This will give them a real foothold on an international career," McClure said.
Ambulance service to conduct free CPR training at car dealership
The Douglas County Ambulance Service is conducting four nights of CPR training free to the public at Jim Ellen Auto Plaza, 2112 W. 29th Terrace.
The first three nights — Wednesday, March 17 and March 24 — teach adult CPR. The last night, March 31, teaches children's CPR. The classes run from 6 to 9 p.m.
Participants need only to attend classes on one night to become certified by the American Heart Association, said Pat Mayo, coordinator for Project I Can Help, the public service division of the ambulance service.
About 50 spots are open for each night's classes. Those interested need to sign up for Wednesday's class by Monday.
To register, call 843-7777.
The car dealership sponsors the classes, which normally cost $15. The dealership started providing the classes last March, four months after its owner, Jack Ellena, underwent CPR after suffering a heart attack.
Haskell searches for new name as college's mission changes
Employees, students and alumni of Haskell Indian Junior College are being asked for ideas as the school searches for a new name.
The institution plans to offer its first four-year degree this fall. Officials said "Haskell" would remain part of the name but that "Junior" would be deleted when the new name was adopted in the fall.
Haskell President Bob Martin said the name would reflect the college's changing mission.
Haskell will offer a teacher-education baccalaureate program in the fall, its first four-year degree.
Recommendations for the new name are by March 31, said Ray Morgan, Board of Regents chair.
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writers Todd Seifert and Lynn McCormick and from Associated Press reports.
Revenue code budget vetoed
By Brett Riggs
Kansan staff writer
Student Body President Brad Garlinghouse yesterday vetooed the proposed revenue code budget, citing the need for the budget to include increased revenue from a proposed activity fee increase.
On Feb. 24, Senate passed both the $1,152,950 budget and a bill to raise the student activity fee by $3, which would add a projected $135,000 to the budget for next year.
STUDENT SENATE
Student senators augmented the budget by taking money from the Senate unallocated account — a coffer used to meet organizations' weekly money requests. The senators intended to replenish the
fund, which would have dropped to $234 from $22.498, by raising fees.
The projected revenue was not included in the budget when it was passed last week. Garlinghouse said that he thought it should have been.
"We need to account for the increase in the activity fee," said Garlinghouse, who will submit the budget at next week's
Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer, said he agreed with the decision to veto the budget.
Senate meeting.
By sending the revenue code budget back to Senate, it is possible that it could be changed. Garlinghouse said.
He said that he wanted to put the money in the Senate unallocated account rather than reopen Senate debate to redecide allocation of funds to revenue code groms.
"I think it would be best to put it in the unallocated account," Garlinghouse said.
He said if Senate broke into debate about allocation of funds, he would move to table the budget bill and call an emergency meeting for March 13, which would give Senate
more time to make good decisions.
One of Garlinghouse's complaints about the first budget was that the finance committee, which formed the proposed budget, did not provide adequate information for senators to make good decisions.
According to Senate rules and regulations, the finance committee must submit each revenue code group's original budget request and an explanation for financing each recommendation.
"I want a breakdown of every group's budget," Garlinghous said. "I want to see who's in it."
Jayhawks win sales for T-shirt vendors
Sigourney said he wished the budget could be sent back to the finance committee to propose a new budget using the increased revenue.
MIG
1993
8
CHAMPIONS
By Terrilyn McCormick
Immediately after the KU men's basketball team won the Big Eight Conference championship Wednesday night, the team sported the official T-shirts now in high demand at Lawrence stores.
Screen-It Graphics of Lawrence, 315 N.E. Industrial Lane, had printed in advance 25,000 T-shirts celebrating the championship to be sold immediately after the Jayhawks won the game, said Doug Hamilton, manager of the store.
The company printed 4,000 more shirts after the victory to distribute throughout the state.
The Kansas Union Bookstore has the official victory shirt and another, unofficial version.
Monica Seiter, assistant manager of merchandise at the Union, said that the bookstore had about 140 of each shirt in stock, but that it would order more to meet the demand.
Jonathan Martin, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, bought three of the official T-shirts at the Union: one for himself and two for his parents.
Joanne and Bob McPhee of Overland Park check sizes on T-shirts commemorating the Kansas men's basketball team's Big Eight Conference championship.
"I just wanted to show my support for the team because it has done so well this year," he said.
Seiter said that alumni wanting the shirt from all across the state had been calling the bookstore.
Deana Podrebarack, assistant manager of Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Massachusetts, said that the store received calls all day yesterday. Jayhawk Spirit does not carry the shirt
worn by the players after the Nebraska game but has a style unique to the store.
Podrebarack said that many of the calls were from people wanting the shirts the players wore after the game.
Hamilton said that the official shirt worn by the players always was popular with fans.
"People like to be able to get merchandise the players put on after the game," he said.
Hamilton said the Jayhawk's performance influenced sales.
"It is definitely a boom to our business," he said. "Each year, particularly the years that KU does well, there is a marked increase in business."
Former head of Planned Parenthood to speak tonight
Kansan staffwriter
By Jess DeHaven
The debate about abortion rights will be the topic of a speech given by the former president of Planned Parenthood at 7 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Faye Wattleton has traveled the United States speaking on reproductive rights and has been a consultant of national politicians and foreign leaders on family planning issues.
She received the American Public Health Association's 1980 Award of Excellence.
Although she no longer has any formal
ties with Planned Parenthood, a national organization that defends abortion rights, Wattleton still is involved with issues concerning reproductive rights.
Wattleton, a former nurse and public health-care official firsthand the probe
PRIYANTHA GILMORE
Faye Wattleton
lemms caused by unsafe abortions when abortion was illegal. It was these experiences that established her commitment to providing reproductive health options to all women, especially those who could not afford them, she has said.
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, who will introduce Wattleton tonight, said she was looking forward to Wattleton's speech.
"I certainly admire Ms. Wattleton because of the work she has done for all people, not just women," she said. "I'm honored and delighted to be introducing her. She's a role model for a lot of women."
Margaret Hu, Student Union Activities
vorsors coordinator, said Wattleton was
chosen to speak at KU because several selection committee members had requested her.
"Some of our members have seen her on TV and were very impressed with her sneaking." Hsu said.
The lecture is sponsored by SUA, KU ProChoice Coalition, Women in Law and the National Organization for Women. A reception will be held after Wattleton's speech in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
Tickets are available at the SUA box office. They cost $1 for students and $3 for non-students.
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Friday, March 5, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Nation's pastime faces threat on field of greed
Baseball is in danger of striking out. Money is killing our national pastime and most people don't even know it.
Gone are the days of walking down the street to Wrigley or Fenway or Tiger Stadium and catching a day game for about a dollar. The games are at night now so the teams can maximize their television profits.
And the once-proud neighborhoods around the parks have decayed. A lot of people gave up and moved to the suburbs, and so did some baseball teams. Now games are played in places such as Arlington, Texas, and Anaheim, Calif.
So today most people have to commute to get to a ballgame. That means that after buying a ticket, paying to park and getting something to eat, most families are paying more than $100 for one game.
That sounds like a foul ball, and it's keeping a lot of families away from the game.
And the situation is only getting worse. As operating costs increase, so do the prices.
Player salaries are skyrocketing. Free agency has meant that the teams with the most money get the best players — for astronomical amounts of money.
That's frightening for small-market teams such as Kansas City and Milwaukee. They can't afford to pay those salaries.
But players don't care about market size when they sign their contracts. They want money. Never mind the fact that the average player's income has risen from $245,000 in 1982 to $1.1 million this year.
And so many players who had spent their entire careers with one team — like Barry Bonds and Wade Boggs — find themselves in new uniforms this spring. They jumped ship for more money.
Whatever happened to loyalty? It has been forsaken for the almighty dollar.
And for every player who whines that $1 million isn't enough money, there are hundreds of mothers and fathers explaining to their children why they aren't going to see their favorite team.
There are proposals that could help rein in the game. Several owners have proposed an NBA-like salary cap that would slow the growth of player incomes.
Another plan designed to aid teams in small television markets would distribute television revenue evenly among the 28 franchises. That would help teams like the Seattle Mariners, with a television contract worth $1.5 million, compete with the New York Yankees, who rake in $42 million a year in TV money.
These proposals are not perfect. But they do address the fundamental financial problems that are threatening to make our national pastime part of our national past.
Two years ago, one baseball father reflected on the game after being elected to the Hall of Fame.
"My kids," Tom Seaver said, "will be able to take their children to the Hall of Fame and say: 'There's your grandfather. He was pretty good at what he did.'"
That's what the game is all about.
Sadly, it's being sacrificed as the field of dreams becomes a field of green.
Greedy owners and players should start making sacrifices of their own and bring America's game home.
CHRIS MOESER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
TOLES
UNIVERSAL PRESS SYND.
3 ©1993 THE BUFFALO NEWS
I'M GETTING TO
KNOW THE ROPES
GETTING THE
HANG OF IT.
Balding, fat men are fed up with today's medicine
The day had hardly begun when half a dozen gloom-spreading co-workers asked if I had seen the latest scare story from the medical world.
It appears that really bald guys under the age of 55 are four times more likely to have heart attacks than men who have hairy skulls, or so some doctors claimed in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Those who have mild baldness are still more likely to keel over, but in fewer numbers. Those with only a receding hairline are in no greater danger than the mop tops.
Of course they aren't sure. When they come out with these reports, they're never sure why. They just toss out some statistics, scare the hell out of a few million men, then go off and poke and probe some other sample group.
Why should baldness have anything to do with heart attacks? The doctors say it might have something to do with male hormones, but they aren't sure.
Maybe next week it will have something to do with the relationship between flat feet and suicide or small chins and choking to death on hot dogs.
Besides, this latest report doesn't apply to me. It has to do with men under 55, a sorrowful birthday I've already drowned.
At least I assume it doesn't apply to men over 55. Maybe they asked some older guys and were told: "Mind your own damn business. I'm sick of hearing about your stupid studies."
COLUMNIST
MIKE ROYKO
were in our 30's when the medical world started telling us what not to eat, drink or do.
Most older guys feel that wav. We
It started with eggs, bacon, butter and most other dairy products. That led to steaks, pork chops, ribs and anything else that might taste good. Don't smoke. Don't drink. Wait, you can drink—but only one or two glasses of wine, because another study showed that wine could be good for the heart.
And, like a fool, I listened to them. No, I didn't stop smoking, drinking or eating the allegedly deadly foods of my choice, but I listened. That made me feel guilty for not striving for physical perfection, which brought on stress, which will probably shorten my life more than a couple of fried eggs and bacon will.
Now I no longer listen. When I see a headline that says: "Medical findings say men who slouch have..." I turn the page. I don't care what their findings are. Will slouching turn me into a troll or a gnome? I don't care.
Ever since I declared my emancipation from science-induced fear and dread, my conversation with the doc now goes something like this:
"Hmmm, your weight. It appears that you have gained..."
"Oh, shut up. You could use a little meat on your scrawny bones. You wouldn't last 30 seconds in a barroom brawl."
"About your blood pressure. it is..."
"About your blood pressure, it is..." "Stuff it." If my blood pressure is up, it's because I had to sit in your waiting room 25 minutes past my appointment reading dull magazines that are two years old."
"Now, the lab reports aren't what I'd like to see. Your cholesterol..."
"Lab reports? I almost did not survive your lab. That blind woman with the needle stabbed me six times before she found a vein. If it happens again, I'll not only sue you for malpractice, but I'll file a criminal complaint for assault with intent to kill."
"About the smoking..."
"I'll tell you about the smoking. I wouldn't accept an invitation to the White House even if Hillary hadn't banned the weed."
"Other than that..."
"Other than that, give me the bill. I want to go get a pork shank and a beer."
One of these days, I'm going to go public with my own scientific study. It has to do with doctors secretly buying up all the chicken and turkey farms, fishing boats and controlling interests in the companies that make jogging shoes.
Is that true?
Well, probably as true as bad guys getting more heart attacks.
Wike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
We are committed to empowering KU women through information, support and consensus decision-making. We are here to give you the
backing and power of an organization whenever you may need it.
The possibilities and objectives of WSU are endless. We have worked on issues ranging from curriculum improvements to health care to publicizing the prevalence of sexual violence. With other organizations, we have co-sponsored movies, speakers and marches.
Women's group states purpose
We encourage all members of the KU community to voice their concerns about the programs, services and interactions that they need.
As members of the Women's Student Union, we would like to reiterate that we are an organization that supports the rights and concerns of women.
Please consider bringing your ideas, concerns, voice and commitment to our weekly meetings at 5 p.m. on Fridays in the Kansas Union. Also feel free to call our office in the Union or to speak to any of us personally about any of your concerns. The scope of WSU is whatever any of us determine it to be.
Women's Student Union
CHAPMAN Environment suffers brunt of human arrogance
Many people insist on believing that nature operates according to human values. We seem to get a comfortable sense of security by letting religious and social values obscure our view of how nature works. In reality, human values are meaningsign outside the world where nature operates according to our values is misleading, no matter what your personal point of view.
Biologists recognize that interactions among a variety of species are essential to the world's health. Each species is unique, and our own view of them is irrelevant to their roles within the ecosystem. In other words, our emotional attraction to warm, cuddly creatures can make them any more ecologically vital than a cold and creamy creature that crawls out from under a rock.
The notion that certain animals have equal rights is just one of the absurdities arising from our emotional attraction to certain species. The species of concern are inevitably vertebrates, since we find them pleasingly similar to ourselves. It can only be our own arrogance that makes it possible to choose which organisms deserve equal rights. Personally, I'm self-centered enough to put my needs ahead of any other animal's, and I suspect that a lion would do the same, if faced with the choice of killing me or starving. Although we have a responsibility to treat animals as humanely, as possible, it's ludicrous to treat them as if they were humans.
STEVE CHAPMAN
The Gaia hypothesis is a supreme example of assigning human traits to the natural world. According to the most radical version of Gaia, the Earth's organisms manipulate their surroundings in order to actively maintain a great place to live. This makes all the world's organisms a big, happy family, with the notable exception of those pesky human beings. Gaia is emotionally and spiritually appealing because we can so easily imagine that humans are not premise that organisms display the human trait of having purposes and goals. Although Gaia is spiritually irresistible to people who worship nature while condemning human activity, it is scientifically incredible.[2]
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
The most damaging and widespread misuse of human values is implicit in the deeply rooted belief that human beings represent the pinnacle of life, as if all other creatures were stepping stones on the path toward our creation. This belief is so pervasive that scientists once felt compelled to place humans at the very top of the tree of life. Since that time it become clear that relationships among species are better represented by a bush, with humans as just one small twig among innumerable others.
Viewing humans as the pinnacle of creation may actually be dangerous to the future of life. The coming decades are likely to be unique in history, as population growth intensifies the pressure to advance human interests at the expense of environmental health, and vast numbers of species vanish because of human activity. By arrogantly believing that we are the rose on the dung heal of creation, we can easily justify ecosystem destruction whenever it benefits even a small group of people. Since the effects of extinction and ecosystem losses cannot be reliably predicted, we must learn to recognize diversity itself as a value. This can only happen when people realize that we are a part of nature, not its central purpose.
Steve Chapman is an Overland Park senior majoring in systematics and ecology.
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET. Technology coordinate
Editors
Asst Managing ... Justin Knuff
News ... Monique Guilain
... David Mitchell
Editorial ... Stephen Martino
Campus ... KC Traver
Horts ... David Mitchell
Photos ... Mark Roylands
Features ... Lynne McAdoo
Graphics ... Dan Shauser
STAFF COLUMNIST
Business Staff
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flat Hall
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Brad Breon
Regional sales mgr ... Waxe Baker
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Perler
Office sales mgr ... Ashley Hessel
Production mgrs ... Chantal Abbott
Ashley Langford
Marketing director .. Angela Cleverman
Creative director .. Holly Perry
Classified mgr ... Jill Torney
Art Director .. Dave Haber
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Workers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
Mystery Strip
TERROR
AT THE
TRADE
CENTER!!!
DAY
ONE
TERROR AT THE TRADE CENTER!!!
DAY ONE
TENSION AT THE TRADE CENTER...
DAY TWO
TEDIUM AT THE TRADE CENTER...
ONE WEEK LATER
DAY ONE
TENSION
AT THE
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DAY
TWO
DAY
TWO
by David Rosenfield
TEDIUM AT THE TRADE CENTER... ONE WEEK LATER
ONE WEEK LATER
T-SHIRTS
AT THE TRADE
CENTER...
I SURVIVED
THE TERROR
AT THE TRADE
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AND ALL I GOT
WAS THIS T-SHIRT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 5, 1993
5
NATION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kwaiht-Ridder Trihame
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
Police officer Sherrie Martin searches Ronnie Schaper, a construction worker. Security has been increased dramatically in Waco, Texas, as a result of the stand-off between federal agents and members of the Branch Davidian cult, led by David Koresh, at a compound outside Waco.
Cult releases another child
The Associated Press
WACO, Texas — Members of a heavily-armed religious cult let another of their children leave their fortified but police-encircled compound yesterday.
"That makes a total of 20 children and two adults released so far," said FBI special agent Jef. famar.
The child was believed to be the older brother of a boy who left Wednesday night, said Franceska Perot, representative for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
Negotiators continued trying to resolve the standoff. Eighteen children, 47 women and 43 men remained in the Mount Carmel compound of the Branch Davidian sect.
Federal agents raided the compound Sunday attempting to serve illegal weapons warrants on sect leader David Koresh. They pulled
back after four agents were killed and 16 were wounded. A federal source speaking on condition of anonymity said that at least 10 cultists had been killed.
Jamar said a helicopter survey had found the body of an unidentified man in a wooded area on the 77-acre compound, about 350 yards from the buildings where the cultists live. Officers in two armored personnel carriers recovered the body Thursday and took it to a forensic lab in Fort Worth, officials said.
Neither Jamar nor bureau deputy associate director Dan Conroy would say whether the man had been killed in Sunday's raid.
"He was the victim of gunshot wounds. Basically, that's all I can say," Conroy said.
Federal authorities were digging in for a possibly lengthy stay.
bune-Herald she was afraid Koresh must be planning to die Friday. Koresh, who has claimed to be Jesus Christ, is 33, the age of Christ when he was crucified.
"We're concerned about all of these issues and are taking them into consideration," said Dan Hartnett, associate director of the bureau.
One cult member told the Waco Trinamed heart...PG13(445) 725&92
Time and place unknown
Earlier in the week, Koresh claimed in a radio interview to have been wounded in Sunday's 45-minute gun battle. Asked about his condition now, Jamar replied: "He seems to have recovered miraculously."
Jamar said cutting off electricity to the compound was an option that hasn't been exercised yet.
The Houston Chronicle reported yesterday that agents were preparing to wage "psychological war" against the cult. "Everything (Koresh) is used to, they'll disrupt," it quoted a federal agent as saying.
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WASHINGTON — As an emblem of sacrifice, nothing matches a cut in pay — especially your own. For politicians, it's worth the money.
Politicians may sacrifice pay increases
President Bill Clinton's staff is said to be working at salaries lower than the same positions paid by Republican management, although the new pay levels haven't been disclosed. And, they just got a 1993 raise. There's even been talk of an attempt to rescind that.
Already, the Senate voted 98-0 on a non-binding resolution to skin the 1994 congressional raise.
The measure calls for a freeze at the $133,600 salary level, which includes the $4,100-cost of living boost that took effect Jan. 1. The one-year freeze will be imposed on congressional and staff salaries in budget and appropriations bills later this year.
Scientists say Lou Gehrig's disease might be treatable by existing drugs
House revises bill on federal employees
NEW YORK — Scientists from 13 medical centers have collaborated in identifying a gene that appears to cause Lou Gehrig's disease, and the findings suggest the illness might be treatable by existing drugs.
"We've been saying for a long time that there is light at the end of the tunnel," she said.
WASHINGTON — The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly voted to revise a 1939 law that prohibits federal workers from involvement in political activities.
Lou Gebrig's disease, named for the New York Yankees' star who died of the illness in 1941, is a progressively paralyzing illness that affects an estimated 30,000 people in the United States.
The discovery, reported in yesterday's issue of the journal Nature, also might help explain the more subtle changes that accompany normal aging and might open the door to ways of slowing the aging process.
Lymn Klein of the ALS Association, which helped pay for the study, called the finding the biggest discovery so far in research into the disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or ALS.
The bill, approved Wednesday by a 333-86 vote, gives the nation's 3 million federal employees the right to run for some political offices, organize fund-raisers and publicly endorse candidates, as long as they do it on their own time.
But it retains the ban on federal workers running for federal and partisan state offices, meaning they can run for governor.
Rep. Douglas Applegate, D-Ohio, the bill was about First Amendment rights. He said that Ku Klux Klan and Nazi groups could get march permits while federal workers were not allowed to work on political campaigns.
Police instructor says officers used unnecessary force against motorist
LOS ANGELES — A police instructor returned to the stand yesterday for cross-examination by the defense on his testimony that three police officers violated policy when they beat motorist Rodney King.
"An officer should use only the force that is reasonable and necessary to overcome a suspect's resistance," said Sgt. Mark Conta, an officer in charge of physical training and self-defense at the Los Angeles Police Academy, testimony for the prosecution Wednesday at the police officers' federal civil rights trial.
Conta said that a baton blow to King's chest as the motorist lay face up on the ground was "the most flagrant violation" on the videoteo.
Asked whether his opinion would change if the officers believed King was under the influence of PCP, a key defense contention, Conta said, "It would not."
Briefs compiled from Associated Press reports.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 5. 1993
7
Haskell student profile
HASKELL
INDIAN SUNIOR COLLEGE
There are 902 students enrolled at Haskell Indian Junior College this semester. They represent 140 tribes from 39 different states.
HASKELL
JIMIAN JUNIOR COLLEGE
S'92 F'92 S'93
40% 43% 42% Full-blooded
22 19 19 Full-blooded representing blood quantum from one tribe
17 24 23 Full-blooded representing blood quantum mix of 2 or more tribes
17 14 16 3/4 blood quantum
29 31 24 1/2 blood quantum
12 12 12 1/4 blood quantum
2 3 4 1/8 blood quantum
Heritage
Family statistics
67 percent of Haskell's new students (S'93) are first generation college students.
31 percent of Haskell's new students (S'92) were first generation college students
Source: Haskell Indian Junior College Counseling Center, estimated percentages taken from student responses from Spring 1992, Fall 1992, and Spring 1993.
$16,000 is the estimated average family annual income of Haskell's new students (S'93)
S'92 F'92 S'93
24% 22% 28% Speak tribal language
10 13 5 Understand tribal language, but do not speak
Language
Haskell balances traditions, future
Continued from Page 1.
said Doug Roberts, president of Haskell's Student Senate. "A Native American gets drunk, and people see him downtown and say, 'There's another drunk Indian.' But when you go downtown and see white KU students drunk, people don't see them as representing their entire race."
Many at Haskell, including Roberts, have tried to reach out to Lawrence and the University of Kansas. Roberts has met several times with KU's Student Senate to try to bridge the gap between Haskell and KU students. He talks about merging Haskell and KU intramural sports, and linking Haskell's library to KU's libraries through computers.
"There are people here who are curious
"There are people here who are curious about KU," he said. "There just aren't any avenues or reasons to go up there. Haskell is a city within a city. It's been liket,at for 109 years."
David Skeeter, a former Haskell student and a graduate student at KU, said many Haskell students resented KU.
"A lot of them hate it," he said. "A lot of it has to do with the way they're treated in town. KU students aren't followed around or stared at. Restaurants and businesses welcome KU students, not Haskell students. It's frustrating to deal with this town sometimes."
any
e.
four
se
p
City leaders and Haskell faculty and administration are starting to try to bring the two communities together.
starting to try to bring the two communities together. The Lawrence City Commission declared Oct. 12, Columbus Day, American Indian Day. And Wildcat points out that the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce has given money to Haskell to promote arts fairs and other community programs at the college.
This spring, the first of several planned teacher exchanges between Haskell and KU began. Raymond Pterioi, assistant professor of systematics and ecology at KU, is teaching a course called Native and Western Views of Nature at Haskell. Don Bread, chair of the federal-tribal relations department at Haskell, will teach a U.S. Government-Tribal Relations class at KU.
And KU and Haskell have begun to work more closely to help KU students transfer to KU after graduation.
From painful past to hopeful future Changes at Haskell, when they come, will grow from a painful past.
Haskell's history mirrors the United States' treatment of American Indians. Opening in 1884 as the United States Indian Industrial Training School, the school's mission was to "civilize" American-Indian children. Forcibly taken off reservations, young American Indians were forbidden to speak their native languages while being taught English, which many had never heard.
The school's buildings had no heating or plumbing, and 100 students died within the first 10 years.
In 1890, the name was changed to Haskell Institute in honor of Dudley Haskell, the congressman who lobbied to have the school built in Lawrence. By the turn of the century, Haskell had become a high school and a vocational training school.
During the early 1900s Haskell was known more for its football program than anything else. Haskell teams played and beat Notre Dame, Oklahoma and Baylor. In 1970, the high school program was discontinued and the school became an accredited junior college.
"The biggest challenge that young Native Americans face in 1993 is learning to live in a modern, global culture while at the same time not losing the strengths and values of their own culture," Wildcat said. "It's a constant struggle between heritage and traditions and the modern world. Haskell has it to do two things: instill pride in Native American ways while still training students to go out into the world."
Today. Haskell's mission is a difficult one.
The problems American Indians face are well documented. On reservations, a 70 percent unemployment rate is common. Almost 90 percent of Haskell students have some history of alcoholism in their families. And American-Indian teenagers are five times as likely to attempt suicide than other U.S. teens. These problems often must be dealt with on campus.
"The problems Native Americans face need to be addressed by educated people," said Bob Martin, Haskell president. "It is imperative that Haskell students have the abilities to help their communities."
Under Martin's leadership, Haskell has made changes in many areas. The school has done everything from adding computers to expanding student services such as counseling and academic advising.
With the addition of the new residence hall, Haskell
four year degree program in elementary and secondary education begins this fall, and the school hopes to add more degree programs in the future.
"Wherever you go in Indian country now, you hear parents talking about college degrees for their children," Wildcat said. "They want more lawyers and doctors and accounts. There is a great need for more professional roles in the communities."
Students also think Haskell's growth is necessary
"It is essential to add more opportunities for all of us," said Dorothy Stitten, a second-year student.
"all of us," said Dorothy Sites, a second-year student planning to major in personal and human resources at the University of Oklahoma. "Adding four-year degree programs here is a giant step for all Native Americans."
But some say increasing Haskell's size and services isn't all good.
"Educationally, it's great," said Manny King. "But at times I wonder if it's the right direction. We shelter our students so much here, at times it seems like a small reservation. We might do better by sending them out to other schools after two years, where they can learn to face the racism and prejudice that is inevitable."
Challenge of change
While Haskell administrators and faculty are determined to see their school grow, change comes slowly to any institution controlled by the federal government. Haskell is financed through the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington.
"One of the biggest problems we face is operating a college within all the federal bureaucracy," said Hannes Combeset, executive assistant to the president. "And it's not just red tape. There are things like personnel. It's hard to attract quality Native American educators without having any flexibility in terms of salaries."
Combest said it was common to have job openings take a year to fill. And she noted that the new residence hall, which has been in the planning stages for more than a year, will not be ready until the fall of 1994 at the earliest.
"And because we are federally funded, our budget must be approved by Congress each year," Combest said. "A lot of our teachers get tired of hearing each year that their programs might be cut."
The challenge for Haskell is the challenge that all American Indians face: To draw strength from long and proud traditions while coping with the hard realities that face American Indians on reservations and in cities.
While Haskell students and faculty look to the future while holding on to their heritage, many say that the real challenge is for white America, from Lawrence to Washington, to accept them.
"It's sad, but the stereotypes are still very much alive," said Bread, head of the department of tribal-federal relations at Haskell. "People need to realize that these kids have the same problems everyone has. Yes, they come from distinct cultures, but they have grown up in the same country, the same society. They wear Reeboks and Nikes, and they like Nintendo. They weren't raised in teepees and they don't wear war paint. We are all human beings."
IU
At left, part of the American Indian tradition is carried on by Dan Marmon and the Thunderbird Theater, a group made up of Haskell students. Below, Brenda Seaton, left, and Rita Whitehorse look at the results of an experiment during a Haskell physics lab.
EERN U. INDIA
FOOTBALL
CHAMPIONS
19
19
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
10
Some of Haskell's history still stands on the campus as students use the basket ball court in Tecumseh Hall, which is nearly 100 years old. Although the school has a new sports complex, Tecumseh still is used for afternoon free time.
Plans are underway for a new dormitory at Haskell, but at the beginning of last semester overcrowding at Keokuk Hall forced administrators to place up to 1.3 students in what was originally a study room.
8
Friday, March 5. 1993
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Defense witnesses testify
By Brady Prauser
Kansan staff writer
Defense witnesses for Emil Tonkovich yesterday characterized him as respected and popular with students, as dismissal hearings for the tenured professor entered their 20th week.
Former dean of law Mike Davis returned to the witness stand to testify about Tonkovich's track record in the School of Law, and one of Tonkovich's former students, Shelley White, verified Davis' testimony.
Davis said that numerical rankings he had made of School of Law professors based on student evaluations placed Tonkovich above the median rankings of other professors during the last years Davis was dean.
Davis, dean from 1980 to 1989, said that in only one instance were a student's complaints disturbing enough
to prompt him to confront a faculty member, who was not Tonkovich.
He also testified that no formal rules prohibited law school faculty from dating students until 1991, when the school adopted guidelines regarding romantic relationships between faculty and students.
"Would you agree it's not a faculty code violation for a professor to ask a student for a date?" Tonkovich asked Davis.
The former dean said that it was not and repeated his answer when Tonkovich asked whether it was a faculty code violation for the same professor to ask 10 different women for dates during a period of several years.
"By itself, no," Davis said. "In fact, I would imagine it has happened in the law school."
After Davis left the stand. White tiffed that Tonkovich was "very popular and very approachable."
A 1914 law graduate, White now is an assistant Douglas County district attorney, a job Tonkovik's fiance Christine Kenpey also holds.
White said Tonkovich encouraged students not to overemphasize the importance of grades in law school.
"What he told us about grades and not emphasizing them was very helpful," White said. "He said, 'Don't let the emphasis on grades define you — what kind of attorney you're going to be and what kind of person you are going to be."
Chancellor Gene Budig moved to dismiss Tonkovich in August 1992, saying Tonkovich had violated the faculty code of conduct. The dismissal motion came in part because of a law student's allegations that Tonkovich had pressured her to perform oral sex after discussing the importance of grades with her.
Man steals Jeep during test drive
By Mark Klefer Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
When car dealer Jim Vestal first met Troy Williams, he thought Williams might have been a student looking to buy a car.
set a date for a trial.
"He said his dad had made money in real estate and had put $25,000 in his bank account." Vestal said.
But Williams was not buying. Instead, midway through a test drive, Williams pulled out a gun and said he needed the car, Vestal said yesterday at a preliminary hearing for Williams.
Vestal, who works at Jim Ellena Auto Plaza, 2112 W. 29th Terrace, said that he had received checks of $20,000 or more from students whose parents had put money into the bank.
Williams has been charged with aggravated robbery as a result of the incident on Feb. 20. Williams' next court appearance will be March 18 to
He said that Williams was dressed well and was polite, which led him to think that Williams was such a student.
But the casual test drive took a wrong turn
and they wanted him to shoot me," Vestal said.
"He said that he really needed this Jeep and had business to take care of in Topeka," Vestal said.
Vestal said Williams then pulled out a gun from underneath his coat.
But Vestal said he did not notice a car following the truck.
Williams continued to drive along Kasold Drive with Vestal for about 15 minutes. Vestal said Williams had him empty his pockets because. Williams was worried that Vestal would call the police if he let him out of the truck.
Vestel left the truck near the intersection of 19th and lowa streets.
"he said he did not want to shoot me, but that he had friends following,
"He thanked me for not causing any problems, and I asked him to put his gun away. He did," Vestal said.
Police found Williams and the Jeep in Leavenworth.
Facilities planning to undergo reorganization
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
Mike Richardson, director of facilities planning.
The University earlier this week announced it was reorganizing the operations of KU's facilities planning, a move suggested by last year's program review report.
The restructuring creates two departments that would split up planning responsibilities.
The report said restructuring in noninstructional programs at KU would save $3 million, which would be used for instruction pursuits.
However, this restructuring is not aimed at saving money but at making facilities planning more efficient, said
A department headed by Allen Wiechert, university director of facilities planning, will be responsible for design projects costing more than $500,000. Its responsibilities will include long-range planning and the selection of architects for projects.
The office of facilities planning and the department of facilities operations will merge with the department
of facilities management, which will be in charge of design projects of less than $500,000 and all construction management.
Richard Mann, director of information resources, will head a department that will coordinate both departments.
Wiechert said he could not say how much money it would save.
"The reorganization was done to help make things more efficient," Wiechert said, "and wasn't really intended to save funds."
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 5, 1993
9
Kansas rides streak into tournament
Defense is 'Hawks'key to success
Kansan sportswriter
By Jay Williams
Kansas sportwriter
The Kansas women's basketball teamrolled into Salina yesterdayhoping to stay on its most recent hot streak.
The Jayhawks, 18-8 overall and 9-5 in the Big Eight Conference, will practice today in preparation for its first-round Big Eight Tournament game against Missouri at noon Saturday. A Jayhawk victory would advance Kansas to the second round against either Colorado or Kansas State at 2 p.m. Sunday.
Kansas has been hot of late,winning four in a row and seven of its last eight.
"We've been having some great games lately," freshman guard Charisse Sampson said.
Big Eight tournament
The road to the women's NCCA tournament starts tomorrow in Salina for Big Eight teams. The winner will receive an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
8 Kansas St.
2 p.m. Saturday
1 Colorado
2 p.m. Sunday
5 Missouri
noon Saturday
4 KANSAS
Championship game:
7 p.m. Monday, live television coverage on Prime Sports Network, Channel 45
6 Oklahoma
8 p.m. Saturday
3 Oklahoma St.
4 p.m. Sunday
7 Iowa St.
6 p.m. Saturday
2 Nebraska
Cyclones
The Jayhawks were 4-4 in the conference after Feb. 5,loss to No.6 Colorado. The month following has been the best for the Jayhawks, and the team now is a contender for the tournament title and an invitation to the NCAA Tournament.
"This is a whole different ball club," Sampson said. "This is what counts, now."
Sophomore forward Angela Aycock said she was excited about the tournament and the Jawhacks' chances.
Andrew Hodges / KANSAN
can beat anybody."
"I don't care who we play," she said.
"If we play like we are capable of, we
Kansas coach Marian Washington, who will try to win her sixth conference tournament title since 1976, said that defense would be an important factor against the Tigers.
Missouri is coming off a 64-63 upset of Oklahoma State. Washington said the Tigers had a strong inside attack that Kansas could not stop when the teams met in Columbia, Mo.
"We're starting out against a very good ball club," she said. "We've got to play very well, there's no doubt about that."
Source: Big Eight Conference
The Tigers' inside attack is led by senior center Lynette Linneman and senior forward Vantrece Williams. The two average a combined 31 points and 16 rebounds a game and were named second team all-conference.
Washington said conference regular season champion Colorado and conference runner-up Nebraska should be the favorites for taking the tournament title. She also said two second-division teams could surprise in Salina.
Oklahoma shocked the conference with its upset of Colorado on Sunday. The Sooners' 74-69 victory impressed Washington.
"Oklahoma has been playing good basketball," she said. "They're doing something right to be able to beat Colorado."
Washington also highlighted K-State. The Lady Cats, despite being 1-12 in the conference, have played several of the conference's top teams tough, including Kansas. The Lady Cats stayed close in the first half Sunday before the Jayhawks ran away in the second half.
"If they come out as hard as they did here in Allen Field House, they will be someone to reckon with," Washington said.
State and Kansas. All but Kansas remain in the poll.
For the first time in the history of the conference, four women's teams enter the tournament after having been ranked in the Associated Press Top 25 at some point during the season. Colorado, Nebraska, Oklahoma
"That represents a big step up in terms of the caliber of teams in the Big Eight Conference." Washington said.
Kansas will hope for an NCAA at large bid if it does not win the conference title. With a good showing, the Jayhawks might convince the NCAA selection committee that they
deserve a bid.
"I know we're good enough for a bid," Samson said. "But our minds are focused on winning the Big Eight Tournament."
All Kansas tournament games can be heard on KMAJ 1440 AM and KJHK 90.7 FM.
NOTE:
Baseball team set for home opener
By Brady Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
"We'd like to get into a baseball mode." Bingham said. "We're much more into a football mode right now, practicing every day and playing on the weekends."
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham said his team's early-season regimen resembled that of a different sport.
The Jayhawks, scheduled to play their first home game at 2 p.m. tomorrow against Grand View College, have been plagued by football weather this season. Kansas originally was to open its home schedule Tuesday against Washburn, but the game was postponed because of snow.
The Grand View game was to be played today but was moved to Saturday because of wet field conditions. Kansas, 3-3, also will play the Vikings in a doubleheader Sunday.
Grand View is a National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics
VIPX
Saturday will be the Vikings' first game this season.
He said he knew one important thing about Kansas.
"Any time we can play a Division I school to make us better, we do," said Grand View coach Lou Yacinich.
"If Dave Bingham is there, they've got to be good." Yacinin said. "I've seen his teams before."
Bingham's Emporia State team played Grand View in the 1884 NAIA World Series.
Senior right-hander David Soult, 1-1,
will be Kansas' start pitcher tomorrow.
Fellow senior Tom Stewart, 2-0, will start Sunday's first game.
Freshman Jamie Splittoff, 0-0, will start the second game.
Bingham said the series might allow Kansas to play some of its younger position players.
Kansas sophomore left fielder Josh Igou awaits a pitch during practice.
Kansas sophomore left fielder Josh go depth," he said. "It has nothing to do with how good or how bad the guys have done, we just need to get more players involved."
'We need to begin to work on our
Kansas has scheduled two new opponents to make up for its canceled
'Hawks aim to keep focused
series with Southeast Missouri State.
The Jayhawks will play host to Pittsburgh State University on Tuesday,
and to Missouri Valley College on Thursday to fulfill the NCAA-required 56-game schedule.
Champions to face another challenge against Cowboys
The No. 8 Kansas men's basketball team wasn't the only Big Eight Conference team to have taken down a net this season. Fans and players in Iowa State and Nebraska have celebrated on the court after victories as well — after beating Kansas.
But the Jayhawks' victory celebration after clinching the title in a 94-83 victory Wednesday night against Nebraska was relatively subdued compared to those at Ames, Iowa and at Lincoln, Neb., where fans rushed on to the court. At Iowa State, a player climbed onto one of the baskets in triumph.
Those celebrations, said Kansas coach Roy Williams, had something
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
"Somebody asked me why I wasn't jumping up and down after we won," Williams said yesterday at a news conference. "What I enjoy doing is watching our kids. Plus, I'd like people to think that we've been here before. It's also a relief to get rid of some of the pressure. If you make Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan sophomores this year, I'm not so sure we'd lose because the pressure isn't there."
Williams said that teams gunned for Kansas because of its high expectations, and that he didn't expect that to change this weekend against Oklahoma State.
to do with expectations
"My goal is to put our program in a position where it can win or be in contention for a championship each season," Williams said. "It's fun to sneak up on people, but at the same time, I don't mind being the hunted."
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said that the 7-foot-1eve had been a large factor in the Cowboys' steady improvement this season.
5, are led by sophomore center Bryant Reeves, the leading candidate for conference player of the year. He leads the team with nearly 19 points and 10.1 rebounds a game.
The Jayhawks, 21-5 overall and 10-3 in the conference, will face Oklahoma State at 2:45 Sunday afternoon in Still water. Okla. The Cowboys, 18-6 and 1
Jayhawks hope to net victories
The Cowboys were in contention for sole possession of the conference championship until they lost Tuesday at Oklahoma. Despite the fact that they're playing for second place, Sutton said that Sunday's game still was significant for his team.
"Our guards make better decisions than they did six weeks ago. And our center has improved a great deal," Sutton said.
"I don't think we've lost any incentive," he said. "The game means a lot because if we win we'd get the second seed in the conference tournament. We'd rather be on the other side of the bracket from Kansas. And by no means have we clinched an NCAA
By Blake Spurney
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas women's coach Chuck Menzbach said that Notre Dame, 5-5, had played the toughest schedule in the nation. Many of Notre Dame's matches have been against top 10 teams.
He said that the Irish were strong at every spot, and that Kansas would have a battle on its hands.
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams will both hit the courts against high-profile opponents this weekend.
The men will travel to Des Moines, Iowa, to face Drake on Saturday, and the No. 20 Kansas women will play No. 22 Notre Dame in Lawrence on Sunday.
"We're glad this one's at home," he said. "We're expecting a large crowd."
The match will begin at 11:30 a.m. at Alvamar Racquet Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway.
Merbzacher said the Jayhawks, who competed last weekend at the National Team Indoors, had been playing well as of late.
Both Kansas and Notre Dame need to win this match to be in a solid position to get invited to the NCAA Championships, Merzbacher said.
At the National Indoors, the Jayhawes were edged, 5-4, by top 10 teams Georgia and Indiana, but came back to defeat Virginia, 5-0.
Sophomore Rebecca Jensen, Kansas' No.1 singles player, will
Tennis KU
The Fighting Irish are led by No. 36 Lisa Tholen and their No. 21 doubles combination of Wendy Crabtree and Holly Lord.
bring a 16-1 single record into the match. She is ranked 16th in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association poll but may move up when the new polls come out Tuesday.
Kansas coach Michael Center said that this match was a big one.
The Kansas men also have a lot at stake going into the Drake match. The Jayhawks are the No.4 team in the Midwest region, and Drake is No.3.
"A lot is at stake if we want to go to nationals." he said.
The top-ranked team in the region automatically will qualify for the NCAA Championships.
He said that Drake, 12-2, was a good team with a lot of depth and experience. The Bulldogs are led by potential All-American candidate and No. 1 singles player Martin Dionne.
He did not play for Drake in the fall because he was competing on the professional tour.
Senior Carlos Fleming, Kansas' No. 1 singles play, is undefended in singles play this spring. Center said Fleming probably would be ranked in the ITA's next poll.
Kansas Jayhawks
record:
23-5, 10-3
head coach:
Roy Williams
Probable Starters:
■ Rex Walters
G Sr. 6-4 13.8 pp
■ Adonis Jordan
G Sr. 5-11 11.8 pp
■ Richard Scott
F Jr. 6-7 11.1 pp
■ Darrin Hancock
F Jr. 6-7 7.9 pp
■ Eric Pauley
C Sr. 6-12 10.5 pp
Men's basketball
game
29
Sunday,
March 7
2:45 p.m.
Gallagher-Isa Arena,
Stillwater, Okla.
Radio: NZR FM 105.9
IV: ABC
Oklahoma St.
Cowboys
record:
18-6, 8-5
head coach:
Eddie Sutton
Probable Starters:
■ Brooks Thompson
G Sr. 6-4 12.8 pp
■ Randy Rutherford
G So. 6-13.4 pp
■ Fred Burley
F Jr. 6-6 9.2 pp
■ Milton Brown
F Sr. 6-4 5.5 pp
■ Bryant Reaves
C So. 7-0 18.9 pp
Andrew Hodges / KANBAN
Source: Kansas Sports Information
bid. It'll be a competitive contest."
Now that Kansas has fulfilled its expectations of winning the Big Eight Conference Championship, Williams said that the Jayhawks would continue striving for improvement in pursuit of a successful NCAA Tournament.
As for specifications, Williams said the Jawarchaws could improve rebounding
"I've got a feeling that those guys aren't going to be satisfied with that," he said.
and outside shooting. The Jayhawks, led by senior center Eric Paulle's nine rebounds, outbounded the Corn-huskers 39-38.
Despite already having a conference title, Williams said his team would want more.
BASKETBALL PLAYER
Shannon Kite
Senior reflects on career
The time has finally come for me to say goodbye to Allen Field House, and as a senior my final home game was one of mixed emotions.
I was sorry to see it all end, yet I am thrilled with everything I've experienced during my career at Kansas. My four years at the University have been the best years of my life.
I had no idea what to expect coming to Kansas from Kimballton, Iowa, and having as many people in an auditorium-size classroom as I have in my entire hometown. My freshman year was full of new experiences and new friends. The team instantly took me under its wing and got me through many things that first year.
My sophomore year the friendships grew closer, and I didn't feel quite as out of place. That was the season the team traveled to Texas to participate in the National Invitational Tournament, where we placed third.
Then came my junior year. Finally, I was an upperclassman and every thing seemed so much easier. I knew I belonged here.
Last season the team captured the Big Eight Conference Championship and earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. I would have to say that being Big Eight Champions was the best memory I'll be taking with me — along with the ring I received.
In the first round of the NCAA Tournament that year, we played Southwest Missouri State in Springfield, Mo. The gym was packed, and the noise level was indescribable. I had never seen anything like it. Sadly, we lost that game, but found out later we would get a chance to play the Bears twice during the 1992-93 season.
That brings me to this, my senior year. When the season began I was excited. This would be my last year of preseason conditioning at 5:30 a.m. This would be my last traditional five mile run. But as time goes by, I wish it wouldn't go by so quickly. This season has gone by too fast for me, knowing it's the last go around for everything I do. My last game at Allen Field House will remain with me for a long time thanks to the fans and my teammates.
I guess I never wanted to think of it as over. It's sad to think that this is my last year to play the game I love.
I'd like to use this column to thank the loyal women's basketball fans for all their support throughout my four years. Your support makes the difference in many games.
A special thanks also goes out to the coaching staff for all their support and help throughout my career. I wish them all the luck in years to come.
To my teammates now and teammates past, thank you. You've made my experiences at Kansas the best I could have ever expected. You were always there for support and laughter. You are the greatest friends I could ask for. The great of luck to all of you. I love you, and thanks again.
I could never say thank you enough.
Shannon Kite is a Kimballton, Iowa, senior major in exercise science.
BRIEF
Swim, dive teams get fast start at Big Eights
Kansan staff report
The Kansas swimming teams had a successful first day at the Big Eight Swimming and Diving Championships at the Oklahoma City Community College Aquatics Center.
The women lead second place Nebraska 217-178. The men trail defending champion Nebraska 205-201.
The women took the top three spots in the 500-yard freestyle with freshman Jennifer Davis winning in a time of 4:51.74. Sophomore Frankie Hansen was second, and freshman Donna Christensen took third.
Senior Zhawn Stevens set a meet and pool record in the men's 200 individual medley with a time of 14.793
Both Kansas teams won the 400-
medley relays. The women won in a time of 3.47.50, and the men nipped
Nebraska by 30 seconds with a time of 3.17.01.
10
Friday,March 5,1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Hawks to open season in Texas
Kansas will attempt to defend its title at 10-team tournament
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team begins its season today at the Texas A&M Invitational tournament in College Station, Texas.
The Jayhawks, ranked 13th in the nation, are the defending champions of the 10-team invitational. Last year they went undefeated in the tournament, winning all nine games.
Coach Kalhm Haack said this tournament was important for a number of reasons.
First of all, three of the teams invited,
Illinois State, Creighton and Nebraska,
as well as the host team, TAA&M,
are in Kansas' region. Also, another
highly-touted team, No11 Southwest
Louisiana, is competing.
"Anytime we play a team from our region, or a队 that is ranked, it's a big game," the haack said. "Also, every
Softball KU
one we play is looking to stick a feather in their cap by beating a ranked team."
Haack also said that it was important for the seniors to get off to a good start. And for one senior in particular, this weekend will provide the challenge of playing a new position while batting an injury.
Shanna Cole spent most of the 1992 season playing second base. However, in a game against Iowa State last fall, she suffered an injury to her ankle. She said the injury caused problems with her lateral movement, making it difficult to play second.
To combat this, Haack has moved Cole to center field.
Cole said she shouldn't have too many problems at her new position because she had some experience there.
"It doesn't matter where I play," Cole said. "I'll play where coach puts me — wherever is best for the team."
Last season was Kansas' best in Haack's five years with the club. The team was 45-10, finishing second behind Oklahoma State in the Big Eight Conference. The Jayhawks finished seventh in the 1992 NCAA Women's College World Series.
However, this season, Kansas is a much younger team than in previous years. Last spring, the Jayhawks were led by four seniors, including Kansas' only three-time All-American, third baseman Camille Spitaleri.
Haack said that in order to be successful, he would have to receive solid play from this season's recruiting class. The class consists of five freshmen and one transfer.
The transfer, junior Kim Newborn,
will play third base. She was a junior
college All-American last year for
Hutchinson Community College.
Another key newcomer is freshman Katie Morgan, who will play shortstop, the position last occupied by two-time All-Big Eight selection Christy Arterburn.
BRIEF
Special Olympians to play in tournament
Kansan staff report
The tournament will begin at 8:00 a.m. and end at approximately 5:00 p.m.
The Kansas Special Olympics of Douglas County will play host to the Gary Samuels Rainbow Classic Special Olympics Basketball Tournament tomorrow at Holcom Park Recreation Center. 2700 W. 27th St.
T-shirts will be sold, and a concession stand will be open throughout the day. Entertainment for athletes not playing will be provided by the Piper Clowns.
Some of the teams competing are Lawrence, Topeka, Olathe, Leavenworth, Johnson County and Blue Valley. The event is free
Anyone interested in volunteering or donating to this event can call Anette Noll at 843-7122.
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
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Beauty
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Dance for Heart
Benefits the American Heart Association Sunday, March 6 12-3 pm at Anschutz Purchase tickets at Wescoe for $2.00
WILD OATS COMMUNITY MARKET
OVERMONT OPEN
8-10 EVERYDAY 865-3737
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NATURAL WAY
THE FIRE ALERT SYSTEM
841-0100
820-822 Mass
S
Snow blind?
Before you hit the slopes, Ski into The Etc. Shop for the hottest ski shades
M V
The Etc. Shop
bRay.Bans
junglasses
et-France
- Vuarnet & Trucks
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928 Mass
OPEN 10:30 AM
10:00 PM Daily
841-8444
Mr. Goodcents Subs & Pastas
SUB SANDWICHES
| | Half | Whole |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1 Mr. Goodenough Combo | 299 | 459 census |
| Ham, Bologna, Salami, Pepperoni | 229 | 370 census |
| Biobased Ham, Cheese) | 229 | 370 census |
| Peony Club | 299 | 459 census |
| Ham Bref, Turkey, Ham) | 299 | 459 census |
| Capicola, Pepperoni, Salami) | 299 | 459 census |
| Ham Bref, Turkey, Ham) | 299 | 459 census |
| Capicola, Pepperoni, Salami) | 299 | 459 census |
| Pepperoni & Cheese | 299 | 435 census |
| Salami | 299 | 435 census |
| Savoury Cheese | 299 | 435 census |
| Turkey | 299 | 435 census |
| Turkish | 299 | 435 census |
| Capicola | 299 | 449 census |
| Mr. Goodenough Suak & Cheese | 339 | 459 census |
| Capicola | 339 | 459 census |
| Sauage & Pepperoni & onion) | 319 | 449 census |
| Chicken Salad | 299 | 440 census |
| Chicken Mitsu | 299 | 439 census |
| Pineapple | 15 | 25 census |
| | 150 | 150 census |
1
MR. GOODCENTS
CREESES AVAILABLE
Swiss · American · Mozzarella · Cheddar · Provolone
STANDARD DRESSINGS
Leisure · Tomato · Onion · Orgainza
· Salt · Pepper · Oil · Vinegar
All Available.
Mussel · Potato · Pickles
Jalapeno · Mushroom
Mexican Mushroom
KID'S KORNER
1410 Kaiser Dr.
Lawrence,KS
Orchard Corners
Shopping Center
159 cereal
Spaghetti (Pasta, Drink & Cookie)
159 cereal
w/Meatball
169 cereal
w/Snagage
169 cereal
FREE
HOT PASTAS
EXTRA LARGE
CHOCOLATE CHIP
COOKIE
Limit 1 cookie per coupon
SALADS & SIDES
Limit 1 cookie per coupon (with sub or pasta purchase)
ad well but bare or red & dine toast!
Patties 279 w / Mustard w / Sausage
\uggetti 279 279 339 349 cents
Momocaselle 279 339 339 349 cents
Rigatiens 279 339 339 349 cents
Passo 120 crens
Mustella (2) 99 (6) 189 (6) 390 crens
Sausage (2) 149 (6) 289 (6) 189
Garbled Bread (2) 60 (6) 120 (6) 189
SIDES
COOPERSTATE
| | Regulator | Large |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Coke, Diet Coke, Sprite, Mr. Pibb | 79 | 99 cm³ |
| Lemonade | 79 | 99 cm³ |
| Iced Tea (fresh brewed) | 79 | 99 cm³ |
Seafood Salad 330 cups
Chef Salad 280 cups
Chicken Salad 320 cups
Pineapple Salad 250 cups
Garden Salad 199 cups
Soup (annual) 199 cups
Pasta Salad 75 cups
Potato Salad 75 cups
Cups 75 cups
Cooler 75 cups
EASTERN STATE
PARTY TRAYS AVAILABLE
Seltzer Water 79 cer
Coffee 60 cents
MR. GOODCENTS
15th & Kaisol
Orchards Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence,KS
841-8444
Classified Directory
WE DELIVER!
200s
Employment
208 Help Wanted
238 Professional
Services
238 Tipping Services
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any adjournment for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, religion, color, gender, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
ad is Ours
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires registration by a licensed attorney, limitation or classification based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or denial.
300s Merchandise
308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs
and trading information in this newspaper are
reliable.
卫
100s Announcements
Bausch & Lomb Ray Ban-Ran and Varelard-France
The Kit Shop
The Kit Shop
110 Bus. Personals
Recycle Your Daily Kansun.The World is our square.
story idea? 864-4810
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon - Fri 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11.30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon - Fri 4.30 p.m - 10 p.m
Sat 11.30 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Morning Star
Pet Care
15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
Current K.U.I.D. Required FREE RICK UP & DELIVERY
VISA 842-9979 MasterCard
842-9979 Master Card
1 Mile East of Johnny's
Loose up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $30.100% Guarantee
823-0487
FITNESS FREAKS
LOSE FAT-GET STRONGER
FOR FREE. By helping your
friends do the same.
WE DID IT!!!
My name is Jennifer Brehm, a junior in AZD,
and my friend Lee and I have lost 21 lbs, and over
6" between us "without dieting." We both look
and feel great and
we because of our results we
have started our own part-time business. We now
get paid to be in great
shape and hang around
with athletes because we
can get you "dudes"
stronger than!!!
If you want to feel great,
lose your fat and inches or
stronger before Spring
Break-- CALL NUW ON!
Call Jennifer, Lee, Tom or Greg at 1-800-955-2524
120 Announcements
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
MIRACLE VIDEO
$14.99 Adult Video Sale
910 N. 2nd, 841-8963
1910 Haskell, 841-7954
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
ATTN; Social Chairperson
ATTN: Social Chairperson
H & J
Call for Party Favors
865-0974
H&L
Call for Party Favors
865-0974
SUMMER JOB! Campus Concepts will be recruiting on campus for summer interns. Details at information March 8th, Kansas Union, Alceve D at 7:06.m.
"GREAT $ - GREAT EXPERIENCE!"
Last 30 lbs.
in 30 days!
Jeutique
One Day Diet
Mary Waxon
NQ 204-777-177
Cody, KS 6770
813-462-4966
Anyone can stick to a diet for one
Anyone can stick to a seat for one day when they know they can eat anything they want the next day!
130 Entertainment
MILLHAUS NIXONS
and THE WAKE AT
BENCHWARMERS
Thursday March 4
25 Cent Draws
Friday March 5
2 FOR 1
WELL DRINKS
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Spring break quad occupancy Daytona Beach,
room, limited space 2/3D 769-180-712
Coming Attractions
Soul Shaker Thursday March 11 Love Squad w/ August Red Friday March 12
AT
BENCHWARMERS
L. A. Ramblers Saturday March 13
Jack O Pierce
BENCHWARMERS
Saturday March 6 AT
2 FOR 1 WELL DRINKS
MUSIC CITY
Jayhawk
CAFE
Presents
FRIDAY, Mar. 5
If you saw their Lawrence debut, you won't miss this Encore Performance
It Could Only Happen at.
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO 843-9273 A Campus Tradition Since 1919
140 Lost & Found
FOUND - Kitten, female, toast color calor, wear
a brown tag banner. Call 841-2188.
Found. Signed Msc Cat I 1-2 yrs, old. Declaived on V-Mail Day. Worn on v-day wear on V-Call Day. Buryed 843-9414 to claim.
LOST - Russian-style hat. Brown leather w/ black fur.
REWARD! # 865-1489
LOST. Black leather day planner. Very important addresses inside. REWARD! Lost last Wednesday, in Wicecon 1 st floor or by auditorium. If found please call 843-2721.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Child care needed some afternoons. Light house work. Need phone, references. 841-7036 evenings.
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
The KU Department of Student Housing announces an additional Academic Program Coordinator, who will hold a half-time position with the Department of Student Housing, working with students to coordinate all programs, to encourage good study skills, and to provide an environment of intellectual inquiry. The Program Coordinator will be Required Qualifications: Graduate student in good standing at KU, taking no more than 10 hr/semester; Preferred Qualifications: Rei- tionary Supervisory experience; Working knowledge of educational programming; and, Knowledge of curriculum development for regular student teaching, out-of-town practicum or internship. This position does not allow for regular student teaching, out-of-town practicum or internship. All candidates must be able to commit two evenings per week to the position and preference will be given to candidates who are able to pay $125/mo. The salary is $400/mo. The period of employment extends from August 1, 1983 through May 31, 1984 (incl. holidays). Additional academic year Contact the Department of Student Housing for further info and application deadline: April 1, 1984 EEO Employer
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 5, 1993
11
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries.
Earn $800+ / week in cookers or $4,000 +/mo on fishing boats or Female. For employment program.
1-306-545-415 ext. 455.
All I takes is a small group with a little energy and
them to warm up to earn $805 in just one
call (Week 1) Call 877-324-2699
ASSISTANT RESIDENCE HALL DIRECTOR
The Assistant Residence Hall Director (ARHD) takes a ten-month, half-time position with the Department of Education. The ARHD primarily assists the Residence Life Complex Director (CD) in coordination with the Student Affairs. The ARHD primarily assists the Residence Life Complex Director (CD) in coordination with the Student Affairs. In addition, the ARHD manages the operation of the hall main desk and its student hourly workers and/or supervisors. The ARHD manages housing between 350 and 960 residents. In addition, the ARHD manages the operation of the hall main desk and its student hourly workers and/or supervisors. At least one resident of residential group living experience. Enrollment at KU for 1989-94 as either a junior undergraduate or a fourteen to ten小时, per semester with a 2.8 minimum GPA. Preferred Qualifications: Residence Life staff & supervisory experience. Experience with the computer science faculty. Computer microcomputer experience. Salary & Benefits: $3,000 for first year staff. Furnished apartment, for six years. Employees are eligible for KU tuition rates. Period of employment extends from August 1, 1993 through May 31, 1994 with the possibility of renewal. The applicant must have an interest and relevant experience; a resume; and three letters of reference to the KU Department of Student Housing. 422 W. 11th, Lawrence Park, Brooklyn, NY 11217. Mail postmarked by April 1, 1992. EEO Employer.
Business Students. internship program that offers great resume experience, money and future business employment connections Call 212-567-8300
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach, swimming, volleyball, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. SALARY $100 or more. See Seeger 176 Maple, Nilf, IL 784-598-3444.
SPRING/SUMMER OPENINGS
*10-40 hrs. weekly* *Flexible around classes*
*$10 to start* *Call 642-8035.*
Correspondent wanted for weekly newspaper, wide variety of writing assignments. Photography and Macintosh experience helpful but not required. Call Susan at 845-222-9121.
schild=children, camp=northeast top salary,
rm/dl laundry, travel allowance, Misc.
adm/finance, basketball, baseball,
basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama,
drama, fencing, field soccer, football, golf,
golf
gymnastics, hockey, horseback扛臀-hunt seat, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography piano, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailboard riding, tennis, sports equipment, weights, wood. Support staff kitchen teeward, workers, cooks, cook bus drivers, maintenance nurses, secretaries. Men call or write: Camp MACHINE, tennis trainees, teachers (914) 381-9833 Women call or write: Wheeler 841-850
Cruise line entry level on board/landside positions available. Summer or year round, great pay.
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs students for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old and have a good driving record. We will train you to drive in a variety of environments, wk. Very flexible. $n*r. Call Michael 842-0544, 3:30am - 4:30m. M-F EOE.
Evening wait person(s)* wanted. Chinese restaurant. Experience required. Minimal knowledge necessary. Hard working. Apply Peking Restaurant, 749-0003. Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time experience necessary. Experience necessary. cattle and maintenance experience necessary. Send resume to Wakasuru City Office.
Full-time position opening for Employment Training Specialist working with adults and older adolescents who have severe and persistent mental ill-health. Provide educational support in working with special populations in a vocational setting or at school, service field, business, education or education agency, long-term mental illness. Looking for strong public relation skills strong written and interpersonal communication skills. Req's Master's degree, great credit and resume to the attention of Dale Creamer of Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, Inc., 336 Missouri Suite, 202
GRADATE RESIDENCE HALL DIRECTOR
GRADH RidD has a live-in, 10 month, half-time positions, managing student personnel aspects of a
dental practice. Students are required to
dents. Duties include assisting the Complex Director with student personnel functions including
supervisory responsibilities for the student staff and
training.
development, adjustment to university life, and conduct—including providing counseling and referral services to university and community staff. Provide training to a tripartal group living experience. Enrollment at KU for graduate study.
August 1, 1993, through May 31, 1994 with the possibility for renewal for the following academic year: To Apply: Submit a letter of application outlining your academic background and three letters of reference to the KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W.11, Corin Hall, Burlington, Iowa 52607. He post-graduated in 1991. EF Enrolmer.
Help waint 8am - 11am $-5.00 per hour to
attack stroke patient. Call 5 pm - 8:43 noon
83-930.
Help Wanted: Recreation Services is hiring intramural soccer officials. 4-7 to 10 pm/hr Anyone interested should attend an organizational meet March 8, 2018 at 8:00 am in Johns Hopkins University.
Jacque's Restaurant and Ultimate Sports Bar is seeking wait staff, dishwasher, and cooks. Apply in person between 1am and 4pm M-F at 02. Wetrice Shopping Center, 6th and Kaseold.
Located LAKERSHIRE GP FP Hospice work four Located (Flexible hours) and five days a week. 85 $ per hour.
Located in Kansas City, Kansas. Be able to work
a week on a sunny day or a week on a
sunday's mandatory. Barely 25 per hour.
Line up your summer job now. We are currently hiring in May for the position in May Only drug free, nonamaking individual apply. Call 913-825-6326. Nassau Combining Inc Manual labor 1 hourly 7 a.m.-5 p.m. M·Bowers Construction
MARKETING INTERNSPIRIT - Part time now! full-time this summer. New progressive Printing Co. wants a ambitions self-starter for commissioned sales job in Lawrence. Apply in person, 611 Verizon Drive, Suite B, Washington, DC 20007.
Models needed pro $175-300/day & TV/PMl
extra $175-200/day no exp. No required 41-9009
Mckeeled wanted for Redskin International午夜舞
Mckeeled wanted for Redskin International午夜舞
1/4/2015 8:32:29. If interested call Dahl Chess-
man (612) 785-2121.
namiith Talh RA applications for Fall 1983 are now available at the front desk. All interested students may apply. Applications to NANNIES WEIDER NCY NYC. We offer great opportunities to work with us. TREK/RASIH/ATL
nation position available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii, summer city, round Great pay.
Nation position available nationally.
Part time Secretary position. Must have Macintosh Microsoft Word processing experience. Position available from May 1 to June 30. Hours are 8:00-5:00 Tues. & Thurs., noon to 5:00 Wed. plus additional days. Send resume to Teresa Smith, 3220 Clinton Parkway Ct., Lawrence, RI 26047
Nationals positions available nationwide including Florida, Iowa summer camp, Great pay
Flores, Arizona summer camp
Part-time work in downtown retail business
in the job offered. Reqs: a bachelor's degree
for Kansas Career Work Study. For more
information, visit ks.edu/careers.
**SCHOLARSHIP HALL FIRST FORUM** - Housing announcements *Scholarship Hall Director* (SHD) vacancies for 1983-94. The SHD holds a 75%, live-in position, to facilitate academic progress, help plan housing initiatives, and assist students, coordinate physical maintenance, and help with development of a cooperative academic community. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's in management or related field, taking no more than 9 hrs. per semester; group living experience. Preferred Qualifications: Experience in menu planning, food preparation, budgeting, inventory control, and facility assistance skills and experience. Ability to assist in development of a supportive academic/coperative atmosphere in the hall. Salary and Benefits: $20,000 per year, including an apartment including utilities is provided as well as meals when the hall is serving. SHDs and their colleagues, who are part of the period of employment extend from August 1, 1983 through May 31, 1994 with the possibility for renewal for the following year. To Apply: Submit resume to the KU Department of Relevant experience, a resume, and three letters of reference to the KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W.11th, Lawrence, KS 69545. Applicants must be hired by April 1, 1993. EGO Employer.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BYDONATING NINE TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BEDMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Educationally self employed mom needs someone to care for 13 month old child in my home weekday afternoons. Must be a Christian, willing to work flexible hours, and have references. Please call 865-8044 for inter-contact.
SPORTS OFFICIAL NEEDED: ANEED interested in umpiring youth baseball/softball or adult softball for Lawrence Parks & Recreation Department. Contact Bob Stalliff at 742-1722 informa
Students needed to work w/ young child w/ autism
student needs to work w/ older child w/ credit study/credit employment over summer. Call 822-365-1740.
Students need to work with young child with autism. Initial training required. Possible independent study credit/summer employment. Call 823-007.
Tennis juniors-summer camp-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call Jeniffer Wheeler a 141-6508 Men call or write: Camp Winfield Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 10943
Waterfront Job: WK-SI summer children's camps-northeast men and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterski (slalom) or skateboard, teach children pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Men call or write: Camp Winada, 51 Glen Lane, Manorville, NY NJ 06454 (914) 381-2800.
Energetic, enthusiastic person needed to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during school year, full-time during summer. Must be at least 18 years old. Resume to Trinity Lutheran Church, 1245 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS 60044. Deadline: 03-21.
225 Professional Services
CC Desktop Publishing Resumes, Cover Letters,
Bioresumes, Fliers. Term papers, Newletters
& Notices
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial
Moneys to ESMS Go B O P x34331. LK 69087
to ESMS Go B O P x34331. LK 69087
Make your modeling dreams come true! Portfolio Modifofo photography. Call Rochi 841-235-6700.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 834-4023
full-time person. Mon Wed & Fri mornings. Full-time in summer. Saving apts, answering phones & general office work. Must be a Kansas resident, having G.A.P. at a lot of 8 or enrolled in an earnest job.
Operations manager at L. Lawrence Catholic Student Center. Duties include supervising staff, monitoring the budget and the annual fund, and overseeing all administrative operations of the center. Send resumes to Search Inc., March 16 or Search Inc., St. Lawrence Center. 1631 Crescent Road, Lawrence KS 66044
TRAPIC-DOT'S
Fake ID§ & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
235 Typing Services
Fromm Photos and Headshots B&W Darkroom
Fast Service. First Photography. 841-423-0544
DONALD G. STROLE
AFFORDABLE TYPING & EDITING. Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 brs.
a day. Tutoring avail. near campus. Lowest rates
in town. 832-1296.
An attractive resume can make all the difference in the job you want
Leave message for Keliv @ 843-7386
$11/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
rush Jobs, Call 749-4648
DONALD G. STROKE
Donald G Strohe Sally G Keisey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Expert typing by experience secretary. IBM Cur-
riculum provided bsp-hadoop page. Ease
Lawrence Call Mrs. Kershaw.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms words into accurate pages of letters.
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard
Corners. No calls APTER 9143, 843-8568
Bus seats for Spring Break trip to Texas $225 for International Student Services. 2 strong 4,817 CABLE DESCRAMBLERS! Fight high costs with this innovative International Student Services. Send $10 for complete manual, plans, and parts list to Advanced Industries, P.O. Box 7149, Corpus Christi, TX 78903.
Word processing, applications, term paper documents, Filing, computing, rush jobs available. Master's Degree required.
SPRING SALE 50,000 & for $25. 25,000 money Eliza the Psychologist - Lawrence Griffin
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, paper,
graphic presentations. Law review and engineering.
Research reports.
305 For Sale
X
VIRGINIA
300s
Merchandise
Airline credit charge 800. Selling for $150. No Restrictions. Call Trim 399-649-766
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
Computers: New and Used
P.C. Compatibles
P.C. Source 823-1126
IBM compatible 286, 48 meg hard disk, 5.25 floppy
disks, and 16MB of RAM. We new mounts
DOS included, a nuda 6000, Oal 8181, Calr 8181,
DOS included, a nuda 6000, Oal 8181, Calr 8181,
Furniture on Consignment
Used
Waterbeds + Futons
WANTED
Let us sell your
Furniture for you on
Consignment
Bobbi's Bedroom
842-7378
LIX HOME NARM System In its own cabinet with
their own proprietary software. Requires
$200 Realizer receiver $69-157 leave
insurance.
IBM Compatible 386, SX 170 MB hard drive, 3.5 & 5.25 floppy drives, mouse, keyboard, VGA monitor, 24 hour Panasonic printer, 240 baud modem, excellent cond. $1300 B.O. C,户号 865-8899
Must sell 1866 Ford LTD R. Red P. W. $1200
Call 8641-7539 1:00 p.m.
Used Book Sale, March 12-14 Metcalf Selfshop
"American Association of University Women"
*
340 Auto Sales
**Bubaru LD, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/FM Cass,**
**AC, Great Winter Car $380; AMF $434 - Allow**
***
1800 4-door/hatchback Nissan Datsun 510
fm/fan/tape.IMA, Good Condition 803-824-860
1800 Citation for sale, Runs well, $75 O.B.O. Contact Travis at 184-650
370 Want to Buy
Four tickets to Adam Sandler this Saturday night
will pay $8.90 per each. for. 841-857-11
$10.00 also Buy Jean Jacks 841-0546
1-3 requests to Adam Sandler March 6
Wanted: Tickets to Soul Asylum concert. Call Jake 865-249.
Garden House
400s Real Estate
1900 NAISMTH 3 4 & 4 B, 2 Bath. Lg. rooms micro, etc. Cable to t.v. slot on operated laundry machine.
405 For Rent
Avail Now! Spacious 1B, Brone to campus Low
price; pd $30, CD $30.
Deposit now! Purses IDK 396-3571.
Deposit now! Purses IDK 396-3571.
Apt. Sub-lease thru July 2, BK very close to cam-
paign. Avail Now. March rent free. 749-3595
Hey KU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apart-
ment, 165 West 48th Street, New York,
Luxury Hair Bath Living, Avingt Entry,
& Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage.
355 RISK STREET BK C K 1956. Across
Avingt.
BEAT THE CROWD Everyone wants these apes. for August, but if you can take one Jane Ivy to the new buildings at West Hils Asps 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS: 831-3400 or 582-7291
bald eagle
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Large 2.8bm api. 4 blocks from campus. $160/mo.
Large 3.5bm api. 4 blocks from campus. $160/mo.
31-189 room option includes large yard, private,
roommate responsible, quiet, like living alone.
Pets allowed 0f street parking. Contact Jennifer
must sublease immediately 2 hdrm. $50 very low
util. central heat/air. Please call 843-0088.
Nice, quiet 3 BR duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl., C/A, gas, heat. 1/2 BA, W/D hookups. No pets. References. $450./mn. 845-288.
Boardwalk
Kayak Rentals
Pepper Tree Apartments Sablease June 1- July 31
18R Ibth. Call 843-606-90
For East West Rentals for Fiat
at Aspen West West Rentals. 2 BR 1
hectare, no water, paid on baste, 865-200
per year.
Plan Early. One or two female, non-smokers need
or allow subm. May Aug $250 per unit; utili-
ly pay at the rate set by your health provider.
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins
Room in history home on edge of campus. Kitchen and laundry room privileges. Vacant now. $150,000.
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
West Hill APARTMENTS
South camp location 1801 Maine Nive 2 bedroom house, hardwood, AC, garage. available April 1 Short or long term lease $500 + deposit, pets negoible 832-1309 by appl. please.
Spacious apts. - furnished
524 Frontier 847-4444
1000cmphper sqft
$305 to $365permonth
- 2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
GREAT LOCATION-Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed Thurs
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed (or other times w/apot.)
$375 to $450permonth
WATER PAID ON ALLAPTS.
info or appt.
Species 2 bedm apt. Summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities Call evenings: 749-3282
24TH & EDDINGHAM
EDDINGHAM PLACE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 br.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Affordable Price!!
No Appt Necessary
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt..Inc
SPRING BREAK SOOK ADHRE PADRE - BEACH
Parties on the beach / 2/3 SHR 214-723
Resort
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED
FURNISHED
Studios, 1,2,2+3 & 4 dbrm
apts... designed with you in
mind!
1145 Louisiana
Campus Place-841-1429
Regents Court-749-0445 1005 Mesa
NAISMITH Hall
Hanover Place-841-1212
14th & Mass
Erican Contours
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Kasold
Orchard Corners-749-4226
15th & Kasold
Orchard Corners 041-5855
Tanglewood-749-2415
Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
842-4455
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House. Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0848. Stop by 1406 Tennessee.
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, KS
66044
(913)843-8559
NOW
LEASING FOR
FALL
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
*2Pools
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
*On KU Bus Route with
4 Steps on Property
Hookups
Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
4 Stops on Property
*2 Laundry Rooms
*Some Washer/Driver
"we'll make life easier for you"
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry pets)
Two bedrooms available now! A/C, cable, $25 per month, on his bus route. Gap 091-636-1014
Naismith Place
2 &B RIM for $95
1 &Juxury car bus route
2 &Private bus route
3 &private buses/Parios
4 &pD cable TV/PiVs
5 &Basketball co-workers
Outside &Sunday 6:41 a.m. 81-185
5:15 p.m. Friday 10:24 p.m.
Or Call for Appointments
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Bdrm in 4 Bdrm, pool 2, bath 8; *iplus*. Unit:
stain apple Lane Orthodontics Corner. Call 843-582-6931
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Female roommate wanted for 1 lbm & 8 bdm
Rent negotiated. Close to campus
Rent negotiated. Fb 48-4956
Great Deal! 1 Bedroom in old house near campus
TV, TVC Kitchen, Bathroom, lvgroom,
TV, TVC Kitchen, Call 842-767-8537
Large 4.8 LB, 2 BA furn. loft, apt. Corner Corders.
Avail ASAP. No req dep. You lease Mar.-Aug. $205
+/ui.tl. large roommates, privacy, + more fun than any dorm. 865-5199
- By phone: 864-4358
Beautiful 1.ibdm 1.nap near campus Hardware
2.ibdm 2.nap near campus Hardware
3.ibdm 3.nap must see 10 and Kentucky Call 844-2298
Quit. mature, female roommate wanted for 2 bdm. Spanish Crest Apartments. Sublease from April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 +1 / utilities. Call 842-4324
Roommate needed to share furniture 4 Bdrm apartment. 2'/ utilities on bus route. Looking for first-owner of 1st floor.
Roommate needed to share furnished 4 bdrmn
room for Bachelor's. Looking for
admirerate white female. 50%
By Mall: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Roommate Wanted NOW! $200/mo, water, gas,
and cable paid. Call Brian at 842-5323
- 2 per person! 19% Starbucks Fifti
* 2 per person! 8 at a time between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
- 9 phone响es: 800-353-1243
* phonehands in be moved to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* phoneaddress: 800-353-1243
Single parent invited to live in to share domestic
life. Appr. 20 mins from campus. 864-370-3700
Appr. 20 mins from campus. 864-370-3700
Classified Information and order form
classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day instructions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the daily card cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
- BY NUMBER 11 $119 Starburst Floor, Lafayette, KS 46003
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have它ilted to your MasterCard or Vaccan Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cancelled before your expiration date.
When canning a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds can be added to these that were pre-paid by chess or with cash and are not available.
DID NOT MARKS.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to
Classifications
Cost per舱 per day
1X 2X 3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
1.95 1.50 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.45
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.65 0.60 0.40
1.76 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 0.85 0.60 0.55 0.50 0.35
140 labs & found ... 385 for sale
202 help wanted ... 384 aids sales
225 professional services ... 386 miscellaneous
225 prerequisites ...
105 personal
110 business personals
128 announcements
138 entertainment
370 want to buy
495 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Duration: 1 hour
---
Address:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daly Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Master Card
Account number:
Expiration Date:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of Dalkey Kannan, 119 Stuart Street Fint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 69042
www.theuniversityofdalkey.com
By
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1990 BEEHAVEN, THE COMPANY BY ROBERT PRESS SYNDICATIONS
"It wasn't me, Dad! It was Randy's musk glands!"
12
Friday, March 5, 1993
The Etc. Shop 843-0611 928 Mass REVENUE MARKETING Ray Ban A BOUTIQUE & LUNES
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
Spring Break Sale!
ALL Jackets $20 OFF
ALL Fitted Hats $2 OFF
ALL Adjustable Hats $5 OFF
ALL Sweatshirts over $30 $10 OFF
ALL NFL Tees - $10
Sale Thru March 7 th
Best Selection of Hats in Lawrence! Best Selection of Officially Licensed KU Merchandise
ALL NFL Tees - $10⁰⁰
837 Massachusetts
Downtown
842·2992
FAYE WATTLETON
of planned parenthood
7:00 P.M.
FRIDAY MARCH 5,1993
KANSAS UNION
BALLROOM
Under the leadership of Faye Wattleton,Planned Parenthood has played a major role in defining the national debate over reproductive rights and in shaping the family planning policies of the government worldwide. Ms.Wattleton's vision and courage have projected Planned Parenthood into the forefront of the battle to preserve women's fundamental right to equality and self determination.
LAURENCE BROWN
TICKETS: can be purchased at the SUA Box Office March 3-5 and one hour before the lecture by KU students. Tickets can be purchased by the general public the 5th. Tickets are $1 for students with KUID, $3 for non-students. IDs will be checked at the door.
This lecture is co-sponsored by KU Pro-Choice Coalition Women in Law and KU Now.
The lecture will be interpreted for the hearing impaired.
SUA
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Women to play in Dixie Classic
Golf
By Matt Doyle
Kansas women's golf coach jerry Waugh has not checked out the weather reports in St. George, Utah, to see if the weather there is any better than it has been in Lawrence recently.
Kansan sportswriter
"St. George is in a high desert area located in the southwest portion of the state which has warmer temperatures," he said. "Last year when we were out there, there was snow in the mountains, but we had light rains when we played, so you can expect most anything weather wise."
The Jayhaws leave tomorrow for St. George to play in the Dixie Classic, which starts Monday with 36 holes of competition. The 54-hole event concludes on Tuesday.
Like the Kansas men's team, the women head into their first tournament of the spring with virtually no practice time on the golf course.
"We have not had weather conducive for preparation, but that probably has been the case for many of the schools participating in this tournament," Waugh said.
Big Eight Conference rivals Missouri and Nebraska also will compete at the Dixie Classic.
Waugh said for the Jayhawks to be a competitive team this spring they needed some of their first and second year players to step up their games and complement junior Holly Reynolds.
Reynolds won medalist honors in the last three fall tournaments the Jayhawks participated in. She finished second at the Diet Coke Roadrunner Invitational at Las Cruces, N.M., the first fall tournament in early September.
One player that Waugh hopes can step to the forefront is sophomore Ann Holbrook, who gained valuable experience in the fall by participating in three of the four tournaments. Holbrook participated in only one tournament last season.
"I'm happy that I qualified for the tournaments, but I didn't score as well as I could have," she said.
We need everyone to score well so we don't have to rely on Holly so much.
An hour of your time is worth the lives of three. Give Blood.
Holbrook had a scoring average of 87.2 in the fall, with her best performance, a 14th place finish, coming at the Cyclone Classic in Ames, Iowa.
If you stop to think of all the good your single donation can do, an hour doesn't seem like much of a sacrifice.
Today is the last day to register to donate. Sign up in front of Wescoe or in the Student Union. Donate March 8-11.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE!
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
♂
old age old DSM Holley Layla I'm looking for a girl to camp Kappa University and I want to spend my time at camp Kappa University and I want to spend my time at camp Kappa University.
Are there no single women in Lawrence? Graduation time alone, looking down for down-to-earth female time alone, looking down for down-to-earth female time alone, occasional bears, live music; am a SW2, 28, reasonably fit, open-minded and creative; am a teacher.
Blonde, mountain bikes, herbal tea, 22 day hikes,
tall flowers, a warm blanket, destroy your
television, skirts, spring evenings, ashes on a coffee
box, intelligent苦味,intelligent blake,bloke盒
10306
BFW meets BFW travelling comparison to New Orleans during Spring Camp. Call Ben Brokaw, Call Ben Brokaw.
SWM Graduate student, 29, seeking possible serious relationship. I'm honest, kind, generous, and intelligent. I'm #62, 190, with an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I'm looking for an athletic NWF who wants a relationship with mutual respect, caring, and fun. Call 415-8077 415-8077
Artist now showing, Nation's Capitol, State Capital,
Palm Beach Airport, Kansas City, looking for
a good woman, any age, any race. HIV neg. Box
10115
Do you worry about repeating conversations, having thick ankles, or eating too many fruit flavored cookies? Do you braug about your parents constantly? Or may you just love Mr. Pobb? Please let me know that someone is still there worrying about the same things - expire dates, birth dates, call numbers...
SWM looking for customers who appreciate the
experience of working through a process
to the "Experiment" (Call help)
SWIM. 25, is looking for a woman, 19-22, who looks, sports old men, romantic warrior style, would love to be in the real world, really good woring dating, but right now not looking for aariiou relationship. I want to have some fun Call Us
SMU 344 Grad Student musician, creative, off-bat,
easy going, in live music, Mythy P杀人K, Jody
good beer, and talker forever about anything and
anything. You can also learn alternative
social media with similar interest. #10291
SW/WM NonTraditional student, with a sense of humor about life, seeks female to share time and experiences with. Don't be shy. Call me. What have you got to lose? Expect may landlines. Box
NWM 25 looking for singles and couples any sex, age or race for intellectually convoying conveys a certain appeal.
SWM, very slightly neuralist, seems similarly deranged partners for quality time in the quiet room.
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778
SWM(19) Traditional non-engineering student who doesn't worry about what his feet are touching in lakes and streams. He is a school of hard work, interested in someone with damn. I wouldn't answer a personals ad, but won't think any less of you when you do. Me! Okay, dark hair, and eyes with paint for the unusual Calc box.
The world is already full of wanna-bee. Natural is beautiful. I'm looking for someone of sound mind with enough backbone to be true to themselves before others. My interest are Muzik, weights, and a desire to drink because it impairs my 'high'. All calls will be responded to box call 101168.
οβ
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
"If you like pina colada and getting caught in the rain, if you not into yoga and have half a brain. Then, we’re the women you’re looking for, call us for your needs." But, as much as 3, but 3 of us get your calls. Call 21244 for fun!
2 SWFs from a small, Iowa town friends since birth, both under 25, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet men w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down on earth. Like long walks, movies, talking on the phone, & trying any scam to get us rich call. Box 641
BI SWF 21, non drinker. Looking for female ninety-girl and cute guys ages 29-44 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to have close friends with trustworthy people. #20/41 Grad. 29/9/0 WMS, recently separated with mother. I am athletic, intelligent and outgoing. Keeping physically fit and dancing are one of my passions. I am socially conscious and believe in equality. I do not wear black or white. I keep a rather tight schedule, but would like to spend spare hours with mature, intelligent, attractive, white male with some interests. If dinner is as innovative as you get on a date, don't
Love seeking intriguing P. B. have a tight virgin belly button, do you? I work it to a base, and I'm not sure any underwear So. "If you won't go tell me, don't bother." box B. # 30148
don't. don't bother. Box B. # 30148
SWF blue eyed, blue hairred braunetie seeking SWM aged 18-23 Enjoy laughing, the outdoors and a good MGD. Any man with a Dalmatian, call me Uptights don't 'inquire' #20140
MEN SEEKING MEN
50
Common abbreviations
GW stud look for someone to share a lot in课堂. Like nature walks, great outdoors, sporting events, dining out, going places, doing things you didn't know you could do, or lean on will also need someone to be there when needed. Not afraid to be seen with an older student non-stomacher / light driver. Call box #20825 or 916-373-2633 to speak up or race for inclusion by stimulating conversation and maybe mutual gratification. #20822
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W Wife L Lesbian
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoke
GWM - 30 something, have been called tall dark and handsome. Discreet but not closed. I love the outdoors and cooking and going to the theatre. Staying home is great but weekly outings are a must. We go to the museum in type 25-35 who looking for someone to you. a good time. I'll take good care of you. #s0616
♥ ♥
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
20 year old inexperienced WF look for someone feminine 19-23 to explore friendship with adventurous possibilities. I'm an attractive brunette @ 8'5" tall. I'm a creative person @ 6'4" Cocteau. I'm too able to open up to women I find attractive so I resorted to this! Don't worry about the法律 lettent just let you acquaint. Call box #4000
BIFSWF, 21, Non-Drinker. Looking for unique feminine and cute guys ages 20-24 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to have friends with trustworthy people. Box #4000
Female 23 seeks platinic friendship –shopping,
movies, get involved on campus. Grad student living
in Lawrence. Occasional nights on the town!
Just someone to hang out with. Call box #4012.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansanat
119 Staufer-Flint Hall 864-4358
2. You'll place an ad in the **laytak Network section of the Kansan** (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own, include a phone number where you can be reached.
SPORTS: The Kansas men's basketball team defeated Oklahoma State 74-73 yesterday, Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102.NO.115
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING:864-4358
MONDAY, MARCH 8,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Saferide driver Tim Morris, Overland Park senior, records a student's location before setting out to pick him or her up. Morris said Saferide usually could pick up students within 15 minutes of their calls.
Saferide's popularity creates soaring costs
Student Senate projects service's growth will continue
By Brett Riggs Kansan staff writer
Late one February night. VanNamen.
ristin VanNamen had a creepy feeling.
Late one February night.
Austin, Texas, senior, set out into the darkness on foot from Robinson Gymnasium to her home on New York Street.
Still blocks away from home, she was startled by a man in a car who pulled up next to her. He rolled down his window and said, "Come on baby. I give you a ride."
VainNamen quickened her pace and headed toward the Kansas Union, where she called Saferide at 864-SAFE. A look of relief swept across her face as she climbed into the car and told the driver, Tim Morris. Overland Park senior, her address.
Riders like VanNamen prompted Student Senate recently to allocate an additional $15,000 to continue Saferide, a free student cab service, through the end of the semester.
Saferide, sponsored by Senate and operated by the Lawrence Bus Company, carried 8,784 passengers in Fall 1902 alone, compared to about 7,500 during both semesters of the 1991-92 academic year.
Brad Garlinghouse, student body president, says the service, which was originally budgeted at $55,000 for the year, is growing more rapidly than expected.
In fact, Senate does not know where the growth will end
Under the operation of A-1 C-A
Cab, the service cost $35,794 in
1989-90, $35,577 in 1990-91, and
$31,983 in 1991-92. This year the
cost for Safedire more than doubled. The service will cost students $7,000.
Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer, said that he foreores continued growth, and that Senate will attempt to fund that growth — even if it means seeking outside help.
"In the next year or two I could see it becoming a $100,000 project." Sigoumey said.
The Bus Company and Senate have not settled on any concrete numbers for next year, but have projected the cost at about $95,000. That cost would make the service the third most expensive that Senate offers, behind KU on Wheels and Legal Services for Students.
Chrisy Kaiser, director of KU on Wheels, said the service was struggling to satisfy the demand for rides.
"We are providing an excellent service," Kaiser said, "but we are getting more calls than we can handle."
The service, which operates nightly from 11 p.m. to 3 a.m., leases four 1991 Ford Tempos and employs 15 student drivers.
The program is costly because its goal is to provide a free ride for every student who needs a safe way home.
"We don't ask for any reimbursement, and when more people ride, you need more cars and more drivers." Kaiser said.
Garlinghoe house said that $5,727 of the supplementary funds would pay for a fourth car that was added last fall to the Sunday night schedule and for a new car that will soon be added on Tuesdays.
"We are taking too long to pick people up on those nights," Garlinghouse said.
The remaining $3,273 will make up for a low estimate of the service's cost and act as a buffer in case more money is needed at the end of the semester.
"This is our first year with the Lawrence Bus Company, so it was a trial-and-error year to begin with," Kaiser said. "We were hoping it wouldn't go beyond $55,000."
But it has. In fact, senators don't seem to have a clear idea of why the service is growing so rapidly.
It has been hard to come up with an accurate budget. Kaiser said.
"I have heard that some students are riding from one end of Daisy
One theory is that the service is being abused.
Story continued, Page 3.
Curtain falls on Rock Chalk Revue
Winners announced at final show of 1993
By Vicki Bode Kansan staff writer
Members of the 1993 Rock Chalk Revue performed their last show Saturday before a sold-out audience at Lawrence High School.
After the performance, members of each act gathered in aisles of the auditorium and waited for the announcement of the total money raised and the winners of the revue.
Members of Pi Beta Phi and Pi Kappa Alpha screamed and embraced each other when their act was announced as the best Rock Chalk Revue show.
Ann Perry was co-director of the winning show, "Off The Wall," a musical production about a painting gallery where the art came to life.
She said she was surprised when their show was announced as the winner.
"I could only hope," Perry said. "Everyone did a great show."
By Saturday night, the snow had raised $20,000 for United Way.
Jill Raines, promotions coordinator for the revue, said that more money would be donated and that the totals were not completed by Saturday's performance.
Revue participants also donated 16,566 hours of community service to the United Way.
Stacey Moore, community service coordinator, said the total number of service hours was an all-time record. Last year, the show donated 10,000 hours of community service and $43,000.
BONNER
donating more than 2,000 hours of community service.
Chi Omega and his Kappa Psi won an award for the
Gamma Phi Beta won the Most Charitable Award for donating more than 2,000 hours of community service.
Among the other awards given Saturday:
Kappa Alpha Theta and Lambda Chi Alpha won best production number.
Perry of Pi Beta Phi won best female performer for her portrayal of Dorthea Dawn Davies, an art gallery tour guide.
Jamey Welch, member of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, won best male performer for his portraital of Wolfgang Von Schritz, a hairstylist with characteristics similar to the Sprocket character on "Saturday Night Live."
Todd Miller, executive producer of the revue, said he was pleased with the results of this year's show.
"We had five really good shows that were all equal on their competitive level." Miller said.
Kelli Curtis, Ekhart senior and Alpha Gamma Delta sorority member, received her award for best support female performer after Rock Chalk Revue's final show Saturday night.
Proposal would keep some out of KU
Qualified admissions would turn away about 20 percent of applicants, study says
Kansan staff writer
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Nearly one-fifth of KU students who apply to the University would not be admitted under proposed qualified admissions standards, according to a University study of 1987 incoming students.
The study was conducted by the Office of Institutional Research and Planning and outlined in a Feb. 24, 1993, memo to the Board of Regents. It found that 81.7 percent of students who applied at KU would have gained admission.
A bill passed by the Kansas Senate last week would require that high school students meet one of three standards to be admitted to one of the state's six Regents universities.
The bill now goes to the House of Representatives.
The qualified admissions legislation includes what state legislators call a window, a clause allowing a certain percentage of incoming students to enter the University without meeting the standards. The window would allow for a certain number of "late bloomers," they say.
The study of 1987 students assumed a 15 percent window in figuring that 81.7 percent of students would have been admitted.
As it stands now in the Senate bill, that window is
set at 10 percent.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs,
said each of the universities would decide who made it through the window. The bill does not outline what students would make up the 10 percent.
Supporters of the qualified admissions bill, including the Board of Regents and KU administrators, have outlined a number of alternatives for students who do not meet one of the requirements. They have said that the state could not afford to finance remedial education at its universities.
Karen Seals, Supportive Educational Services director, said she opposed qualified admissions.
"The people we serve haven't had the same opportunities as others," said Seals, whose service tutors about 250 students.
Joy Stovall, Wichita sophomore, is an SES student who would not have met one of the qualified admissions requirements.
In high school her grades were bad, but she graduated and came to KU, where she earned a 1.2 and 1.5 grade point averages her freshman year.
After that, Stovall took some tests that determined she had a learning disability.
"It may not sound like much, but for someone who got a 1,2,..." she said.
Last fall, after a semester of tutoring, she earned a 2.0
SES is financed annually by a federal grant of about $160,000, which the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences nearly matches.
Both administrators and state legislators are quick to point out that qualified admissions has a long history in the Statehouse, and that although it passed the Senate for the first time last week, it still
Proposed admission requirements
A bill containing admission requirements for Board of Regents schools is now in the Kansas House. The bill would require that incoming students complete two following requirements: 2:0 high school GPA
20 composite ACT score
top one-third of high school class
Random sampling of 410 new students A study was conducted to see how many of the new students in 1987 would have met proposed admission requirements.
met two of three requirements
26.6%
met all three requirements
13.7%
did not meet any requirement
33.4%
met one of three requirements
26.3%
Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning Elaine K.Barkley/KANSAN
faces debate in the House.
Gov. Joan Finney has said she would veto the qualified admissions bill if it made it to her desk to be signed into law.
Joy Stovall said she hoped no one was denied the chance she was given.
"I was taught to fail when I was little," Stocvall said. "I has taught me that I'm going to make it, and that's what I need to do."
INSIDE
A. H. Burridge
Faye Wattleton, former president of Planned Parenthood, spoke to about 500 people Friday night in the Kansas Union Ballroom about the reproductive rights of women.
Jayhawks upset Lady Buffs in 'one of the finest ever'
Reproductive rights
By Jav WIlliams
See story. Page 5.
Kansan sportswriter
SALINA — In a determined effort, the Kansas women's basketball team fought its way to an 81-78 double-overtime victory against No. 6 Colorado yesterday in the semifinals of the Big Eight Conference Women's Basketball Tournament.
The Jaihawks, 20-8 overall, stood toe-to-toe with the conference's regular season champions in the second half
"This game will go down in tournament history as one of the fines games ever," said Kansas coach Martian Washintying baskets at both the end of regulation and at the end of the first overtime.
The Jayhawks will play for the championship at 7 p.m. against Nebraska at the Bicentennial Center. The game will be televised on the Prime Network, channel 45, on a tape-delay basis starting at 9:30 p.m.
Nebraska beat Oklahoma State 66-64 in yesterday's other semifinal.
Eansas had a six-point lead with 4:30 left in regulation and a four-point lead with 52.7 seconds remaining in overtime, but Colorado showed why it had earned its high ranking. The Lady Bucks, 25.3, forced some timely turnovers and went to junior forward Jamall Lang for the game.
Championship game
BASKETBALL
Championship game
Of what: Big Eight Women's Tournament
Against whom: Nebraska
When to Play: Central Center in Salina
When: 7 tonight
Live radio: KMJA, 1440 AM, or KHKJ, 90.7 FM
Tape-delay TV: Prime Network, network 45 at 8:30 p.m.
Aycock led Kansas with 20 points, while Sampon scored 17 and Kite added 16. Junior guard Michelle Leathers and sophomore forward Alana Slatter also scored in double figures.
The young Jayhawks received big performances from sophomore forward Angela Aycock and freshman guard Charisse Sampson, plus a hand from a veteran, senior forward Shannon Kite.
Washington looked at her players as they came to the bench between the overtimes and knew the Jahwahks
"I looked at my players' eyes, and they told me they could do it," she said.
34
See related story. Page 7.
Doual Hersise / KANBAN
Members of the women's basketball team celebrate from the bench their B1-78 victory against Colorado in the Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament.
2
Monday, March 8. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Daily Re-affirmation
Tenter prayer consciousness by releasing the situation over to (the higher power,?) clearing my heart of doubt, and being wholly thankful for all the good that is ready for me.
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Who?
Susan Fauld Naomi Wolf Gloria Steinem ...and others.
Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a speaker, Albert Fishblow, at 7tonight at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Fishblow, professor of economics at the University of California-Berkeley, will speak on "Quality of Life Implications of the North-American Free Trade Agreement for North American and Mexican Workers." For more information, call Marc at 841-5660.
"Review our current Book selection on ..."
Women's Studies Month
ON CAMPUS
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will hold its meeting at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-4256.
Gay and Lesbian Services or Kansas will hold its business meeting tonight. For more information, call the GLOSK office at 864-3091.
The department of art history will hold a lecture, "The Art of Pang
■ KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 843-6250.
Tianshou, a Modern Painter," at 3:30 p.m tomorrow at Room 211 in the Spencer Museum of Art. The speaker will be professor Pan Gongkai, former chairperson of the department of Chinese painting at Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts in Hangzhou, China, director of Pan Tianshou Museum in Hangzhou and visiting scholar at the Center of Chinese Studies at the University of California-Berkley. For more information, call the museum office at 864-4713.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Association will hold a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
Jayhawk Bookstore
ON THE RECORD
A student's compact discs, compact disc holder and cash, valued together at $2,480, were taken Friday in the 3000 block of University Drive, Lawrence police reported.
The Club, an anti-car theft device placed on the steering wheel, valued at $100 was taken Saturday from a student's car in the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police reported. Damage to a window and the interior done light was estimated at $150.
B
1420 Crescent Rd. • Lawrence, Ks. 66044
A student's Walkman, two textbooks and a compact disc, valued together at $110, were taken Saturday from a vehicle in the 1500 block of Sigma Nu Drive, Lawrence police reported.
A student's pullout compact disc player, compact discs and a compact disc case, valued together at $540, were taken Friday or Saturday from a vehicle in the 1500 block of Sigma Nu Drive, Lawrence police
reported.
A student's compact disc player, textbooks, art supplies and 30 cassettes, valued together at $403, were taken Thursday from a vehicle in the 3800 block of Westland Place, Lawrence police reported.
A student's jacket, driver's license and KUID, valued together at $200, were taken Saturday in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police reported.
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WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 53°/33°
Weather around the country:
Attanta: 64°/41°
Chicago: 34°/27°
Houston: 78°/46°
Miami: 76°/60°
Minneapolis: 37°/26°
Phoenix: 86°/47°
Salt Lake City: 63°/36°
Seattle: 57°/41°
LAWRENCE: 58°/37°
Kansas City: 57°/37°
St. Louis: 54°/38°
Wichita: 65°/38°
Tulsa: 71°/43°
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
Sunny.
Mostly sunny.
Mostly sunny, cooler.
High: 59°
Low: 37°
High: 58°
Low: 35°
High: 42°
Low: 31°
Source: Pat Murphy, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hill, Lawrence, KA 66045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA. 60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, KA. 60444. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Latin American Solidarity
Ed Hasse
"Cuba Today"
Thursday, March 4
6:30 p.m.
ECM. 1204 Oread
Advertisement funded by Student Senate
Latin American Solidarity will be serving a Rice and Bean Dinner beginning at 6 p.m.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Monday, March 8. 1993
Higher costs result as service 'reaches out' to more students
Continued from Page 1.
Hill to the other when they could just walk," Gar linghouse said.
Kaiser agreed that the purpose of the service needed to be clarified.
"It is not to be used as a shuttle between bars or parties," Kaiser said, adding that it was not just a "tipsy taxi."
"It is also for people who don't have safe transportation or don't feel comfortable walking home at night," she said.
Morris expressed doubt about whether students were abusing the service. He said that drivers could not totally prevent abuse but that they did reserve the right to deny rides to suspected drivers.
He recalled a time when three men wanted to be taken from the Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St., to a location on Locust Street near Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St. He said he was suspicious and refused them the ride.
"I knew the guys, and I knew they didn't live there," Morris said. "We'll ask them if they have proof of their address."
Morris said that students used the service for dif- different reasons. Some riders simply use it to ride from campus to their home, and others use it as a safe way home from the bars.
"We usually get a rush of calls at about 1:30 a.m. since that is when the bars close." Morris said.
Another problem that contributes to the rising cost is that some cars run past 3 a.m. Senate pays the Lawrence Bus Company $18.50 a car for each hour it operates, and that becomes costly if cars are running late.
"If we get a call at 2:59 a.m., we are expected to pick it up." Kaiser said. "It just backs things up, and we have cars running until 4 a.m."
1990-91, A-1 ran the service at a rate of $a car for each hour it executed. Chris Ogle, president of the Lawrence Bus Company, said he thought that his company's hourly rate for this year was a good deal despite the overall increase in cost.
"If you look at $22 as being a good price two years ago, I think our price is extremely competitive." Ogle said. "If anyone else wants to try to do it for less, then more power to them."
Ogle refused to comment on the specific breakdown of the contract costs, but he did say that capitalization costs for the vehicles, along with maintenance, insurance, drivers' wages and administrative overhead all factor into his rate.
Ogle said he thought that the service had more respectability than in the past because the cars were new, the drivers were students and the service was prompt.
You can either look at it as the cost going up or the service becoming more effective. "On-call"
Angela Dumap, Garden City sophomore, said she could attest to the improved service. She rode in a Saferide car late one night from Marvin Hall to Lewis Hall.
"It was about 12:30 a.m. and my friends and I
didn't want to walk home. "Dunlap said. It only took about five minutes for them to get there."
Sigourney said that when A-1 ran the service, students had to wait longer then 15 minutes for the ride.
Morris said the goal of the service was to pick people up in 15 minutes or less. He also said that he thought having students as drivers helped the
"I talked to a lot of people who said they didn't want to use the service last year because of the cars and the drivers," Morris said. "I think they are less intimidated about calling us."
Sigourney also noted an improvement in the quality of the vehicles under the bus company.
"The cars are cleaner and newer, and people feel more comfortable in them," Sigourney said. "A-1 City Cab was out of touch and never understood our side."
A-1 refused to comment about its operation of the service last year.
KU is the only Big Eight school to offer a service like Saferide.
Even though Senate is satisfied with the service, it is considering alternatives, including a $1 charge for rides, ending the service in April, seeking University assistance and seeking sponsorship from local bars to cut costs.
He said that Saferide was doing a service for bars as well as students, and that Senate might even go as far as to refuse to pick up students from bars that did not contribute.
Garlinghouse said he particularly supported the idea of asking bars to contribute.
Andrew Arnone / KANSAN
John Wooden, owner of The Wheel, 507 W.14th St., said that he thought Saferide was a good service and that he would be very open to talking with Senate about contributing.
Senators do not want to charge students to rue because students already pay for the service indirectly through student activity fees.
"I think charging students to ride would be defeating the purpose of the program," Garlinghouse said.
"As a citizen. I think the service is needed." Ogle said. "We have probably deterred accidents and saved lives."
Garlinghouse considers the service to be one of the best that Senate offers.
"I like Saferide a lot," Garlinghouse said. "It is one of the few things that Senate does that really reaches out and affects students."
It certainly affected VanNamen. As she stepped out of the car, any apprehension seemed to be gone. "Thanks," she said casually and headed for her door.
A. R. Kumar
As he waited for her to make it safely inside, Morris said, "I wouldn't try to walk home from that far at noon, let alone midnight."
Above, Girish Ballalla, Bangalore, India, sophomore, takes Saferide home from a friend's house. Below, Lauren Perona, left, Northfield, ill, freshman, and Anne Payment, Willmette, III., freshman; take Saferide home from Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill. At bottom left, Jamie Briscoe, Overland park freshman, and Dionne Newton, Manchester, Mo., freshman, take Saferide home from campus after working late on an architecture project.
9
SAFERIOE
Andrew Arnone/KANSAN
Andrew Arnone / KANSAN
The cost of traveling safely
The funds that Student Senate has allocated to Saferide have doubled since last year and are expected to be the third most expensive item in the Senate budget next year.
$100,000
89-'90
'90-'91
'91-'92
'92-'93
'93-'94*
Source: Student Senate
'93-'94* estimated
Forum focuses on solutions to drug abuse
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
A two-day forum on drug and alcohol abuse gave University of Kansas representatives an opportunity to come up with a plan to help deal with the problem of abuse on campus and in the community.
"In the two days we had, we got a lot accomplished," said Janine Demo, coordinator of health education at Watkins Memorial Health Center and one of nine KU participants.
KU representatives at the round created recommendations aimed at alleviating drug and alcohol abuse problems on campus, ranging from providing more recreational opportunities to expanding counseling services.
About 25 people from KU, Baker University, Haskell Indian Junior College, the city of Lawrence and the Lawrence and Baldwin City police departments participated in the forum, which was held at the Adams Alumni Center on Thursday and Friday.
"Oftentimes people feel that this is just a university problem," she said. "When we come together on a common ground, I think some great things can happen."
Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs and another KU representative, said he also thought the forum was effective.
"The first day it was hard to believe this was possible," Weinberg said. "But it was clear the second day that we had set some short and long-term goals. I think that what we set out to accomplish we certainly did accomplish."
It was a student, Marc Wilson, Hiawata senior, who came up with the idea for the forum. He asked Weinberg to help bring it to KU.
Weinberg said that although much had been achieved at the forum, even more remained to be done.
"This isn't the end, it is really just the beginning." Weinberg said. "There is much we have to do to fulfill the commitments we have made to each other."
Recommendations
KiU's drug and alcohol abuse plan, which was devised Thursday and Friday at a forum on drug and alcohol abuse, includes the following objectives.
- Later closing hours at Robinson Gymnasium in the fall. The gym now is open until midnight Monday through Thursday and 10:30 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
- Reviewing the possibility of having a drug and alcohol issues. Students want evaluation or treatment currently are referred off campus.
Increasing Lawrence police involvement in campus programming.
military campus programming.
Allowing all Lawrence residents to use a service, which provides free rides home to all students who have been drinking.
- Creating bicycle and pedestrian paths to increase traffic safety.
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REPLACEMENT SENATORS
STUDENT SENATE AND THE ELECTIONS COMMISSION ARE NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATION FOR REPLACEMENT SENATORS FOR THE FOLLOWING
1 ARCHITECTURE
1 EDUCATION
4 GRADUATE
1 SOCIAL WELFARE
1 LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
STUDENT
SENATE
4
Monday, March 8,1993
OPINION RSTY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Western Civilization tries to cover too much
The goals of the Western Civilization department are clearly stated in this, the mission statement: "Western Civilization is a two-semester interdisciplinary program which critically examines the ideas and values characteristic of Western culture from its early expressions of Ancient Greece, Rome and Israel through the modern period." Unfortunately, in practice, the majority of the students that are in the program are not being offered anything close to this. Instead they are inundated with too many authors that surpass their ability to learn and the teaching assistant's ability to teach.
During a transition period such as this, mistakes understandably will occur, and through trial and error, we will create a better program. But we have reached the point of too many trials and too many errors, and it is time for the department to get the job done.
The Western Civilization program has been through a challenging and unstable period in the last decade. Because of the nature of the Western Civilization program, it has unfortunately been subject to intense scrutiny as a variety of factions have championed their versions of how Western culture came to be.
The student concerns with the program have been voiced time and again. There are too many books with too many authors, and it is impossible to critically examine any of them because the students and the teachers are spread too thin. By the end of the two-semester program most students have a superficial knowledge of what the 25 authors wrote but virtually no ability to "critically examine" any of them. But for some reason, every time the students voice their concern, it is simply shrugged off as those lazy, unprepared students just trying to get out of reading all of the texts.
However, it has been proven that the easiest route for the students is the one we have right now. With New Analysis, basically Cliff's Notes for Western Civilization, any student can make a B or even an A in the class and never read even one text. Why in the world would we be complaining if we aren't reading the texts now and still making good grades? Maybe, just maybe, students are interested in that education that faculty are so earnestly trying to grant us.
The most illustrating thing about this whole problem is that everyone knows what the problem is, and no one is doing anything about it. In an internal memo to the Western Civilization department on Feb. 4, 1992, Jim Woelfel, the head of the department, stated: "My view continues to be that students are better off really feeling that they have a handle on six to eight 'great authors and books' — even if the course reading doesn't 'cover all of the bases' — than they are being exposed to the bewildering number and variety we expose them to now."
Student sentiment couldn't be expressed any more clearly. Simply prioritize the works, choose the top six or eight and teach them. The students will learn more, and the teaching assistants will be able to grasp all of the material and teach it better.
No, we won't have learned everything there is to know about the founding of Western thought, but at least we will learn something, which is more than can be said now.
JEFF REYNOLDS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Musicians should try writing their own music for a change
STAFF COLUMNIST
Something evil is happening in the world of music.
No, it's not Billy Ray Cyrus, although his efforts certainly are not a valuable addition.
Rather, it is what seems to be an increasing proclivity of mediocre artists to cover songs that were much better performed by their original
Probably the most egregious of these performers is Michael Bolton. His most recent album, "Timeless: The Classics," would be better titled "Tuneless." He can run the best of songs, and this isn't the first album he's done it on. Take, for example, what he did to "Georgia On My Mind." That song was meant to be sung by Ray Charles and no one else, especially not the possum-haired likes of Bolton, whose raspy voice brings about thoughts of respiratory infection, not musical ability.
JULIE WASSON
His latest venture includes a mangling of Sam Cooke's "You Send Me" Even the most romantic of settings and moods cannot compensate for the damage Bolton does to this song. But Bolton is far from alone in this type of musical crime: Consider Rod
Stewart's interpretation of Van Morrison's "Have I Told You Lately." Stewart was fine on songs like "Maggie May." He nowhere near enough talent to cover Van Morrison ballads.
Sinead O'Connor recently covered some standards on her album "Am I Not Your Girl?" A traditional interpretation of these songs would have been much better. O'Connor's style is far from compatible with these songs.
of "Easy," an early '80s ballad by the Commodores, falls into the same category.
And the list goes on. A group called Ugly Kid Joe now has a cover version of Harry Chapin's "Cat' in the Cradle" on the charts. For a loud, clangy rock band, they do a relatively respectable job, but they certainly don't improve on the original. Faith No More's cover
Whitney Houston has ruined what was once a sad and saddy, but pretty ballad by Dolly Parton. Houston has an incredible voice, and her emotion-free approach to "I Will Always Love You" is certainly sad, but not in the way Parton's tear-jerking version is.
Some of the songs on the "Honeymoon in Vegas" soundtrack, a compilation of Elvis songs, are good. Dwight Yoakam, for example, gives a spirited rendition of "Suspicious Minds." But on the same album you also get John Mellencamp's bizarre version of "Jailhouse Rock."
George Michael has covered Elton John's "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me," and his cover is great. (It helps that John performed with him.) But on "Two Rooms," a collection of Elton Johnson songs performed by various artists, Wilson Phillips performs an insidious cover of "Daniel."
When discussing Mariah Carey's cover of "I'll Be There," a song originally performed by the Jackson 5, "Saturday Night Lives" David Spade directed the following comment
toward Carey: "You know why they sang that? So you wouldn't have to. It's called originality. Check it out."
Some songs are just so good, you can understand why singers would want to cover them. "Unforgettable," by Nat King Cole is one of those songs. Some singers are so good that other singers shouldn't cover their songs. Nat King Cole is one of those singers. Sorry, Natalie.
There should be a way to limit who covers which songs. Not legally, of course, because that would be censorship. But some sort of guidance in this area would be nice. An artist should be required to improve on a song if he wants to cover it, or at the minimum, should produce an enjoyable variation.
So the question becomes, who should decide which songs are covered? It should be someone who's ready to pass judgment on such matters.
A Kansan columnist, for example.
Julie Wasson is a Springfield, Mo., senior majoring in political science and journalism.
Trekkie dreams of deep space fantasy
I have decided to come out of the closet: I am a Trekkie; a hidden, shame-faced Trekkie. Yes, I too want to go where no man (or woman) has gone before.
Embarrassing as this may seem, I have found myself captivated for hours each week in front of the television. Occasionally, I even imagine myself on the new space station, "Deep Space Nine." However, I don't want to be Dax, or even the woman who plays the indomitable major, and no, I don't want to be the commander. I want to be the shape changer.
STAFF COLUMNIST
LISA
COSMIDO
For those of you who have yet to be ensnaRED by this whimsical show, the shape changer is just what he sounds like. He can change into anything. Often he changes into an inanimate object such as a chair. He is incredible.
Imagine what you could do with this talent. You would never be locked out of your home or car. You could
When I was a child, I used to watch reruns of "Bewitched" and "I Dream of Jeannie." Though I now know the sexist implications of these shows, when I was a child, I just wanted to be magic. I would imagine myself able to wiggle my nose or blink my eyes and be anywhere I chose. I would imagine the ability to have whatever I wanted
become a key or a piece of paper and slide under the door. If someone wanted to go somewhere they could become an airplane or a car. The possibilities are endless.
and to blink out of any uncomfortable situation.
Sometimes I would use this method when I was lying in bed at night and heard my parents fighting, or worse when my father got mad. I would think as hard as I could and blink with all my might and imagine I was somewhere far from our kitchen in Overland Park.
It never worked.
But if I were a shape changer, I wouldn't even have to leave. I could simply change shape. I could become the wall, or the proverbial fly on the wall. I could see what everyone was doing and not have to take part.
Just think about the implication for students. A shape changer could turn into the textbook and know every answer on a test.
Think about the dating potential. You find out what it is that one special person is searching for and lo and behold you are the one. Tall, short,
thin or voluptuous; the world is yours.
There would be no stopping you.
If you are a woman and the guy you are with is trying to go a bit further than you care, presto-change-o you are a gun, and you are pointed at him.
This bit of escapist fiction brings me back to a time when I was a young girl in sixth grade. All of the other girls were, shall I say, rounder at that age than I was, and I was mortified and embarrassed when all of the boys in the class decided it was my day to be the brunt of a cruel-kid joke. If I had been bewitched, I would have been out of there. If I had been Jeannie, well, the subject would have never come up. But if I had been a shape changer, it would have been all over. I would have turned myself into the big brother I always wanted, and those boys would have been history.
Lisa Cosmilis is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in Journalism.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 8, 1993
5
THE DEAR LADY
William Alix / Special to the KANSAN
Fave Wattleton, former president of Planned Parenthood, speaks to a crowd of about 500 people. Wattleton discussed abortion rights Friday night at the Kansas Union Ball
Speaker addresses abortion-rights issue
Former president of Planned Parenthood encourages change
By Terrilyn McCormick Kansan staff writer
While Faye Wattleton, former Planned Parenthood president, addressed approximately 500 people Friday night about the reproductive rights of women, five antiabortion advocates occupied the front row in protest.
During a question-and-answer session after the speech, the anti-abortion advocates interrupted Wattleton's answers several times. The protesters also held up newspapers with pictures of aborted fetuses throughout the speech.
Wattleton, who had an armed bodyguard, by her request, said she felt at home in the Kansas Union Ballroom with the anti-abortion advocates present.
In her speech, Wattleton said women's rights had suffered severely during 12 years of Republican presidency.
But in a separate interview, Wattleton said it was the only time anti-abortion advocates had interrupted her at a speaking appearance.
"Much damage has been done, and it won't be undone with just one election," she said.
Wattleton said that women could empower themselves by picking an issue or problem and pursuing it. She compared this idea to President Bill Clinton's election.
"Change came about because we were enraged with the usual business of the old
boy's club, "she said "So women did something about it. You need to understand that it does not take a cast of thousands to make change."
Wattleton said the courts and Congress had attempted to chip away at the Roe vs. Wade decision. These attempts include approving laws that restrict abortion by placing a gag order on doctors in state-financed clinics, preventing them from discussing abortion, she said.
These decisions infringe upon other rights, not just abortion rights, she said.
"We need to look at the bigger picture," she said. "Now these decisions envelop the right of free speech."
After her speech, Wattleton answered questions from the audience. Half of the time she defended her work at Planned Parenthood and discussed the medical and psychological effects of abortion on women and medical testing using fetal tissue.
Margaret Hu, president of KU National Organization for Women, said she was pleased with Wattleton's speech but disturbed by the methods of the anti-abortion advocates.
"They have a right to their opinion," she said. "But to deliberately try to disrupt by interrupting Ms. Wattleton was inappropriate, and it infringed upon her right to speak."
Tonya Barker, Lawrence senior and member of KU Students for Life, said that the organization was present because most people were not hearing the whole story.
"Many of them have never looked at what abortion looks like," she said. "How can they make up their minds without receiving all the information?"
Landmark KU journalism grad receives honors
Marie Ross has received more than a degree from KU'S School of Journalism.
By Tiffany Lasha Hurt
Special to the Kansan
Ross, the first African American to graduate from the University with a journalism degree, was named an honorary trustee of the William Allen White Foundation. The University foundation consists of more than 150 journalist trustees who knew White or are interested in prolonging his memory.
Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism, presented Ross with an honorary certificate at a tribute to her Saturday at the Bryant Community Center in Kansas City, Kan.
About 100 family, friends, public officials, community leaders and staff members of The Kansas City Call attended the tribute. The Call is an African-American-owned weekly newspaper in Kansas City, Mo. Because of her declining health, Ross is on leave from her position as editor and manager of the newspaper's Kansas City, Kan., office.
Ross, who is in her mid-80s, also was honored Saturday because of her achievements as an African-American journalist and the obstacles she crossed to get there.
a native of Kansas City, Kan., Ross enrolled at the University in 1925. She said she did not face any resistance as an African American at the University until she started taking journalism classes. One day, a faculty member snotted her in a class.
"He said, I see we've got a darky in the class," Ross recalled.
"He asked me, 'What are you doing here?' I told him I was here to learn just like everyone else. I wasn't leaving."
Her desire to write and the lack of positive African-American coverage in newspapers prompted Ross to become a journalist, she said.
Ross said she never wrote for The University Daily Kansan because it did not cover issues that interested African Americans.
"None of the white papers wrote about what Black people did," she said. "They didn't think that was important."
Instead of writing for the Kansan, Ross wrote the KU column for *The Call* for her last three years in college.
She recalled the day a faculty member told her she was wasting her time studying journalism because no one would hire her. But he was surprised when she showed him some of her columns.
Ross said despite the obstacles she faced in the school, she never was discouraged.
"You make up your mind, you don't get discouraged," she said. "If I open the door, you might close the door, but I'm going to be there."
Ross's determination to reopen closed doors paved the way for other aspiring African-American journalists at KU. Lucile Bluford, editor and publisher of The Call, was the second African American to graduate from the University with a journalism degree.
Bluford, who was a freshman while Ross was a senior, chose to work on the Kansan.
"I really enjoyed working on the paper while I was there," Bluford said. "Marie paved the way for me at KU. I didn't have any trouble with anybody."
Upon graduating from KU, Ross was a reporter for The Call for 12 years before she became the editor of the African-American-owned weekly newspaper The Iowa Bystander in Des Moines. After 18 years in Iowa, she returned to the Kansas City, Kan., office of The Call in 1959.
Bahamas spoke highly of Ross as a journeyman.
"For Miss Ross, writing was not simply an end in itself," he said. "Writing was a means to an end, and that end was, as she puts it, to write 'the truth about Black people.'"
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Haskell Indian Junior College students Junior White Cloud, left, and Warren Anque play the drums for spectators during the Benefit Round Dance. The round dance, held Saturday at Haskell's Coffin Complex, was a daylong benefit carnival featuring American-Indian clothing, jewelry, food, dancing and carvings.
Dance benefits community
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
A group of drummers sat playing a drum the size of a caldron. Men and women danced a circle around them. Some dancers wore American-Indian attire, while others wore ordinary street clothes.
dav at Coffin Complex at Haskell.
One man in a bell-adorned head-address shuffled around the drum and kept time with the load jingles that rang with each move.
"Hove this music," said Daniel Reed Davis, a sophomore at Haskell Indian Junior College. "It almost hypnotize me."
Money raised from raffles, cake walks and American-Indian food and crafts sales will go to the Lawrence Indian community, said dance organizer Mark Randolph, a Broken Arrow, Okla., senior at KU.
The music was part of the festivities at the benefit Round Dance on Saturthe Kiowa Cultural Club and the Uni-
ted National Indian Tribal Youth at
Haskell and the Lawrence Indian Center.
He said the money would help start programs that he and other organizers thought were lacking in the community. The planned programs would teach classes in such areas as parenting and American-Indian language, jewelry making and beadwork.
Randolph said the total amount of money raised would not be known until today.
The center's executive director, Charlene Johnson, did not take credit for the fund-raiser.
Sponsors included the Native American Student Association at KU.
"It was the students who spearheaded the whole thing," she said. "We just lent them our name."
Randolph said a round dance was different from a powwow, a spiritual ceremony, in that it placed less emphasis on traditional dress.
"The best way for me to explain it is it's like an Indian social," he said. "You get to see old friends, make new friends and raise some money."
BRIEF
George Will donates $500 to Kansas baseball team
Kansan staff report
Author and columnist George Will, who received the William Allen White Award Feb. 5 at the University of Kansas, has made a $500 donation to the KU baseball team.
William Allen White Foundation's national citation for distinguished journalism during a luncheon program on campus. The award included a bronze medal and a $500 honorarium.
"I learned after Mr. Will's visit that he wished to donate his honorarium to the baseball team," Kautsch said.
Will is noted for his writings on government and politics and for his best-selling book"Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball." Will received the
Kautsch said he arranged for the check to be presented on Will's behalf before the opening home game on Saturday.
Will included an appearance by two uniformed KU baseball players, John Wuycheck, first baseman, and Jeff Niemeier, catcher. The players, who were accompanied by baseball coach Dave Bingham, asked Will a question and gave him a Jayhawk baseball can.
"John, Jeff and I are all fans of George W. Will," Bingham said. "We enjoyed playing a part in the award program. The coaches and the players are pleasantly surprised and grateful."
The Feb. 5 award program with
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 8, 1993
7
Kansas defeats No.6 Colorado 81-78
55
KUando
5
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Junior center Lisa Tate, left, and sophomore forward Caryn Shinn force Colorado's senior forward Mindy Henry to commit a turnover in the Big Eight Championship semifinal game.
Nebraska next hurdle for'Hawks
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
SALINA — it took awhile, but the Kansas women's basketball team did what it thought it could do — upset the No. 6 team in the nation.
The Jayhawks beat Colorado 81-78 yesterday in the semifinals of the Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament. The Jayhawks, 20-8-overall, will play at 7 ontnight in the Bicentennial Center against Nebraska.
"Before the game, I felt we were capable of winning," said sophomore forward Angela Avcock.
It was a game that kept many of the 3,656 in attendance tense, as neither team took a lead larger than 10 points during the game. The contest was tied six times, and the lead changed hands 16 times.
Aycock led Kansas with 20 points and pulled down a game-high 12 rebounds in 45 minutes of action.
"Angie had a great performance," Washington said. "She's a tremendous catalyst for us."
"It was an incredible game," said Kansas coach Marian Washington.
Kansas looked to Aycock to spark its offense with dribble drives. She shot 6 of 18 from the field, but reached the free-throw line several times, converting 8 of 11 at the line. In the second half, Washington used the first-tem all-conference selection to bring the ball up the court, looking to drive against Colorado's man-to-man defense.
it was just something that developed during the game," Washington said.
When Aycock sat, the Jayhawks sputtered. The Aycock twisted her ankle and went out of the game with 8-45 remaining in regulation, and the Jayhawks holding a 52-4 advantage. Kansas had turnovers on three consecutive possessions as Colorado took the lead 55-54 with 6:30 remaining.
Women's Basketball
Aycock had the ankle retaped and returned. There was no doubt in Aycock's mind she would return.
"My legs could get chopped off, and I still play," she said.
In the first overtime, Kansas made all eight of its free throws and led by four with 52.7 seconds remaining.
But the Jayhawks turned the ball over against the Colorado press and held a one-point lead until junior center Lisa Tate made two free throws with 10.2 seconds remaining, giving Kansas a three-point lead.
Colorado had the oval with 2.2 seconds remaining and no timeouts.
Junior forward Janillah Lang popped out on the right wing, took the pass and drilled a three-pointer as time expired, sending the game to a second overtime
Lang had attempted just six three-pointers all season.
"That shot could have happened to anyone," she said. "I just happened to be in the right place at the right time."
Lang lled the Lady Buffs with 25 points and seven rebounds.
Kansas used big offensive rebounds in the second overtime that led to Jayhawk baskets and allowed crucial time to tick away when the Jayhawks edged back into the lead. Sophomore forward Alana Slatter pulled down an offensive rebound, and senior guard Shannon Kite made a 16-footer with 1:23 remaining to give Kansas its final margin of victory.
Kite scored 16 points, 11 in the first half, helping Kansas take a 33-32 lead at halftime. Known as one of the best three-point shooters in the conference, Kite drove to the basket yesterday, which seemed to surprise the Lady Buffs.
"It's something I've been working on in practice," she said of her aggressive play. "It's been a positive thing in
Kansas 81, Colorado 78 (2 OT)
Player fgm/fga fm/fta tp
Aycock 6-8 8-11 20
Shinn 0-1 2-2 2
Tate 0-3 3-4 3
Witherspoon 0-2 2-2 2
Leathers 3-9 4-6 10
Slatter 5-9 0-0 10
Muncy 5-9 1-2 10
Kite 6-7 1-2 16
Sampson 4-8 7-9 17
Holmes 0-2 0-8 0
Totals 24-62 20-37 81
COLORADO (25-3)
Henry 5-10 6-16
Mathem 3-4 6-16
Wirfs 1-4 2-1 8
Park 1-4 0-1 4
Sheetz 2-6 0-0 16
Thomas 4-11 5-7 16
Lang 2-6 0-0 4
Paimer 8-22 8-11 25
King 0-2 0-0 0
King 1-5 1-3 3
Totals 26-70 22-30 78
Halftime Kansas 33, Colorado 32 Regulation
Kansas 62, Colorado 62 First overtime
Kansas 72, Colorado 73 Three-point
goals Kansas 5.10) Kite 3.4, Simpson 3.2
Leathers 0.2, Witnesspoon 0.1, Colorado 4.
Sheet 3.7) Sheet 1.1, Lander 0.1
**Rebounds** Kansas 47 A (McClark 12), L30-
orange 40 (Lang 7) Assists Kansas 12,
Kansas 12 (Methat 18) Total fouls Kansas 20,
Colorado 18 (Methat 38) Total fouls Kansas 20,
Colorado 40 Attendance 3,656
practice for me."
Freshman guard Charise Sampson also came through for the Jayhawks, finishing with 17 points and five rebounds. The Jayhawks will face a No. 21 Nebraska team that defeated No. 23 Oklahoma State 66-64.
Nebraska coach Angela Beck praised the Jayhawks' performance against Colorado.
"Kansas looked like an All-American team," she said. "They played awesome."
The winner of tonight's game will receive an automatic invitation to the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas might have played itself into an at-large bid with yesterday's victory
"I would hope that by beating highly ranked teams, like Colorado and playing a fine schedule, we would get a strong look," Washington said.
Jayhawks sneak past Cowboys
Walters scores career-high 27 in one-point victory
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla. — The No. 19 Oklahoma State men's basketball team could not get the ball to sophomore center Bryant Reeves during the final five seconds like it wanted to.
KANSAS
23
Nor could it overcome the hot shooting hand of Rex Walters. The senior guard scored a career-high 27 points on five of seven shooting from three-point range, leading the Jayhawks to a 74-73 victory.
On the Jayhawks' final possession, Kansas junior forward Steve Woodberry missed a 16-foot jump shot. The Cowbies got the rebound, and junior guard Brooks Thompson called a timeout.
With five seconds left, Kansas sophomore center Greg Ostertag guarded the inbounds play, one intended for Reeves. Oklahoma State's Fred Burley grabbed the ball off the inbounds pass, turned around and threw it toward the basket in desperation as the buzzer sounded. The attempt turned into an airball.
Kansas finished the regular season 24-5 overall and 11-3 in the conference. Oklahoma State, 19-7 and 8-6 was picked during the preseason to finish sixth in the conference. It finished second, tied with Nebraska and Iowa State.
"This was a great ballgame," he said. "This just shows the type of kids we have. When you see us as a team denying out on the floor, you know we're playing with enthusiasm. There's no doubt we were motivated."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that the victory showed his team's determination.
The first half was up and down for both teams. There were eight lead changes and eight ties before Kansas went to the locker room with a 47-43 lead
Men's basketball
With 7 minutes left in the game, the Cowboys had regained the lead and were up 65-59 when Walters hit a three-pointer. Less than a minute later, after Reeves scored inside, Walters bit another one, bringing the Jayhawks to within two points.
Rachel G. Thompson / KANSAN
Kansas junior forward Steve Wood-
berry stole the ball and passed to
Kansas 74, Oklahoma State 73
KANSAS (24-5, 11-3)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Hancock 2-4 0-4 0
Scott 1-2 2-4 4
Pauley 3-8 2-4 8
Walters 8-12 6-6 27
ORDAN 3-7 2-2 15
Riekey 1-9 0-2 0
Rayford 0-1 0-0 12
Ostertag 1-3 1-2 0
Gurtley 2-2 2-2 7
Woodberry 3-7 2-2 9
Pearson 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 24-51 17-24 74
Oklahoma State (19-7, 8-6)
Bennet 1-2 3-4 5
Brown 1-4 0-0 2
Breen 10-17 8-10 28
Rutherford 2-10 2-12 7
Tromsion 3-9 2-3 8
Burley 9-10 1-2 17
Collins 0-2 2-4 2
Sutton 0-2 0-0 0
Manzer 2-3 0-0 4
Totals 27-57 18-25 73
Senior guard Rex Walters goes up for a two-point shot over Oklahoma State's Terry Collins. Walters scored a career-high 27 as the Jayhawks nudged past the Cowboys for a 74-73 victory in Stillwater, Okla.
Halftime Kansas 47, Oklahoma State 43
Three-point game Kansas 9.14 (Walters 5, Jordan 2:3, Gurley 1:3, Woodberry 1:3)
Fourth-place game Kansas 3.14 (Milner 2:0, Robbenda 33, Pauley 17, Oklahoma State 32 (Reeves 9) Assale Kansas 14 (Woodbury 4, Ryford 3), Oakland 14 (Woodbury 4, Ryford 3), Oklahoma State 20, Oklahoma State 20 Attendance 6.381
senior guard Adonis Jordan, who laid it in and tied the game at 67.
Reeves scored 28 points on 10 of 17 shooting. He made 8 of 10 free throws and finished with nine rebounds. Reeves said that he liked playing against the Jayhawks, and that he hoped to play against them next weekend in the Big Eight Tournament. The teams will be the top two seeds.
"I knocked them in," he said. "They were great passes. The ball was right where I wanted it. This is probably one of the most memorable games for me individually, especially because we won."
"I think that I can catch the ball on them and get in scoring position." Reeves said "The reason I think it works so well against Kausas is that they put so much pressure on our
Walters said he was wide open during the one-minute stretch.
"When we got out on them, it looked like we had momentum," he said. "Then Walters showed the competitive spirit that he has and hit a couple of gigantic threes. From then on it was anybody's ball game."
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said that he again was impressed with Kansas. The Jayhawks looked better, he said, than they did earlier this season at Allen Field House.
guards. When they get out and pressure you, the floor is open more, and pressure you.
Kansas senior guard Adonis Jordan, who finished with 10 points, was the only Jayhawk other than Walters to reach double figures. Jordan said that the biggest game of the season would be next week against Colorado.
"Right now, we've got to be on the way up," Jordan said. "It's tournament time. Each game has got to be our best game."
The No. 1 Jayhawks play the No. 8 Buffaloes at 2:30 p.m. Friday at the Big Eight Tournament.
The winner will advance Saturday to play the winner of the game between No. 4 Nebraska and No. 5 Kansas State.
On the other side of the bracket, No. 2 Oklahoma State will play No. 7 Missouri before No. 3 Iowa State takes on No. 6 Oklahoma. Oklahoma State was seeded higher than Iowa State and Nebraska because it had swept Nebraska and had gone 1-1 with the Cyclones.
Women swimmers claim Big 8 crown
Kansan sportswriter
By Matt Doyle
OKLAHOMA CITY—Kansas sophomore diver Amy Graham did not expect that the pressure of a second consecutive women's Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championship would be resting on her 11th and final dive in three-meter event Saturday night at the Oklahoma City Community College Aquatic Center.
"I knew I had to hit that last dive, which is a pretty good dive for me, for us to keep our lead," she said.
Graham, who stood in fourth place entering the final round of dives, came through with a score of 57.40 on her final dive to earn a second-place finish. Her performance allowed Kansas to maintain its lead against Nebraska and eventually defend its conference championship, winning by a margin of 685-679.5 against the Huskers. Iowa State finished third at 313.5, and Missouri was fourth at 201.
"Amy Graham did the thing that allows good teams to become champions," said Kansas coach
"We won it, and we're proud of them. But we were off this weekend as a team," Kempf said. "The mark of the champion, though, is to win even when things aren't always going in your favor."
Gary Kempf.
Nebraska kept chipping away at the Kansas lead throughout Saturday night but never was able to catch the 'Hawks.
Nebraska won the 400-freestyle relay. Despite the Jayhawks' second-place finish in that relay, they clinched the championship. However, the road to the championship was not as easy as the Jayhawks thought it might have been.
When Kansas needed a victory, freshman Jennifer Davis produced one in the 200 breaststroke with a meet record of 2:17.71.
Graham's second place finish put the Jayhawks up 10.5 points entering the final event, the 400-yard relay. The point differential in the relay between a first- and fourthplace finish is 10 points, meaning all Kansas has to do was finish the four-time relay and not get disqualified.
'Husker men sink Kansas swimmers
Bv Matt Dovle
Kansan sportswrite
OKLAHOMA CITY — Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf jumped for joy after sophomore Marc Bontrager edged out Nebraska's Francis Boshoff in the final leg of the 400-yard freestyle relay. Bontrager finished with a winning time of 2:56.17 Saturday night at the Oklahoma City Community College Aquatic Center.
"We had a tough day today," Kempt
The victory in the relay salvaged a disappointing day and meet for the Jayhawks, who finished second to Nebraska for the seventh consecutive year.
It was only the second time that night Kempf could celebrate a Jayhawk victory. Nebraska's men won their 14th consecutive Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championship with a point total of 726. Kansas finished second with 628 points.
said. "We struggled in the morning and continued to struggle tonight."
Bontrager said the Jayhawks were not able to bounce back after losing in the 800-freestyle relay on Friday night and after a poor preliminary round Saturday morning, when Kansas got 12 swimmers in the finals compared to 15 for Nebraska.
"The past 24 hours really hurt us a lot," Bontrager said after the meet Saturday. "It took a lot of character and heart to come back tonight."
Any hopes for a come-from-behind victory by the Jayhawks were dashed after the first two events in Saturday night's finals. Nebraska won the top three spots in the 1, 500 freestyle.
The 'Huskers added the final nail to the coffin in the 200 backstroke with another one-two-three finish.
"Nebraska met every challenge we issued, but we never gave up." Kempf said. "I am proud of the effort our gays gave."
8
Monday, March 8, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Catcher sets record in 'Hawks sweep
By Brady Prauser
Kansas sportwriter
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team batted in 55 runs in its home-opening, three-game series sweep of Grand View College this weekend, but one particular RBI made history.
Kansas senior catcher Jeff Niemeier broke the school record for career RBI in his first at bat in the opening game of yesterday's doubleheader. His 129th-career RBI broke former outfielder Brian Gray's record, as Kansas cruised to an 18-4 victory in the first game and crushed the Vikings 21-0 in the second game.
Kansas beat Grand View, a NIAA team
from Des Moines, Iowa. 10:00 Saturday.
Niemierie, whose ground-out to third base broke the RBI record, gave credit to senior second baseman Jeff Berblinger and junior center fielder Darryl Monroe for frequently reaching base throughout his career.
"That's vintage - hit a ground ball and let those guys score." Niemeier said.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said Niemeyer the record was appropriate.
"It couldn't have happened to a better guy," Bingham said.
Junior outfielder Joel Benninghoff and sophomore third baseman Brent Wilhelm hit consecutive home runs in the seventh inning of game one of the doubleheader. Benninghoff's shot still was on its ascent when it cleared the trees behind the left-field fence and headed toward the Robinson Gymnasium parking lot.
But Kansas' success against Grand View was not limited to its offense.
Saturday, senior David Soult won his second game this season, pitching
Kansas 21, Grand View 0 (2nd game)
| | ab | r | h | rhl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| ss Burmester | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| cf Baugher | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2b Fix | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| c Wilson | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| m McBibb | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| ff Rossman | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| fr Fruhli | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 1b Boles | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| p kernes | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 3b Abertison | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| dh McKibb | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| pk nich | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| rf/rf Busse | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| rf Qoust | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | 22 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
KANAS (6-3)
b2 Berlinger
ph/20 Tumey
d morrope
f 51
b1 Wuychecheck
c nhemeier
d king
ph/ff Stickleman
Soa
o pheresety
b3 Wilhelm
r fbrinhoching
of quiero
dh wilhelm
ph/dh Mahon
ab | r | h | rbl
1 | 2 | 0 | 0
2 | 1 | 0 | 0
5 | 0 | 1 | 2
1 | 2 | 1 | 4
2 | 2 | 1 | 4
2 | 3 | 3 | 4
4 | 3 | 3 | 0
3 | 3 | 3 | 0
0 | 1 | 0 | 0
4 | 2 | 3 | 4
2 | 1 | 1 | 2
1 | 1 | 0 | 1
1 | 1 | 1 | 1
Grand View
Joonj 2.0 IP H R ER BB SO
Sonij 1.0 IP H R ER BB SO
Gahenje 3.0 1.0 9 9 4 1
Kailish 3.0 1.0 0 1 0
Kaisich IP 0 0 R 8 0
Spilott 5.0 1.0 0 0 1
Meyer 2.0 1.0 0 1 6
B Burmeister Fw, Winnipeg, Alberta; BHP Northman L 1.08
C McDonald Pw, Winnipeg, Alberta; BHP Northman L 1.07
MBC Worcester BW, Winnipeg, Alberta; MBC Northman L (1), NL (1), Forestry 2.32
MBC Worcester BW, Winnipeg, Alberta; MBC Northman L (1), NL (1), Forestry 2.32
innings and allowing three hits.
innings and allowing three hits.
In the first game yesterday, senior Tom Stewart pitched five innings for his third victory.
In the last game, freshman Jamie Splittorf allowed one hit through five innings in his first start and first victory.
36 10
HAWKS
29
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
After a two run-homer, sophomore infielder Dan Rude gets a warm welcome at home plate. Rude's blast in Saturday's home opener against Grand View was one of 10 Kansas home runs this weekend.
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
520 W. 23rd·841-5885
Beauty WAREHOUSE Salon & Supplies
KMS JOICO NEXUS
SORBIE
IMAGE
ERASTIM
Breast
LAWRENCE, KYORU
CORNUCOPIA
RESTAURANT & BAR
1901 Mass
good food & good times
TIN PAN ALLEY
FATS
1106 Mass
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
focus 21
TRASIAN
REDKEN
frames PAUL MITCHELL
MOVING?
Let
Lawrence Paper Company
Solve your moving hassles.
Slurdy boxes for moving and storage
Boxes with handles for easier moving
Large quantities at discount prices
Small quantities • walk-ins welcome
Study boxes for moving and storage Boxes with handles for easier moving Large quantities at discount prices Small quantities - wait ins welcome
Call 843-8111
Ask for Sales/Service Dept.
Must have valid I.D. & paycheck stub form your place of employment
1019 Mass
Tavern Monday Special Bar & Restaurant Employee Night
865-4055
Classified Directory
WE WILL
ON MARCH 8
KANSAS UNION
ALCOVE D
7:00 P.M.
MAKE MY DAY!
doors for past associates at places such as Pepsico, Leo Burnett, Northwestern and Columbia Business Schools. These benefits come from creating your School's version of the Unofficial Student Guide which is distributed on 63 campuses to 850,000 students. If you are self-confident, resourceful and hungry for success come see how Campus Concepts Can Make the Rest of Your Life.
And maybe, the rest of your life. Campus Concepts, the nation's fastest growing college marketing firm, is coming to your campus. Since 1985, we have provided students with more than the typical summer-job opportunity. As a sales associate, you will receive great training, substantial performance based compensation, and unmatched business experience. Experience, which has opened
WASHINGTON
HOLYROSE PARK
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
$1^{00}$ Boulevard Pints $1^{50}$ Call & Premiums
Campus Concepts
SUMMER JOBS
100s Announcements
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
I
Hockenbury's Tavern
Classified Policy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which requires limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disby noon, March 17
110 Bus. Personals
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are underwritten by the following companies:
Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban and Viunet-France
Sunglasses
The Ete Shop
99 Macy's $29.00
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
200s
235 Typing Services
Spring Break Budget Blues?
225 Professional Services
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon - Fri a.m. 12:30 a.m.
Sat a.8 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon - Fri 4:30 a.m. -10 p.m.
Sat 11:30 a.m. -4:30 a.m.
Sun a.8 a.m. -4:30 a.m.
Watkins Health Center
We loan $$$ in exchange for your valuables! Guaranteed security while you're away!
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
There is no easier way to get a quick, short-term loan with no credit check!
Lose up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $30,100% Guaran
tee 823-0487.
Both exams will be given on March 17
Junior Level: Open to all undergraduates
Senior Level: Opento all undergraduates
Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply
Firstprize--$150
718 New Hampshire 843-4344
Firstprize--$100
Secondprize--$50
7-10 pm in room 301Snow
To participate you must register in 405 Snow
COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
MATHEMATICS PRIZE COMPETITION
of non-senior standing
Council Travel
1634Ortington Ave
Evanton, IL 60801
1-800-752-5070
400s Real Fert
*Student Activities*
*International Railpasses*
*International Identity Cards*
*Worldwide Adventure Tours*
*Travel Gear and Guidebooks*
*Expert travel advice*
*Student Airfares
Student Travel Experts
1-800-475-5070
120 Announcements
For anomaly info and support for AIDS concerns, call 814-2542. Headquarters
Love STAR Attraction
MERCHANDISE
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
ATTN: Social Chairperson
MIRACLE VIDEO
84-199 Adult Video Sale
910.2 Nn 841-8603
1901 Haskell 841-7504
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is叫自己 481-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquartera Counseling Center.
H & J
Call for Party Favors
865-0974
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
SUMMER JOB S Campus Concepts will be held on August 15th at information March 8th, Kansas Union.
"GREAT! - GREAT EXPERIENCE!"
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in 30 days!
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Bella Blvd.
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(719) 452-6006
Anyone can wish to a diet for one
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something they want the next day!
130 Entertainment
Live Comedy
Wednesday March 10
Featuring
Wild Man
Dan Ballard
Spring Break quad occupancy. Daytona Beach,
room, limited space. 2/14 785-1326 785-1328
AT
50 cent draws
BENCHWARMERS
140 Lost & Found
Found: Siamet Mix Cat 1-3 yrs. old, Declawed
Lawrence at Lawrence on V-day Call
W849-8544-2700
Found. **Fleece Stocking cap** Wed at Wescoe Call &
describe 844-7590
FOUND-Kitten; female, toast color calico, wearing a brown tag collar. Call 841-2188
Lost, Peacock feather earring with gold bead trench.
Lost vicinity of Library Hall/Brazilian Carnival.
Feb. 27 If found please Call 842-6433.
LOST - Stainly style hat. Brown leather w / black
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
SPRING/SUMMER OPENINGS
*10-40衣s, weekly* "Flexible around classes"
$10 to start* "Call 642-8035."
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
The KU Department of Student Housing announces an addition to the Program Coordinator, 1989-94. The Program Coordinator holds a half-time position with the Department of Student Housing, working with students in the program's progress, to encourage good study skills, and to promote an environment of intellectual inquiry and a live-in position. Required Qualifications: Gaining good standing at KU, taking no more than 10 good standing at KU, gainingQualifications: Residence hall living experience, supervisory experience; Working knowledge of educational programming; and. Knowledge of teaching out-of-town practicum or internship. This position does not allow for regular student teaching, out-of-town practicum or internship. This position does not allow for regular student teaching, out-of-town practicum or internship. All candidates must be able to commit two evenings per week to the position and should have the ability to work three evenings per week to work three evenings per week. Salary is $600/mo. The period of employment may vary by May 1995 with the possibility for renewal for a lower academic year. Contact the Department of Student Housing for further info. and application information deadline: April 1, 1993 EEO Employer.
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries
Earn $600 + / week in canvases or $4,000 + / mo. on
board! Make a free transportation! Room &
Board! Male or female for employment!
call 1-800-425-4157. ext. 4576.
ASSISTANT RESIDENCE HALL DIRECTOR
The Assistant Residence Hall Director (ARHD) holds a ten-month, half-time position with the Office of Student Affairs. The ARHD primarily assists the Residence Life Complex Director (CD) in coordination of functions of a residence hall busing between the morning and evening hours. The ARHD manages the operation of the hall main desk and its student hourly workers and/or counselors. The ARHD maintains at least one year of residential group living experience. Enrollment at KU for 1995-94 as either a graduate student in good standing taking no more than five classes per semester or GPA. Preferred Qualifications. Residence life staff & supervisory experience. Experience with all aspects of the computer/microcomputer experience. Salary & Results $2,000 for first year staff. Furnished apartment, utilities, and meals provided. ARHD's and their assistants are responsible for employment extends from August 1, 1993 through March 31, 1996 with the possibility of application ordination and relevant interview and three letters of reference to the KU Department of Student Housing. $21 W. 11th. Lawrence
Child Care. Caring person wanted to provide child care in our home for our son and daughter, ages 4 & 14 Located at Alverny area. Flexible daycare time, baby care, meal prep, and required. Phone: (310) 858-2695; email: bcaregiving@usda.gov
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 8, 1993
9
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boy/girl summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterboarding, gymnastics, climbing, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also camp, crafts, drama, OR riding. Also life course, maintenance, SALE $101 more for iBUB, RUB 788-464-2446, Seeger, 178 Maple Nd, IL IDL 788-464-2446
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
bakers, nurses/housekeeper, maintenance person
camp coach, Camp Box 71, Boulder. COB 8030 (306) 422-5657
CITY OF LAWRENCE SUMMER JOB
The City is accepting applications for all summer part- and full-time positions. Positions are available in the following areas:
OUTDOOR WORKER-SPECIALISTS
SPORTS INSTRUCTORS
PLAYGROUND PROGRAM
WORKER
SPECIAL POPULATIONS PROGRAM
CONCESSIONS
MAINTENANCE AND LABORER
Cooks ate 7:30-1:30 p.m. Weekdays. Ability to
children required 4 am/pm. Apply at
www.babyschool.com
Complete application at administrative Server. 2nd
day of appointment. 10am to 5pm. Deadline, Friday, April
1 at 5:00 p.m. EOM.
apply to
Church Training Center 313 Main Street,
Correspondent wanted for weekly newspaper,
wide variety of writing assignments. Photography
and Macintosh experience helpful but not
unnecessary. Send resume to: trainingcenter@churchtraining.com
Cruise line entry level on board/boardside positions.
Summary. Sunny, round, round, great pay.
City: 813-729-2450
State: CA
zip: 92236
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old and have a good driving record. We will train you for a Commercial Drivers License. 8-20 hour training. Call Michael Licensing B48-0544, 3:30 pm-6:30 p.m. M-F E.O.E
Evening wait person(s) wanted. Chinea's
experience. Experience minimal. Knowledge
of Lawrence areas. Must be dependable.
hard work in. Akinese Peking Restaurant. 749-6033
Extension Course Instructor. The University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education, Fire Service Training unit wishes to fill an unclassified, enlisted position. Participants include the marketing, management and delivery of fire safety-related courses to business and industry. Specific duties include: coordination of fire training programs.
areas, minimum of three years teaching experience, minimum of knowledge of state and federal busines s systems, which pertain training of personnel; ability to conduct training in these areas.
opment of program budgets, goals and objectives; and written policies and procedures; supervision required to ensure that needed bases with other Fire Service Training programs. Required Qualifications 'Associate' grade.
opment, maintenance, revision and management of industrial firefighter and emergency response certification and training designed to meet applicable OSHA, EPA, and other national standards.
sound training materials, physically able to perform and continue to perform job duties, willingness to travel extensively; thorough knowledge of computer science; knowledge of microcomputer applications.
Salary: $35,000-$40,000. Preference will be given to applications received by 5:00pm, May 1, 1983. Position is filled. Application must include letter of application, *curriculum vita*, and two letters of recommendation. Send to Alan G. Walker, Fire Service Training, University of Kansas, Division of Communicating Education, Continuing Education Building, Lawrence, KS 60483-2648 EO/AA employer
Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time
experience needed during time off or maintenance
experience preferred. Send resume to Wakarusa
Partners, P.O. Box 1761, Lawrence
GRADUATE RESIDENCE HALL DIRECTOR GradRH 12 hold a live-in, 10 month, half-time positions, managing student personnel aspects of a school. Duties include assisting the Complex Director with student personnel functions including supervisory responsibility for the student staff and instructional development, adjustment to university life, and conduct-including providing counseling and referral services to university and community students in a large intergroup group living experience. Enrollment at KU for 1983-94 as either a graduate student in good standing or a postgraduate student year senior with a 2. GPA Preference. Residence Life staff experience. Residence hall supervisory experience. Experience with payroll, budgeting, and financial management. Experience. Salary: $4,300 for first-year staff. A furnished apartment including utilities is provided as well as meals when the cafeteria is serving. Grassland area vacancy rates. The term of appointment extends from August 1, 1983, through May 31, 1984, with the possibility for renewal for the following academic year. Req's degree in a relevant field, interest and relevant experience, a resume; and three letters of reference to the KU Department of Law, 402 W. 11th, Corin Hall, Lakeview University, Beaumont
Help was needed - 10am - MF 8:00 per hour to
attain stroke catheti. Call SAF - 690-8400.
Help Wanted! Recreation Services is hiring intran-
tural Soccer officials. 4.70-5.30 per hr/ Anyone
interested should attend an organizational meet-
ing March 8, 1988 at 8 a.m in 156 Robinson Bennon
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make $2,000
each teaching a lesson; converse with
English abroad; attend a daytime
room and board + other benefits. No previous
training or teaching certificate required. For pro-
vice training only. Apply at http://www.macromo.com/.
Laboratory Clean Up Position Located on the 2nd floor. Work four hours a day (Flexible hours) and five days
Located in Kansas City, Kansas. Be able to work
a week in the office or on a week in a
weekends are mandatory. $6.25 per hour.
Line up your summer job now. We are currently hiring a crew for 169 harvest, starting in May. Contact us at (312) 523-6820 or call: Appl 312-523-6820 Combining Inc.
Manual labor 2 hrs daily 7-9am m-F M. Bowersock Inc.
MARKETING INTENSIHPH - Part time now! time this summer. New progressive Printing Co. wants a ambition self-starter for commissioned printers. Apply in person, 61 Vermont, B: 8-340-40-M F
Models needed pro $175-300 day & TV/PPI
extra $175-300 day. No exp required. 541-9009
Nanny positions available nationwide including
$75,000/day job, no exp required. 544, 980-
Nanny jobs available nationwide including
Nanny positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii summer/yr. Great pay.
Part time Secretarial position. Must have Mautchin Microsoft Word processing experience. Position available from May 1, for 6 months. Hours are 8:00-10:00. Tues & Thurs. to noon 3:00 to midnight plus additional days as needed. Send resume to Resume-Trainer 3101 Clinton 408 way C, Lawrence, RS
Part time work in downtown retail business.
Should have good math, bookkeeping skills and be eligible for Kansas Career Work Study. For more information call 843-0000.
Self employed mom needs someone to care for 13 month old child in my home weekly afternoon. Must be a Christian, willing to work flexible hours. Have relevant references. Please call ill@skid.com for info.
SPORTS OFFICIAL NEEDDLED-Anyone interested in umpiring youth baseball/nordic or adult softball for Lawnery Parks & Recreation Department. Contact Bob Stanceff at 843-1721/heimr
SUMMER JOB!S! Camp Birchwood, a Minnesota summer camp that works as counselors and instructors in items, English and Western riding, windsurfing, canoe trapping and swimming. Employment June 8th through October 13th.
Tennis juniper - summer camp - northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call Jennifer Wheeler #184-6800. Men call or write. Camp location: Lamar, Mancorner, N.Y. 10234 (914) 381-5983
UNIQUE SUMMER JOBS IN BEAUTIFUL MN. Spend 4-13 weeks in the L of 10,000 E. Esquire salaries (GN, BN, board commissioners, GN, NB, NSW) and other positions available at MN camps for children and adults with disabilities. Contact MN Camps, 10090 10th St, N. W. Annandale, MN 53820. Contact MN Camps, 10090 10th St, N. W. Annandale, MN 53820.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BYDONATION NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W 24TH 749-5750
Waterfront Jobs-WJS-Summer children’s camps-north-mead and women who can teach children to swim, coach swimmer team, waterski (slalom) and water polo teams, pool lakes and pools. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Men call or write. Camp Windsor, 5.0; Camp Winnetou, 6.0; Camp Wembeer, 9.088. Women call Jennifer Wheelser at 841-0580.
Energetic, enthusiastic person needed to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during youth activity, full-time during summer. Must be at university or related. Must resume to Trinity Lutheran Church, 1248 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS 65044. Deadline: 03-21-19.
225 Professional Services
C CD Deskbook Publishing Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brocurets, Flyers, Term Papers, Newletters.
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial
Moneyman role to ESMS To O Box 3454, KS 9608.
To ESMS To O Box 3454, KS 9608.
Make your modeling dreams come true!
Model Portfolio photography. Call Rochi 841-281-6530
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri
Need person. Mon Wed. Fri. mornings. Full-time in summer. Showing apts, answering phones & general office work. Must be a Kansas resident. In most cases, will live at an least 128, at K. U. Call 841-6003. M-F 5.
Operations manager at ST. Lawrence Catholic Student Center. Duties include supervising staff, monitoring the budget and the annual fund, and overseeing all administrative operations of the center. Send resume and salary requirements by email to operations@lcs.edu. Contact center 1631 Crescent Road. LAWSKEN 66044
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
THE LAWMEN OF DONALDG. STROLE
Promo Photos and Headshots. B&W Darkroom.
Fast Service First Photography 841-4234
www.promophoto.com
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
An attractive resume can make all the difference in the job you want Leave message for Kelly @ 843-7386.
235 Typing Services
$1/$Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check rush jobs, Call Paul 749-6468
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters.
Experting typed by experienced secretary. IBM Corp.
Lawrence, Cull Mrs. Mattilia 84129. Eileen
Lawrence, Cull Mrs. Mattilia 84129.
- aaper due!* Accurate, fast word processing. High quality due! $2.00/menu. Call Me #23-BYTE
Word Perfect W Word Processing Near Orchard Cnails. No calls APTER 9pm. 843-8568
Word processing, applications, term paper, dis-
tribitious writing, journal articles, usable
available. Master's degree 841-6024
X
word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
graphic presentations. Law review and enginee-
rial writing.
TM compatible 280, 40 mg hard drive. 3.25 flash drive, mouse keyboard, & Bristol monitor, mouse keyboard, & Bristol monitor.
305 For Sale
Bus seas for Spring Break trip to Texas $225 for bus and hotels in Dallas, San Antonio, Austin, Minneapolis, and Chicago **CABLE DESCRIBLER381**! Fight high costs with our prepaid bus seas. We will describe ANC cable Send slip for complete manual, plans, and parts list to Advance Industries, P.O. Box 7349, Corpunx
Airline credit worth $200. Selling for $150. No Restrictions. Call Trina 794-7456.
300s Merchandise
LXI Home Stereo System. In its own cabinette with 2 speakers. AM/FM stereo, cassette, turntable, CD ready. $200 Realistic receive $50 865-1567 leave message.
IBM Compatible 386 SX (192 MB hard drive) 3.5.
Scientific calculator 480 SX (240 MB hard disk)
24-bit Panasonic printer 3800 band modern.
24-bit Sharp printer 3800 band modern.
Computers: New and Usec
P.C. Compatibles
P.C. Source 832-1126
drawer chest oak finish. 800. Call Brad. 843-1600
after 7p.
Must sell $166 000 LTD LTR. Red P. S. P.W 1200
Call 641 851 000 1 after 0pm. lt
Matching couch and Chair. Very nice condition.
$150 Call 599-306 for mark.
Need a little Sunshine?
The Elie Scu has now new ingredients of handmade pendants, crystals and precious stones.
Assorted熊 fetishes
$ 95 - $49.95
$ 95 - $49.95
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon. 6:00 Tues. Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Used Book Sale, March 12-14 Metcalf Shopping
International Markets; American Association
Universal Music Group
340 Auto Sales
18 Subaru DL, FWD, AT, M2, AH/PM, Cass,
AC Green Winter Car $380 | PB, Call 642-4342 | Leave
1980 4-door hatchback Nissan Datsum 510
fm/am/tape, A/C Good condition $500. $82-8460
1980 Citation for sale Runs well, $75 O.B.O. Contact Travis at 749-6560
360 Miscellaneous
STUDENTS why pay retail for travel? Wholesale travel research center offers opportunity to save $$$! Guaranteed savings. No nimmicks. Great for last minute spring breakers. Larry at C轧er 823-746-3510.
370 Want to Buy
WANTED LEVIT S01 S'JANS WE PAY UP TO
$10.00 also Buying Jean Jackets. 841-0546
Wanted. Tickets to Soul Asylum concert. Call Jake
865-2469
400s Real Estate
1 BR Bur. apt. available now. New paint + mini blinds 1 vr lease 843-4217
405 For Rent
Quail Creek
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
2111 Kasold 843-4300
鸟
Apt. Sub-lease thruly 31 July. 2 BR, very close to camps.
Avail. Now March 10th. 749-3595
1000 NAIISMP 3 $ 4 BR. 2 Bath. Lg. room
museum, 1000 NAIISMP 3 $ 4 BR. 2 Bath. open laund
room, variable leaves, 1000 NAIISMP 3 $ 4 BR. 2 Bath.
Weir
Naismith Place
- $2B from $35
- Jazebus meat shop
- Private batesons/PaTES
- Private batesons/PaTES
- $4 cable VIPers
- On-site management
- Onsite management
Outsidn # 674. Chl 81-145
Offical Car
5:15pm to 10:25am
Or Call for appointments
Avail Now! Spacious IBr, Br come to campus. Low
Way Parking. Car bldg. pad. £350.
Deposit neg. Pets OR $76-3871.
Boardwalk
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apts. for August, but if you can take one June I, you can take two. We have several buildings at West Hills Apts. 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS: 813-8400 or -323
524 Frontier 842-4444
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
- on bus route
843-4754 (call for appt.)
- on-site management
*Most sublease immediately.* 2 Nbrm. $80 very low
mid central head/air. Please call 817-346-9556
24TH & EDDINGHAM
- 2 bedroom (1&1/2 baths)
- quiet location
- 1 bedroom
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Affordable Price!!
Offering Luxury 2 br apartments at an
EDDINGHAM PLACE
No Appt Necessary
FREE CASE OF BEER when you sublease for the summer hours, near campus cafeteria or at 623-781-9500.
West Hills APARTMENTS
841-5444
Hey KU MMed Student, Rainbow Tower Appa is now leasing St. 18 and bedroom appa; for fall, contact RKU at rainykud1.com. Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage parked. 353 Rainbow Rainbow K. C S 6163 Across
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts - furnished and unfurnished
- 1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
- 2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
GREAT LOCATION: Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed. Thurs
WATER PAID ON ALL APTS.
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(or other times w/appt.)
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for information
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
*Luxurious 2,3, &4
660 Gateway Ct.
New Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 1-5
Bedroom TownHomes
*Garages;2% Baths
- On UD Bus Route
• Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400
841-128
House for rent 28 dm lease, no pets 842-4463
Makaceen Place now leasing for Aug 1, 9. No deposit required.
Microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appl. 2 decks or porch/patio. Wet insulated, energy efficient.
or 7
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature studio1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. We also have 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath townhomes.
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
*2Pools
*2Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
- Volleyball Court
* On KU Bus Route with
4 Steps to Parent
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th,9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Nice, quiet. 3 BR duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A, Gas, heat. 1/2 BA, W/D hookups, garage. No pets. References $450./mo. 843-2888.
Now feeling for Pa.
at Aspen Lake
on bus route 28, 3rL lease,
no pets. water said on bus route 2850-450 for pa.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m. 8:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
9;00 a.m-5;00 p.m.
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED
Studios,1,2,2+3&4bdrm
apts...designed with you in
mind!
Campus Place-841-1429
apartment
Pepper Tree Apartments Sublease June 1 July 31
1 NBR 1 Bath Call 843-6064
Hanover Place-841-1212
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
10th & Arkansas
Now taking deposits for summer/laiseing Mon-Frill call for appt 843-6446
Regents Court-749-0445 1905 Mass.
Orchard Corners-749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
Plan Early. One or two female, non-smokers needed for sum subm. May-Aug 4250 (cm²), until incl. 100% smoke.
Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Room in historic home on edge campus. Kitchen and laundry room privileges. Vacant now
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
VILLAGE
SQUARE
SUMMER SUBLASELE: Spacious 2 bedroom Apt. on bus route, close to campus and owntown. Designated quiet bldg. A great deal at $395 mo. Call 823-248
Equal Housing Opportunity
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Spacious 2 bedm apt. Summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3262
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE REACH
Parties on the beach, ZBR 232, ZBR 472-1244
Sublease. 5 mo. lease, large 1 bedroom; 2 blocks to KL
841-1870 or 963-1824
South campus location 180 Maine. Nice bed in
school room for rent ($590). Short or long term lease $500 + deposit, pet negro-
tion.
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly live, fantasies. Call 749-0871 or 841-0848. Stop by 1406 Tennessee.
Two bedrooms available now! A/C, cable. $25 per month, on bus route. BKU 851-0361
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Bdmr in 4 Bdmr, pool 2, Bath 819. +util. to stop Apple Lane Orchard Corners. Call 845-3628
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
Ads phoned in may be billie
Beautiful 11 bsp. apt near campus. Hardwood
must be insured by your employer paid
Must see 11 and Kentucky. Call 842-2392.
1963/54 Natlismat contact face message
1963/54 Natlismat contact face message
mobile available. Male persons only. Call 664-2272 & double
phone.
1 to share two immac 3 BR townhouse in sum-
mary $225/month. Plan now start in June.
Join us on Tuesday at 7:00pm.
How to schedule an ad:
Large 48L, 2B BAFurn. lft apt. appl. Corner Chardens.
Avail ASAP. No dep req. You lease Mar.-Aug. $205
+/vlt.3 great rooms, privacy, + more fun than any dorm. 865-5199
Need roommate June & July. Spacious townhouse
needroom from June & 150/m² / utilities.
Non-smoker. 790-6194
Great Deal! 1 Bedroom in old house near campus
and library. Two bedrooms, bath, Igloo,
telecom, TV, VCR, mic. Call 841-676-7900
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**Email File**
Female roommate wanted for 1 bdm & 8 bdm
Roommate to close to camp
Rent negotiable. Call 749-4265
Roommate needed to share furniture 4 Edrm
apartment; /Utilities, on bus route. Look for
roommate.
Roommate needed to share furnished 4 bdrm
apartment + utilities on noses Looking for
furniture to fit the space.
Quit, mature, female roommate for 2 bdrm. Spanish Crest Apartments. Sublease from April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 + 1/2 utilities. Call 842-4324
Ship by the Kuala Lumpur Airport between a.m. and p.m. on Monday through Friday. Aus may be present, cash or MasterCard or credit card. Please contact Flint Lawrence KS 652-378-4900.
Roommate Wanted NOW! $200/mo. water, gas,
and cable paid. Call Brian at 842-5323
Classified Information and order form
when canceling a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds can be collected that were pre-paid by check or with cash and are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of pages *ad* occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
et par l'une per day
Num. of insertions:
document for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to notification
Classifications
106 personal 140 last & fund 385 for sale
118 business personas 200 help wanted 340 para sales
118 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
120 entertainment 225 tynings services
Cost per inch per day
1X 1-2M 4-7X 8-14X 15-29M 30+X
1.95 1.50 1.00 0.90 0.70 0.45
1.95 1.10 0.75 0.65 0.60 0.40
1.76 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 1.00 0.60 0.55 0.50 0.35
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Name: Phone:
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper
Addrase
VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are asking your ad:
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The University Daliy Kamsan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
3-8
© 1992 by Warner, Inc. © Licensed to Warner Pictures Distribution
"Several more deaths have been reported in the neck area, and although the authorities won't comment, residents are blaming the new collar."
10
Monday. March 8. 1993
Jayhawk Bookstore
642
MARKET ST.
LIBERTY 749
THEATER 01 is accessible to all persons.
Nominated for ACADEMY Awards including
Best Picture
THE CRYING GAME(R) (Th.2)
DAILY (*4:30), 7:00,9:30
642
Mass.
Liberty HALL
749
1912
Theatre 81 is accessible to all persons
(www.libertychurch.org)
Sommersby, ... PG13/5/10 8 /7.00 9.00
Shadow of the Wolf, PG13/5/10 8 /7.15 9.00
Ground Hog Day, PG13/5/10 8 /7.10 9.10
Loaded weapon, PG13/5/20 7.20
Swings Kids, PG13/5/30 7.15 9.80
Untamed Heart, PG13/5/25 6.75
Times good Mon - Thur only
BEFORE 6 & PM. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
53 Prune Timer Show (c) Senior Citizen Anytime
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
MASSACHUSETTS 841 S191
Falling Down $ ^{R} $ 5.00,7.30,9.45
CINEMA TWIN ALL STATES
3110 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25
Amos and Andrew **PG-13**
Best of the Best **I1R**
Homeward Bound **G**
Alladin **G**
A Few Good Men **M**
Mad Dong And Dream **M1**
5.00; 7.15; 8.45
5.15; 7.30; 8.30
5.00; 7.80; 8.30
5.00; 7.00
10.15; 8.45
HILLCREST
--hawks began their winning streak on Saturday by defeating the host team, Texas A&M. 3-0.
River Runs Through It$^{PG}$ 5.00, 7.30, 8.45
Home Alone 2 $^{PC}$ 8.00
Scent of a Woman$^n$ 8.00
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Marvelous Monday
Medium Pizza ONLY
2 toppings $7.10
2 drinks plus tax
RUDY'S
Open 7 days a week
749-0055
Home of the Pocket Pizza
Looks Good
Rides Great
Shifts Well
Incredibly Durable
$409.95
GIANT Iguana
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc.
916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642
$409.9
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Intramural 3 ON 3 BASKETBALL
INSTANTSCHEDULING:
ENTRIES CLOSE:
ENTRYFEE:
图
TUESDAY, MARCH 9TH
MED, MARCH 10TH
25PER TEAM
MANAGER'S MEETING
ku
There will be a MANDATORY MEETING on MONDAY, MARCH 8TH @ 7:30pm in 115 Robinson. NOTE: Entries are accepted on a first come first serve basis beginning 8:30 am until 4:00pm on Tues., March 9th & Wed., march 10th. Team managers not attending the meeting will not be allowed to sign up until Wed., March 10th beginning @ 2:00 pm
SPONSORED BY KURECREATION SERVICES 208 ROBINSON 864-3546
Home of
Mac's Diner
Powerful Values
A La Carte Menu
14" Color Display
$459 $^{00}$
Macintosh LC II
4/40 with Keyboard
$950 $^{00}$
Macintosh
LC II
Macintosh
Centris 650
14" Color Display
$459
Macintosh Centris 650
8/230 with CD ROM
$3290^90
Extended Keyboard
$155^90
Canon
图
COBRA
StyleWriter II Printer $299^{100}$
LaserWriter
Select 300 Printer
$730⁰⁰
LaserWriter Pro 630
$2365
Macintosh
LC II
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Macintosh LC II 4/40,14" Color Display,
Keyboard,and StyleWriter II
$1708 $1708
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-4358
Apple
CUBEONE
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Some restrictions apply Come into the Computer Store for details Please add 5.9% sales tax
Softball team wins tournament again
By Mark Button
The Kansas softball team successfully defended its title this weekend, winning the Texas A&M Aggie Invitation tournament for the second consecutive year.
Kansan sportswriter
The Jayhawks, ranked 13th in the nation, dropped two of their three games on Friday. However, they claimed victories in their final five games, beating Illinois State in the championship game on Sunday 9-0.
Kansas began its weekend and season by defeating Centenary, 4-3 Junior pitcher Stephani Williams struck out 12 batters en route to her first victory of the 1903 season.
Williams then lost her first game, as Southwestern Louisiana, ranked No. 11, beat the 'Hawks 5-4.
Kansas then lost again, scoring three runs to Illinois State's six. Senior pitcher Jill Bailley took the loss. Senior left fielder Tay Saxby homered, and sophomore Krissy Carpenter doubled.
In Kansas' second game on Saturday, the Jayhawks were matched up against Big Eight rival Nebraska. The Cornhuskers came up on the short end of the 4-1 tally.
Despite their Friday losses, the Jay
Sunday morning brought the semifinals, and Kansas played coach Kalum Haack's alma mater, Sam Houston State. It took 12 innings for the Jayhawks to prevail, 1-0. Williams went the distance, collecting her fourth victory. Sophomore outfielder Joy Herrera provided the game-winning hit, singling Richardson home.
Kansas then tasted revenge as it beat Illinois State in the championship game. The title game featured Kansas' offensive arsenal as the 'Hawks scored nine runs on 10 hits.
In the other semifinal, Illinois State defeated Texas A&M, 2-0.
Haack and the Kansas players were unable to comment on their weekend performance because of their late return to Lawrence.
Track team members try to qualify for NCAAs
BRIEF
Kansan staff report
Johannsen jumped 7-1 to meet the provisional mark for nationals.
Eight Kansas track athletes attempted to qualify for the NCAA Indoor Championships this weekend at the NCAA Qualifying Meets held in both Ames, Iowa, and Lincoln, Neb., but only sophomore high jumper Nick Johamsen improved his standing.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said last week that senior high jumper MaryBeth Labosky and junior distance runner Michael Cox were the two Jayhawks who had all but sewn up invitations to the NCAA meet.
Johanns may be invited to the championships next weekend in Indianapolis if enough high jumpers do not meet the automatic qualifying height of 7-4%, and he has one of the top provisional marks.
'Hawks suffer weekend setbacks
Kansan sportswriter
Both the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams suffered losses against strong opponents during the weekend.
The men's team had its four-match winning streak snapped, losing 0-7 to Drake on Saturday in Des Moines. The 20. women's team fell to No. 22 Notre Dame 4-5 yesterday.
The Kansas women, now 6-4, have three losses to ranked opponents.
Tennis
Merzbach said that Kansas played one of the tougher schedules in the nation, and that the Jayhawks have been in the position to win every match this season.
It is all a coach could ask for, he said,
but it still was painful losing the close
matches.
"It's almost like losing at the buzzer," he said.
He said that Kansas had been playing well in singles but had struggled in doubles. Yesterday, the Jayhawks lost two doubles matches.
In singles, Kansas' No. 1 player,
sophomore Rebecca Jensen
improved her record to 17-1, and the No.2 player, sophomore Nora Koves, upped her record to 14-3.
The team will travel to Texas this weekend to face Texas A&M on Saturday and No.2 Texas on Sunday.
On the men's side, the Jayhawks were swept by Drake.
Drake, the 1992 Missouri Valley Conference Champions, improved to 14.2. Kansas fell to 6-4.
Carlos Fleming, the Jayhawks No. 1 singles player, lost for the first time this spring, falling to Drake's Martin Dionne.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
...
PLACE AN AD FREE!
♂
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
19 year old SWM - Hey Laddies I'm looking for a girl to spoil with my livin', I'm a silly poster here at camp Kansas University and I want to spend my time with you. No PSD please. Call #01202
Artist now showing, Nation's Capital, State Capital, Palm Beach Airport, Kansas City, looking for a good women, any age, any race. HIV neg. Box #10135
Authority questioning reality, hacker w/b a passion for Cyberpunk and an intensive collection of books on a date w/b substance. Looking for casual, intelligent meetings that are compatible imperfections. Must enjoy dancing, partying, candlelight picsics, & video games. Feel free to fans &ights not need apply. Call # 10116.
Blonde, mountain bikes, herb to tea, 23 day hikes,
tall flowers, a warm blanket, destroy your
designs, skirts, sprinkles eveningades; ashes on a coffee
box, intelligence, intelligent blondes, blonde box
10306
Do you worry about repeating conversations, having thick ankles, or eating too many fruit flavored waffle cookies? Or do you brag about your parents constantly? Or maybe you just love Mr. Pibb? Please let me know that someone else will care, especially if you have brown curly hair and green eyes. Call box #1631
SWM, 23, is looking for a woman, 19-22, who likes sports, old movies, long romantic war is intellectually demanding. He prefers to work with worth dating, but right now not looking for a serious relationship. I want to have some fun Call us.
S/W/M NonTraditional student, with a sense of humor about life, seeks female to share time and experiences with. Don't be shy. Call me. What have you got to lose expect may be missing. Box
SWM, 62°, 190 lbs. for someone to run with a 4 jog 6 mates at a moderate pace 3 times a week. If you need a partner to keep you honest to your fitness program, give me a call at box 8125. SWM, very slightly neuralistic, seeks similarly deranged partner for quality time in the quiet room.
SWIM 22 locking for singles and couples any age, age or race for intelligenct stimulating use.
SWM 24 Grad Student music, creative off,
easy going, in to live music. Mention Python, JKRH,
good beer, and talk forever about anything and
anything. Interested in alternative
music with similar edges. e1038
SWM looking for sominee who appreciates the SWMJob. Took Servie, and Cree go through to be considered.
SWM's swms SWP traveling comparison to New Orleans during Pond Four finals. CSI Conference 2015. Booth # 8031 & Booth # 8043
SWM (19) Traditional non-engineering student who doesn't worry about what his feet are touching in lakes and never went to the school of hard work. You could be damn. I wouldn't answer a personals ad, but won't think any less of you when you do. Me' Okay, dark and eyes with eyes for the unusual. Call box #10003
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
The world is already full of wanna-bees. Natural is beautiful. I'm looking for someone of sound mind with enough backbone to be true to themselves before others. My interest are Munk, weights, and the ultimate adventure. I don't drink because it feels refreshing. All calls will be responded Box call 810516.
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
♂
If you like pina cola and getting caught in the air, if you're not intooga and have half a brain. Then we're the women you're looking for, call us. We are at our office, but 3 but as you get your friends. Call #29414 for fun!
2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town friends since birth, both between 1 and feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet me w/ cry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down to earth. Like long walks, movies, talking on the phone, & trying any seam to get us rich quick. Call box 780-345-9600.
Bi SWF 21, non drinker. Looking for unique female girls and cute guys ages 28-42 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to have close relationships with trustworthy people. #20141 Grad. 29 y/o, WS, NN recently separated with one person and is still in school. I am athletic, intelligent and outgoing. Keeping physically fit and dancing are one my passions. I am socially conscious and believe in self-improvement. I love black and white. I keep a rather tight schedule, but would like to spend spare hours with mature, intelligent, attractive, white male with some interests. I admire you as an you get on a date, don't box. Box #2135.
Love seeking intriguing P. B. have a tight virgin belly button, do you? I work it to a base, and I'm not wearing any underwear. So, "If you won't go to bed," I should wear my virgin belly button. I take me down. don't bother. Box # 2014 b3
SWF blue eyed, long haired trainee seeking SWM aged 18-23. Enjoys laughing, the outdoors and a good MGD. Any man with a Dalmatian, call me. Uphighs not tightness #.20140
MEN SEEKING MEN
Common abbreviations
&
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White L Lesbian
B Black L Non-Smoker
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoke
SWM 22 looking for singles and couples any age, or age of race for intellectually conviving sex.
GAM 24 hard worker, studies a lot, also makes time to go out. Enjoys stargazing, walks on a moonlit night and stimulating conversation "till dawn with jazz music. Seeking someone older, romantic, matte, conservative, non-traditional, Very strict. Very direct. Non-smoker, social drinker . 60003
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
20 year old inexperienced WF looking for someone feminine 19-23 to explore friendship with adventurous people. (You can take up to 181 lbs, who enjoys art activities, traveling, and the Cocetaux. I'm too shy to open up women I find attractive so I reserved it.) Don't worry about teaching let's just get acquainted. Call box #4006.
GW stud look for someone to share a lot in an environment. Like nature walks, great outdoors, sporting events, dining out, going places, doing things together, & having a great time. Do have a shoulder to lean on will also need someone to be there if you want to join in. Use a student, non-stomber or light drinker. Call box #8065
♂♀
BISWF, 21, Non-Drinker. Looking for unique female and guys cute ages 20-24 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to have friends with trustworthy people. Box #4000
Female 23 seeks platoic friendship *meng-ing*
movies, get invited on campas. Grad student living
in Lawrence. Occasional nights on the town!
Just someone to hang out with. Call Box #f10121.
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You'll place an ad in the Laytak Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
FEATURES: BalletMet, a professional ballet company, blends traditional ballet with modern dance, Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.116
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1993
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
CONGRATS
00:0
60 64
7 - 25 77
'Hawks claim Big 8 tournament
Marian Washington, Kansas women's basketball coach, clips the last strand of net, celebrating the team's Big Eight championship victory against Nebraska. The team defeated Nebraska 64-60 last night at the Bicentennial Center in Salina.
Women's team grabs NCAA bid, defeats No.20 Cornhuskers
By Jay Williams
Korean sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
SALINA — The Kansas women's basketball team accomplished the unexpected last night by defeating the No. 20 Nebraska Cormuskers 64-60 and laying claim to the Big Eight Women's Tournament championship.
The Jayhawks' victory guaranteed the team a bid in the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament.
The post-championship celebration included all the usual rituals: cutting down the nets, waving to the fans, accepting the trophy.
This one, however, had something extra — a team that few people thought could win the post-season tournament after it finished fourth in the Bie Eight regular season standings.
But the Jayhawks did win. And then they celebrated. They could be heard in the bowels of the Bicentennial Center as Nebraska coach Angela Beck tried to maintain her composure and explain what went wrong.
"We didn't have the intensity to match them," Beck said.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said of the Jayhawks, "This team has done some incredible things."
Kansas, 4-4 in the conference after a Feb. 5 loss to Colorado, has won 10 of its last 11 games.
Washington said this year's team, with just two seniors on the roster, had to learn on the court.
"At no time did this team give up," she said. Washington said she saw steady progress throughout the season.
That progress came to fruition here. In winning the title, the No. 4 seeded Jayhawks defeated No. 5 seeded Missouri. No.1 seeded Colorado and No.2 seeded Nebraska. Both Colorado, then No.6, and Nebraska, No.20, were nationally ranked.
dous example of what we are trying to do."
it was not an easy road for the Jayhawks, 21-8.
"At any time they could have stopped playing."
Washington said. "These players set a tremen-
Before last night, some questioned whether the Jayhawks would receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament. Kansas on Sunday clinched its fourth consecutive 20-victory season but has made only one NCAA tournament appearance, last season with
a 25-6 record.
Washington said the automatic invitation was a relief. The Jayhawks will not know until Sunday, when the NCAA selection committee announces the tournament pairings, when or where they will play next.
The road to the Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament :
"The way we're playing right now, it doesn't matter who we face," Washington said.
Quarterfinals, Saturday; Kansas 63, Missouri 56
Final, Yesterday; Kansas 64, North Carolina 60
First, Yesterday; Kansas 64, Nebraska 60
Where the road leads next:
The Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament victory guarantees the Jayhawks an invitation to the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament.
The NCAW Women's basketball
Pairings will be announced Sunday.
International community finds change since '80
NEWS: 864-4810
Kansan staff writer
By Kathleen Stolle
Iranians outnumbered other international groups that attended the University of Kansas in 1980. At that time, 241 Iranians attended KU, while only six Chinese students were enrolled.
Now Chinese students lead the KU international community with 233 students this semester. Meanwhile, Irianians rank 15th with 28 students, and the number of other Middle Eastern students continues to drop.
According to statistics released Friday by the Office of International Student Services, 52 percent of KU's international student population comes from the Far East, compared with 16 percent from the Near East and South Asia, including Middle Eastern nations. Thirteen years ago, students from the Near East and South Asia composed 34 percent of the KU international community, compared with 30 percent from the Far East.
Harris said that until recent times, many petroleum-rich Middle Eastern nations could afford to send their students abroad. But eventually, overspending, competition and a glut in the oil industry collectively reduced the number of students.
Gerald Harris, director of the Office of International Student Services, said economics had played a central role in the changing face of KU's international student body.
Meanwhile, blooming economies in the Far East have boosted incomes, enabling families to send their children to colleges in the United States.
Ozug Cekic, Istanbul, Turkey, sophomore, said that improving educational resources was another possible factor in the decrease of Middle Eastern students since the early 80s.
Michael Wang, Taipei, Taiwan, graduate student, said that Taiwan's
"At that time the quality of education wasn't very good," he said. "But now I think the Turkish universities have improved."
petitive and growing markets, combined with a lack of higher educational options, prompted students to head to the United States to study various fields of science and engineering.
Since 1980, the number of KU international students from the Far East has grown, while the Middle Eastern student population has declined. These 10 groups demonstrate changes in the international population on campus.
Wang said that in Taiwan, students' scores on college entrance exams decided which university they would attend and what field of study they would follow regardless of personal interest.
Face of KU international student body changes
According to a 1991 report on international educational exchange, the number of Asians studying in the United States has almost doubled in the past decade. The number of Middle Eastern students has dropped significantly.
He said many Taiwanese students came to universities in the United States when they were displeased with the field or university in which the exams had placed them
The rise in the number of Far Eastern students and decline in the number of Middle Eastern students is not a trend unique to the KU.
Far East Middle East
China 6 Iran 241
233
Malaysia 33 Jordan 36
200 13
Hong Kong 21 Lebanon 27
75 12
Indonesia 13 Saudi Arabia 54
60 Key
South Korea 51 Kuwait 18 Fall 1980
100 Spring 1993
Source: Office of International Student Affairs
Derek Nolen / KANSAN
Muslims condemn terrorist bombing
By Jess DeHaven Kansan staff writer
Members of Muslim organizations in Lawrence say the recent bombing at the World Trade Center in New York City was not endorsed by Muslims and does not reflect the religion's ideology.
"It's a sad story in human history, but it has nothing to do with the Islamic religion." Rashid Malik, Lawrence graduate student and vice president of the Muslim Student Association, said. "It would be like a mailman going out and shooting people — no one blames the post office for something like that."
Last week's arrest of Mohammed Salameh, a Muslim, in the World Trade Center bombing once again has focused world attention on terrorist acts carried out by Muslims.
Naser Alazed, Lawrence graduate student and president of the Muslim Student Association, said stereotyping of all Muslims as extremists willing to go to any lengths to get their message out was wrong.
"I don't think you would find any Muslim who would support this," Alazey said of the bombings. "The IRA is doing the same thing, but you don't get the same reaction from the Western world as you do when a Muslim is involved."
Baba Safadi, a Lawrence businessman and former KU student, agreed. He said terrorist acts were condemned by Muslim ideology.
"It's just so sad that this is being referred to the Muslim people because we are a peace-loving people," Safadi said. "This is an act of crazy people. If they truly believed in Islam, they wouldn't be doing this."
"It's nice that America is a free country, and people shouldn't be abusing that freedom."
All three said the media was to blame for the misconceptions people in the United States and other Westerners had about Muslims.
Safadi said those who were uneducated tended to stereotype Muslims because of the actions of one person.
"I think most people are intelligent enough to know better, especially in Lawrence," he said. "Unfortunately, there are a lot of closed-minded people in the world."
Alzayed, Malik and Safadi said they were not sure the FBI had arrested the right person in the bombings.
"It has not been confirmed, and I think they should have held off on announcing the arrest until they had more proof," Alzayd said. "It just seems silly to me the way he (Salameh) handled it. It's not very realistic."
After the explosion, Salameh reported the van, that allegedly contained the bomb, stolen and went to the dealership three times to get his deposit back, handing over rental papers that a government source said were covered with nitrates, which were found in some explosives.
Safadi agreed that Salameh's actions were not what would be expected of a bomber.
"It looks pretty crazy," Safadi said. "If it was him, he must be mentally deranged."
INSIDE
FIELDING
Catcher breaks record
Kansas senior catcher Jeff Niemier has come a long way in the past two years. Niemier, a former outfielder who did not play much for the Jayhawks, broke the RBI record Sunday. Niemier and his teammates take on Pittsburgh State at 3 p.m. today.
See story, Page 7.
Enhanced 911 traces county's calls in four seconds
By Mark Klefer
Kansan staff writer
When a person dials 911 anywhere in Douglas County, police know the exact location of the call within four seconds.
Enhanced 911, a system that allows police to trace 911 calls quickly, began operating at 1:30 p.m. yesterday.
"Enhanced d911 is a real plus for rural parts of the county," said Ted McFarlane, director of the department of emergency medical services and emergency preparedness. "Now we have added a system that displays on a screen instantly not only the location of the call but how to get there. We know instantly where it's at."
It now serves the entire county. The system has been used in Lawrence since February of 1991.
With the old 911 system, which had been in place since 1067, police were not able to trace 911 calls to their origins.
Police have been testing the enhanced system, which has cost more than $300,000, since January. A phone tax added to the bills of Douglas County residents was used to raise money to pay for the system.
honey to pay for the system.
When dispatchers receive a 911 call with the enhanced
system, the caller's phone number immediately flashes on a small computer screen. That number is relayed by telephone to Southwestern Bell central offices in St. Louis, Mo. From there, a computer matches the phone number with the address of that phone and sends the information back to Lawrence.
back to Lawrence.
The information sent from St. Louis includes the phone owner's name and address, along with the names of the nearest fire department, law enforcement agency and emergency medical services. All of this information travels to Lawrence in less than four seconds.
els to Lawrence in less than two seconds.
Dal Donquest, dispatch supervisor for the Douglas County sheriff's department, said the ability to trace calls quickly would help emergency crews.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the system, which served a full-time backup to the county system, was effective.
KU police also has an enhanced 911 system, which has served the camus for about three years.
would help emergencies like this. "Sometimes when people call 911, they're excited and they can't remember their phone numbers or addresses." Dalquest said. "Now we can find your house."
If we have a fire alarm in one of the residence halls, and someone from the staff calls 911, we know immediately that it's coming from the front desk," Mullens said.
Help is a phone call away
The Enhanced 911 phone system officially went on line at 1:30 p.m.yesterday covering all residents in Douglas County.
COUNTY.
Douglas County.
023-221-93
>
When a caller diales 911, his or her phone number immediately appears on a screen in front of the dispatcher.
821
8213
电话
That number is sent to a database in St. Louis, Mo. The database sends the Lawrence Police Department the phone owner's name, address, type of location (business or residence), the names of the closest law enforcement agency, ambulance service and fire department.
>
The information is returned to the dispatcher in less than four seconds.
<
Source: Lawrence Police Douglas County Sheriff
921-6028
www.roadmusic.net
NYC Beats
Derek Nolen / KANSAN
2
Tuesday,March 9,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
642
LIBERTY
749-
THOMAS
THEATRE - 1 in ACCEPTANCE for all persons
Nominated for a Academy Award including
BEST PICTURE
THECRYING GAME (R)(Th.2)
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Homeward Bound $ 7.90 8.00 7.80
Alaidin $ 5.00 7.20
A Few Good Men $ 8 15
Mad One and Glory $ 7.90 8.45
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841 $191
ALL STATS
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River Runs Through It$^{pg}$ 5.00, 7.30,
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Scent of a Woman$^{pg}$ 8.00
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frames: PAUL MITCHELL
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 19 Stauffer-Fint-Hall, Lawrence, KAN 60454
Did she say "Yes?"
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Yesterday's front page article on Rock Chalk Revue excluded Phi Delta Theta as a Most Charitable Award winner. The fraternity won the award along with Gamma Phi Beta.
CORRECTIONS
Friday's Page 8 story, "Facilities planning to undergo reorganization," misidentified Mike Richardson. Richardson is director of facilities operations.
ON THE RECORD
A Dalmatian and a German shepherd were reported missing Sunday from Smith Motors, 1231 E. 23rd St., Lawrence police reported. Damage was done to the chain-link fence surrounding the parking lot to and the dashboard of one of the cars in the lot. A stereo and two speakers were taken from the car. Losses were estimated at $800.
A 19-year-old female student reported being shoved to the ground by a man about 5 a.m. Sunday behind Hashinger Hall, KU police reported. Police said the unknown suspect approached the student from behind, shoved her and yelled an obscenity. The student gave the suspect $6 because she thought he wanted money. He then left, the report said.
A student's backpack and calculator, valued together at $109, were taken Friday from the cafeteria in McCollum Hall, KU police reported.
Recycle Your Daily Kansan.The World is Ours to Share.
Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO
Enlargements Up To 12"X18" In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
WEATHER
Omaha: 52°/28°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 70°/42°
Chicago: 39°/27°
Houston: 78°/53°
Miami: 76°/56°
Minneapolis: 39°/25°
Phoenix: 86°/57°
Salt Lake City: 60°/40°
Seattle: 61°/39°
LAWRENCE: 59°/35°
Kansas City: 55°/35°
St. Louis: 54°/37°
Wichita: 59°/36°
Tulsa: 66°/43°
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Sunny with NW winds 10-15 mph.
High: 59°
Low: 35°
Clear and sunny
High: 53°
Low: 32°
Partly cloudy and colder.
High: 45°
Low: 29°
Source: Greg Potter, KU Weather Service; 864 3300 Derek Noen / KANSAN
Sunny Cloudy
Sun
Sunny
ON CAMPUS
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brown-bag lunch at 11 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union and tomorrow at 11 a.m. in Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
The department of art history will have a lecture, "The Art of Tianshou, a Modern Chinese Painter," by Pan Gongkai, professor and former chairperson of the department of Chinese painting at Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts in Hangzhou, China, at 3:30 p.m. today at Room 211 in Spencer Museum of Art.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. today and tomorrow at the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 843-6250 or Laura Lauca at 842-6887
Triathlon & Swim Club, Kansas will have swim practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2734.
Gay and Lesbian Academic and Staff Advocates will hold a brown-bag meeting at noon tomorrow at 208 Twente Hall. For more information, call Maggie Childs at 843-3100.
- The department of art history will hold a lecture-demonstration, "The Art of Chinese Painting," by Pan Gongkai at 2.30 p.m. tomorrow at Room 421 in the Art and Design Building. For information, call the Spencer Museum at 864-4713.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting for Publary and Graduate Direct Exchange Grants at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sonia Friarskon at 864-3742.
Armchair Generals will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow. For more information, call Galen Theis at 864-7118.
KU ENIVERONS will hold a forum on waste disposal at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Korey Hartwich at 843-5502.
**Watkins Health Center will hold an eating disorders support group meeting at 7 tomorrow night at the second floor conference room in Watkins Center. Self-image and assertiveness is the topic of discussion. For information, call Chris Cameron at 841-0086.**
"Hey, only three more months, and my student loan will be paid off."
A man and a woman are sitting in front of a table. The man is wearing a suit and the woman is wearing a dress. They are facing each other and seem to be talking.
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CAMPUS/AREA
Tuesday, March 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
BRIEFS
KU entrepreneurs win awards in NYC
The Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs recognized the KU chapter this weekend as the top chapter in the six-state Midwest region at a national convention in New York City.
"It was a wonderful convention," said chapter president Bennett Griffin. Derby senior.
Six of the KU chapter's 50 members were in New York to accept the award. About 500 people from the United States, Canada, Mexico and Japan attended the convention.
Griffin received an award for outstanding chapter president in the nation.
ACE is set up as a support group for students who own a business or would someday like to, he said.
Eli Muhl, Salina senior, and Martin Hess, DeSoto senior, were honored by the association as two of the top 10 collegiate entrepreneurs for their sports marketing company in the Kansas City area.
state tornado drill to take place today
A statewide tornado drill will take place today as part of Severe Weather Awareness Week, said Steve Johnson, assistant coordinator for the Douglas County department of emergency medical services and emergency preparedness.
To prepare for the severe weather months of March through July, the National Weather Service of Topeka will start the drill at 12:30 p.m. with a statewide severe weather watch, a severe weather warning will be issued one hour later.
A watch means conditions are favorable for severe weather to develop; a warning means severe weather has developed.
The emergency preparedness division also will activate outdoor sirens across the county and notify city schools and KU campus buildings using voice-aelert radio stations.
Japanese Zen master to speak at University
The division encouraged citizens to participate in the drill.
Zen master Fukushima Keido Roshi, the administrative head of more than 300 Zen temples in Japan, will give an Eastern calligraphy demonstration at 12:30 p.m. today in the main court of the Spencer Museum of Art.
Roshi, of Kyoto, Japan, heads the Tofuku-ji Temple and will speak to art history classes and Eastern civilization classes at the University today and tomorrow.
He also will give a demonstration on Zen sitting at 30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Zen sits, the Zen Buddhist form of seated religious meditation, dates back about 2,000 years, said Karin Swanson, lawrence graduate student and curatorial intern of the Asian department of the museum.
Both demonstrations are free
Compiled by Kansan staff writers James J. Reece and Mark Kiefer.
Senators debate distribution of fee after budget rejection
By Brett Riggs Kansan staff writer
Although most student senators agree with Student Body President Brad Garlinghouse's decision Thursday to veto the revenue code budget, they question how the budget should be revised.
Garlinghouse said Thursday that he vetoed the budget Senate passed Feb. 24 because it did not include $135,000 of revenue that Senate would receive from a $3 increase in student activity fees.
Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer, said he agreed that the revenue needed to be accounted for.
"We passed a budget that was misleading." Sioromema said.
Garlinghouse said he would propose at tomorrow's Senate meeting to put the expected activity fee revenue to the Senate unallocated account — a coffer used to meet organizations' weekly money requests. In
STUDENT SENATE
order to augment the budget, senators took $22,264 away from the unallocated account, leaving only $234 in the account.
Garlinghouse did not propose increasing organization's budgets using the revenue.
However, Sigourney said he thought changes needed to be made to the budget.
changes "I think that with the additional money, there are some groups that should receive additional funding," Sigourney said. "To totally put it in the unallocated account is wrong."
Jeremy Haas, assistant to the Senate treasurer, said he agreed with the veto because it would give the Senate finance committee
the opportunity tomorrow to better inform senators about how it formulated the budget.
"I wish we could have provided more information for senators," he said. "We still can if senators think it is necessary."
Haas said that he favored replenishing the unallocated account but that he also wanted to see changes to the budget, such as giving the Chamber and Concert Music Series the $90,000 that the finance committee proposed. Senate approved the music series' budget at $63,142.
"I think we should budget the money as finance proposed," Haas said.
Shannon Morford, finance committee cochairperson, said she wished the finance committee could revise the budget. But Senate rules and regulations say Senate, not the finance committee, must make the revisions.
"I think finance could make a better decision than Senate," Morford said.
Daron J. Rae
Jenny Black, Lake Forest, III...junior, watches every move of Doug Gettis, Red Cross representative, as he prepares to draw blood Black was just one of the students who donated on the first day of the Red Cross blood drive yesterday.
Move to JRP to alleviate space crunch Clinical child psychology Bailey GTAs to reap benefits
On pins and needles
By Terrilyn McCormick
Kansan staff writer
The University announced last week that the School of Education and three other programs would occupy the former residence hall. The school's move from Bailey Hall is expected by 1999.
School of Education officials hope their future home at Joseph R. Pearson Hall provides a better fit.
The lack of space for teaching assistants offices, limited laboratory and clinical space and out-dated teaching facilities are current problems with Bailey Hall, said Richard Whelan, acting dean of education.
For example, Whelansaid office space for graduate teaching assistants was cramped.
Liz Cronemeyer, graduate
assistant, shares her office
at 202 Bailey Hall with five
other GTAs.
Cronemeyer is used to cramped offices. Last semester, she worked in a small basement office. But her current office allows her to meet regularly with other GTAs, she said.
"This is the first time we've ever been together to be able to meet one another," she said.
She said that the GTAs needed a space that would help form a sense of community and that Bailey did
not create that sense.
The new location also will give the 18-month-old clinical child psychology department a permanent home. It is in Fraser, where there is not enough space for the clinic, said Michael Roberts, director of the clinical psychology program.
The program is shared by the department of psychology and the department of human development and family life in the School of Education
Roberts said the move to JRP would bring together the education programs and the clinical child psychology program.
"This will give us an opportunity to interact with strong programs in education school," he said.
Roberts said the clinics' new location at JRP also would help serve the community better than at Fraser because it was more accessible from off-campus locations.
"It is the perfect location for a child and family program because it is on the outskirts of campus," he said. "Families will not have to worry about the guard houses when coming to the clinic."
The JRP location also will give the school the opportunity to have state-of-the art teaching facilities that would incorporate the latest technologies for multimedia presentations, Whelan said.
Student 'tornado chasers' find their adventures in danger
Kansan staff writer
By Jess DeHaven
Tornadoes are often seen as frightening and dangerous, but for one group of meteorology students, chasing twisters is an adventure.
winterst is an adventure.
"It's the thrill of it that keeps us going," Rob Koch, Bismarck, N.D., junior, said. "If a tornado weren't dangerous, we wouldn't be interested."
The students, known as tornado chasers, use radar images received from equipment in the KU Weather Service Office that comes from Kansas City International Airport. This data is used to locate and track severe weather such as tornadoes. The chasers then follow the storms in their cars, recording what they see with video cameras, audio equipment and various other devices.
"The goal of the chase team is to intercept severe weather and tornadoes in the field in an attempt to film and document it," Andy Kula, Lawrence junior, said. "We can learn about the storm structure, why they form and how we can improve our techniques."
Koch said the worst tornado he had seen was in Washington County on April 26, 1991. This tornado occurred on the same day as the one that devastated Andover and parts of Wichita.
"We were moving northeast tracking the storm," he said.
passed on the四脚 right in Koch said no storm was too dangerous for him
Koch said no storm was too dangerous for him.
"For me there is no limit," he said. "Tl go as far as I can go in one day."
The chasers have attended three workshops to train them for work in the field. They learned techniques to forecast severe weather, how to perform first aid in the field and how to repair vehicles while on chases.
The chasers aren't the only people who use equipment at the weather service.
The students are able not only to forecast the weather for Lawrence, but also for locations throughout the United States. Between November 1991 and January 1993, 272,469 calls were made to the weather service's forecast line.
"It's a lab, but it's also a service to the campus," Kula said. "We are an official observation center."
We are an online provider of equipment in the center receives satellite, upper-air and surface data from the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the National Meteorological Service in Suitland, Md.
Students in the atmospheric science department will be visiting five Lawrence elementary schools as part of Severe Weather Awareness Week in Kansas, which began yesterday. They will talk about severe weather and show videotaped chases.
Roger Knoeber / KAMSAN
Jim Dudley, Lancaster, Calif. senior, seated, explains how the KU Weather Service uses the computers to predict and track weather patterns to Chris Murphy, Gnadenhutten, Ohio, sophomore.
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OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Free,plentiful parking is right of every resident
As residents of the Oread neighborhood know, parking anywhere near the KU campus is a car owner's nightmare. Residents of this area are often forced to park several blocks from their homes because the cars of KU students line the streets near campus.
To rectify this problem, the Oread Neighborhood Association has drafted an ordinance which would allow only residents with neighborhood parking permits to park in the area enclosed by 9th, 14th, Mississippi and Tennessee streets. Under the terms of the ordinance, residents could purchase parking permits for $20, and only vehicles displaying permits could park legally in the area. However, only two permits per living unit could be purchased.
While the basic premise of the proposed ordinance is logical, two of the draft's stipulations are flawed. Forcing residents to pay to park in front of their own homes is ludicrous. Only residents should be allowed to park in the area, but they should be issued permits at no charge. The rent and mortgages tenants and homeowners pay should entitle them to park in front of their homes without incurring additional costs.
Secondly, issuing only two permits to each living unit is unfair. Every resident should have the right to park in front of his or her home. If three or more car owners live together, they would be forced to determine who is more deserving of a parking permit. Anyone who resides in the Oread neighborhood should be able to park in the area and receive a permit.
The greatest opposition to the ordinance will come from scholarship hall residents and other students who are forced to park in the area because of the limited parking available on campus. Though it is unfortunate that these students are faced with a shortage of parking, Lawrence residents should not have to suffer the repercussions of KU's parking shortage. The responsibility of providing students with adequate parking belongs to the University, not the city of Lawrence. Accordingly, the association is justified in preventing students from monopolizing residents' parking.
The association's proposal to restrict parking to residents is a logical solution to the area's parking dilemma. However, the proposed ordinance should be revised so that all residents could obtain parking permits at no charge. Residents of the Oread neighborhood should have the right to park in front of their homes at no cost, just as residents of other Lawrence neighborhoods have this right. Passing a parking ordinance would at least give residents a fighting chance to park their cars in front of their homes.
COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Kansan editorial board:
Kris Belden, Greg Farmer, Vered Hankin, Jeff Hays, Val Huber, Kyle Kickhaefer, Stephen Martino, Jolinda Mathews, Colleen McCain, Chris Moeser, Simon Naldoza, David Olson, Jeff Reynolds, Chris Ronan, and Michael Taylor.
Kansan cartoonists:
Michael Irwin, Michael Paul, David Rosenfield, Moses Smith, and Rob Tapley.
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30/1993 THE NEW REPUBLIC
YOU'RE LATE!
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Handgun control would only begin erosion of rights
I find the editorial of March 2 written by Colleen McCain to be shocking. I am amazed that a journalist would use the phrase "...waiting a mere week... " in reference to a Constitutional right concerning the right to keep and bear arms. A mere week, Ms. McCain? Do you actually think that a U.S. citizen should have to wait for the protection given unto them by the Constitution? Any sort of waiting period sets a dangerous precedent that must not be allowed. If we tolerate the loss of the Second Amendment, we surely see that it will not be long before our other freedoms erode. Can McCain envision a future in which the government's decision on who is "mentally unstable" determines who has or does not have civil rights?
Jeffrey A. Lindsey Lawrence senior
I feel for the victims of illegal handgun use as does every other caring person. These victims will not be served by the Brady Bill, however, and it will not stop the epidemic of crime that embraces our culture. The Brady Bill is a reactionary, totalitarian piece of ill-conceived legislation that will not help but will most assuredly hurt. I believe it should be abandoned.
of Washburn can refute the appraisal and present their version of the truth. But if, instead, they use their legislative power to strike at KU's funding, it is clearly academic reprisal.
A university should not accept reprisal. On that point alone, instead of calling for the dean's removal, all should stand behind him.
The February 18 Kansan editorial, calling for the removal of the Dean of Law, Robert Jerry, argued that his appraisal of the inferiority of Washburn law school as compared to KU's would have adverse effect on KU's funding because it would offend those state legislators who are alumn of Washburn law school.
KU should back Robert Jerry not criticize him
"us did materialize, it raises serious concerns on freedom of expression within a community of scholars, and the reality of academic reprisal.
Legislators who are affected or offended by the appraisal as alumni
A scholar to scholars must be able to tell a truth, as he sees it, without mincing words, and the law dean did just that.
T. S. David
Lawrence graduate student
Hoops are why we came here not academics
Poor, poor Mark Button. He can't seem to find any place to play basketball. We sympathize with Mark. When we picked our grade schools, we made sure there were plenty of walls for dodge ball. Then came high school and you can bet we made sure there was an indoor heated pool. But when it came to choose our college, we looked back and realized that it wasn't the walls or the pool that made the school, it was the basketball courts! Yes, we know what you're thinking and you're right. Libraries, classroom space and even teacher salaries are important. But they can't help you when you really need to play a full court pick-up game.
Robert Calvin Keaton Lawrence senior
Ann Marie Andres
Prairie Village junior
like a rape victim" because she was a character in a movie, following a other movie woman who say "no" but mean "yes, yes, yes!" The scene "needs to be considered within its context," says Doyle. Fine. Dafoe's character, angry at his client for calling his wife, retaliates with rape. But the real context of this scene is a society in which it is a typical portrayal of female sexuality.
Author of letter misinterpreted Madonna movie
In her letter on the film, "Body of Evidence," Wendy Doyle takes great liberty with the facts. Willem Dafoe's character was not a victim of rape. He was aware of his client's sexual tastes, and although the candle treatment was clearly painful, he did not object. Further, Doyle's assumption that "all men enjoy pain and force in sex" is hardly common in popular culture. Madonna's character, on the other hand, is shown struggling quite determinedly—if briefly, before giving herself up to "escaty. This is typical movie fare. Madonna "didn't react
If in doubt about a partner's consent, the movies say, assume yes. Why not assume no? Everyone has the right to say "no" regardless of their sex or sexual history. (This is not a concept most people with a "feminist bias" find "difficult.") So, Ms. Doyle, which part of "no" don't you understand?
Heather Devlin Lawrence junior
Reader thinks journalists lack responsibility
Will Lewis' article regarding African-American History Month and KU's African-American Greek system typifies the complete lack of journalistic responsibility on the part of the Kansan and of the media in general.
Lewis quotes Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism, as saying, "It would be stupid to close down a Black organization simply because another organization says we are now desegregating. Desegregation is not integration." Why is it that such imbecile statements pass for truth, unquestioned by Lewis and most of the media?
The American Heritage Dictionary defines integration as 1. a. An act of the process of integrating. b. The state of becoming integrated; c. Desegregation.
This statement by Adams, someone who is supposed to teach journalistic integrity to the media of tomorrow, demonstrates the twisting of truths into politically correct, "enlightened" lies. I'm quite sure that both Adams and the author of the article will dismiss this as a rare instance of semantic error. This could not be further illustrated. Everyone two-year-old to president knows that when you get caught in one lie, your easiest escape is to cover yourself with another half-truth.
Don Fritschle
Lenexa senior
STAFF COLUMNIST
CECILE
JULIAN
Columnist cannot grasp hearing HIV test results
What a staggering blow of fear it must be: the HIV test is positive.
Is that how someone is told? Is that what a doctor says? Does a written report break the news like that, or does it just contain the dreaded, one-word result? I can't even imagine the feelings that come with learning such a thing. But they surely were terrible as the mind screams "Not" in denail. At present, Watkins Memorial Health Center offers the option of an online course of testing. People can whether they have the virus without anyone else knowing anything about them. The teste simply gives a fictitious name when tested and picks up results from the same identification.
It takes about a week to get an appointment at Watkins, where an average of eight state-funded anonymous HIV tests are conducted each week. It takes about two weeks to get results back from a state laboratory
What goes through someone's mind as those two weeks grow into a lifetime? How on earth does a person continue to function in an everyday world where class lectures and gossip small talk exist?
I just can't imagine.
a confidential HIV tests also are given at Watkins. The difference between these and anonymous tests is that a person's real name is used and the results are available in four days. There's someone standing by when those results, good or bad, are made known to the testee.
At this moment of truth, a professional person is there to offer support, advice and maybe even to bear the brunt of the initial response of grief and anger.
A bill proposed by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment seeks to put an end July 1 to anonymous HIV testing at Watkins.
I think that's a good idea. Not ending the tests—confidential testing will continue to be available—but discontinuing the anonymous type. For without an identifying name, any kind of personal contact is impossible. No one but the person holding the news would know.
That's probably the very reason people choose anonymity. It's also the very reason they shouldn't. A secret so awful begs to be hidden, buried so deeply and thoroughly, that maybe it will just go away. But now, we'll figure out later who to tell and when and how. But not now. God, not now.
How indeed, if the results are positive, do you tell a loved one?
A professional health care worker knows how and can give that advice because, sadly, the situation isn't unique. Since HIV testing began at Watkins in 1986, there have been several occasions to exercise the skill of breaking bad news gently. When this happens, impartial advice is needed.
Everyone understands the value of privacy, and no medical records can be released without the owner's signature. So this isn't a problem. What matters is that, regardless of how it happened, people with HIV didn't get it by themselves. And it's heartbreaking to think anyone would carry around that terrifying knowledge by themselves because they couldn't trust anyone else.
Especially since there's plenty of time ahead for what they'll eventually have to do alone.
Cecile Julian is a Leawood senior majoring in Journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
PHIL SEET. Technology coordinator
Editors
Asst Managing ... Justin Knapp
News ... Monique Gualsain
David Mitchell
Editorial ... Stephen Martino
Campus ... KC Trauner
Sports ... David Mitchell
Photo ... Mark Rowland
Fashion ... Lynne McAdoy
Graphics ... Dan Shawer
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Business start
Campus sales mgr Brad Brun
Regional sales mgr Wade Baxter
National sales mgr Jennifer Perrier
Co-op sales mgr Amy Hessel
Production mgrs Amy Stumbo
Marketing director Larry Landau
Honey Payroll
Creative director Jill Torney
Classified mgr Dave Hebig
**Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kaiser must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position.**
**Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.**
The writer reserves the right to reedit or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kaiser newsroom, 111 Stauffer Fint Hall.
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dance
Urban punk ballet
ALEXANDER BORDEAU
BalletMet will bring its unconventional mix of ballet and modern dance to the Topeka Performing Arts Center.
By James J. Reece
common staff writer
Kansan staff writer
P
eople who think the ballet is too refined for their tastes should go see the eccentric ballet production of Ballet Met Thursday night. Ballet Met is a Columbus, Ohio professional ballet company that blends traditional ballet with modern and jazz dance. The company is under the artistic direction of John McFall. whose latest choreographed
piece, "Underbelly," will be part of the performance. The troupe will perform at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Toukea Performing
piece, "Underbelly," with
mance. The troupe will perforat
at the Topeka Performing
Arts Center, 214 S.E. Eighth
St.
“It’s kind of an urban punk ballet,” said David Stover, who dances in "Underbelly." "John just threw it at us and let us interpret it as we wanted. We play around a lot with our makeup. The girls do some pretty harsh things. They let their hair down and let it fly around."
Stover studied ballet in Helsinki, Finland for a year. He then went to dance for the Houston Ballet, which has visited Hoch Auditorium.
Stover said he thought the piece appealed to younger audiences because it blended ballet with modern dance and because it showed the youthful, wild creativity of the dancers.
"Basically, if it's an older audience, they don't like it too much because it's not pretty," he said. Stover has danced for 13 years and has been with BalletMet for three years.
McFall, who has headed BalletMet for six years, danced with the San Francisco Ballet from 1965 to 1983 and began his choreographed two commissioned works for Mikhail Baryshnikov's American Ballet Theatre and created 11 works for the 24-member BalletMet.
ar
Besides "Underbelly," which premiered in April 1991 at the
Ohio Theatre, Thursday's performance also will include three other pieces. These pieces will be "There, Below," by James Kudelka, "Great Galloping Gottschalk," by Lyne Taylor-Corbett, and "Divertimento No. 15," by George Balanchine. "Divertimento No. 15" is based on a work of the same name by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and will feature a solo by Marianna Tcherkassky, and a soloist Susan Jaffe.
and win who replaced injured.
Tcherkassky has danced in America ductions since 1970 and has appeared in "The K as Clara, and "Romeo And Juliet," as Juliet.
Thursday will be her first public performance of the so in "Diveritimento No. 15," Stover said.
He said he had an unusual beginning in ballet when it was 19 years old. One of his friends suffered elbow injury and was forced to quit T Kwon Do. His friend then started take ballet classes for exercise. Stover al became interested in ballet and attended classes with his friend.
Stover said his friend now was a doctor. "He dropped after the sixth less and I just kept going." Stover said Tickets are available at the Student Union Activiti Office and Murphy Hall They are $9 and $8 KU students, $17 a $15 for other students and $16 for
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Discussion of Zen and a calligraphy demonstration.
PAGE 5
12:30 p.m. today in the central court of the art museum
"Pluralism: Cultural, Ethnic and Racial Differences in Comparative Perspective"
MARCH 9,1993 PAGE 5 KU Life
7-9 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union
3:30 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union
Sponsored by Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
"Women's Leadership Styles"
Walk-in advising for students interested in studying in Great Britain, Germany or Denmark 1:30-3:30 p.m. today and tomorrow. Inquire at 203 Lippincott Hall
Panel Discussion
Office of Study Abroad
11-2 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union lobby Information meeting about new programs in Spain and Costa Rica
3:30 p.m. today in 205 Lippincott Hall
at 203 Lippincott Har Information table
A reception will follow.
Continued on Page 6.
Daily Re-affirmation
I meditate on spirit's goodness and mywholeness, so that I can make right choices.
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
MULTIPLE ALUMNA RECOGNITION
Gathering of the Gurus Officer Elections Wed.,March 10 7pm at the Hip Adams Alumni Center
6
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KU chamber choir sings harmonies of religion, literature and endearment
Director hopes music explains beauty in life
By Ezra Wolfe Kansan staff writer
the music in Swarthout Hall tonight may move listeners' souls to a higher level.
"The peak human experience is what we're about," said James Ralston of the artists and choir. Ralston is director of the choir.
The KU chamber choir will sing at 7:30 tonight in Swarthout Reacall Hall in Murphy Hall. Accompanist John Fowler and the Kansas Woodwinds will perform along with the chamber choir.
The concert is presented by the KU department of music and dance.
Ralston, professor of music and dance, said that about half the music would be religious.
The religious songs the choir will perform are: "Crucifixus" by Antonio Lotti and "Zwei Motetten" and "Opus 29", numbers 1 and 2, by Johannes Brahms.
"Religious music has been the standard repertoire of the traditional chorus." Ralston said.
The choir will perform "Heart We Will Forget Him," an Emily Dickinson text with music by James Mulholland. Ralston said he found that song particularly moving.
"Anytime you get involved in aesthetic activities, you have a chance
for uplift," he said. "I can't explain it. It makes your breath short, tears come to your eyes."
Ralston said that the first time he heard "Heart We Will Forget Him," he found it haunting, expressive, warm and loving. The song is performed by only the women in the choir.
Ralston said music was something special and related it to the funeral of a relative.
"At the funeral of a relative, you can see the beauty of their life," he said. "With music, you have a non-verbal understanding of what life is about, that's what the aesthetic experience is."
Ralston said he had reached that level with the chamber choir.
Chamber choirs are smaller than most choirs, with KU's 36-student choir being larger than most.
The chamber choir is a one-credit class in the music school. The choir has performed once this semester.
Ann Epworth, a soprano in the choir, said the concert would be interesting because of the variety of music performed.
The choir will perform Robert Burns "O, My Lave's Like a Red, Red Rose"
She said the finale, three pioneer songs written by Kansan Libby Larsen, would be great.
"It's a very emotional love song almost bringing a tear to your eye," Hepworth said.
“It’s an exciting piece because there’s a section where there’s stumping, and there’s a whisher,” she said. “You won’t fall asleep listening to it.”
Continued from Page 5.
Health Education Seminars "Sex and Alcohol"
Exhibitions
11 a.m. today in the first floor conference room of Watkins Memorial Health Center "How to Get Fit and Stay Fit" 1:30 p.m.tomorrow in the same location "The Risks of Tanning" 1:30 p.m.Monday in the same location
Environmental Colloquium "The Sustainable Development Network"
Chuck Lankester of the U.N. Development Programme 4-6 p.m., Friday, in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union
"Contact; Photo
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Monday is the last day for the exhibition
Concerts
Concert Series: Ballet Met 8 p.m. Thursday in the Topeka Performing Arts Center
心
$18 - $16 public, $17 - $15
senior citizens, $15.50 - $13.50
Faculty, staff, $9 - $8 students
The department of music and dance's scholarship auditions Friday and Saturday in Murphy Hall
Spring Concert: Chamber Choir
7:30 tonight in Swarthout
Recital Hall. Free
Student Recital: Amy Glidden, violin
8 p.m. Saturday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Free
Faculty Recital: Chamber Music with String Faculty and Sequeira Costa
8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall. Free
Soul Asylum Concert
8:30-midnight tomorrow at Libery Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Opening Act: Goo Goo Dolls and
Vice Chestnut
tv Hall. 642 Massachusetts St.
fickets: $13 from Student Union
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 9,1993
7
Jayhawks steal Big Eight crown
Cornhuskers lack spunk in first half
By Jay Williams Kansan sports writer
A runaway train rolled through Salma last night taking the Big Eight Women's Tournament championship and leaving two nationally ranked teams in its wake.
it was waste
It was the Kansas women's basketball team, which used a lightning-fast start and clutch free throws at the end to defeat Nebraska 64-60
Kansas, 21-8 overall, jumped out to a 13-2 lead as the Jayhawk defense annihilated everything No. 21 Nebraska wanted to do on offense. The Comushers missed their first 11 shots and had eight turnovers before junior forward Nafesea Brown scored the first Nebraska field goal with 11:07 remaining in the first half.
"Our defense was tremendous in the first half," said Kansas coach Marian Washington.
Kansas extended its lead to 18-5 with 9:40 remaining in the half before Nebraska, playing in its first tournament final under Coach Angela Beck, found some offense.
"For some reason, we weren't ready to play." Beck said. "Maybe because we have never been to a final."
The Jayhawks used sophomore forwards Carin Shim and Alana Slatter to slow down conference player of the year, Karen Jennings, the 6-foot-2 senior forward/ center who averages 22 points a game. But Shim, Slatter and the whole Jayhawk team held Jennings scoreless for more than 18 minutes in the first half.
Jennings, who had scored 57 points in two games against Kansas this season, said nothing worked for the Combushers early in the first half
"I was first thinking. Don't let her get the ball." Shinn said. "When she did get it, I tried to make her shoot over me."
remitting, in this season, said nothing
games against Kansas this season, said nothing
worked for the Cornhuskers early in the first half.
"They were so intense, all our passes were get-
ting stolen," she said. "In the second half, we set-
tled down."
Nebraska chipped away at the Jayhawk lead throughout the second half. Kansas led by as much as 14 points early in the second half, but Jennings and her teammates warmed up.
Kansas 64, Nebraska 60
Kanea (21-8)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Aycock 11-16 3-5 25
Shinn 2-3 0-0 4
Tate 1-3 2-2 4
Witherspoon 0-0 0-0 0
Leathers 1-10 4-4 6
Kite 3-4 2-2 11
Slatter 4-11 6-7 14
Sampson 0-7 0-0 0
Holmes 0-1 0-0 0
Muncy 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 22-55 17-20 64
Nebraska (19-7)
Taylor 2-6 1-5 5
Brown 8-17 4-6 20
Jennings 6-15 2-4 15
Yeddesa 2-7 2-2 8
Offringa 4-11 2-2 12
Brenden 0-3 0-0 0
Upthegrove 0-2 0-0 0
Anderson 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 22-61 11-19 60
Hattifte N30, 30kraca 21. Three-point goals
Kansas 37 (Leathers 0, Kite 3, Sampson 0.5)
Nebraska 15. 1jennings 1. 1yedsana 2. Offringa 2.
Brendan 3 (Bredon) **Rebounds** Kansas 38 (Kite 4), Nebraska 40 (Bredon) **Grikes** 6. **Wristbands** 10. **Wristbands** 11. (Offringa 4) Total fouls Kansas 20, Nebraska 15 Attendance 3,855
Nebraska trailed by two points with 2:39 left, senior guard Shannon Kite drilled a three-pointer from the right wing with 2:17 remaining giving Kansas some breathing space.
Nebraska stayed close thanks to Kansas turnovers with 30 seconds remaining. But Kansas did enough to win, making its final four free throws and having junior center Lisa Tate snatch the ball away from Brown with 9 seconds left.
On Kansas' next possession, Tate was fouled and made two free throws to seal the victory.
Sophomore forward Angela Aycock led the Jayhawks with 25 points and 10 rebounds. She was named tournament Most Valuable Player.
named to host meet moses.
Brown led the "Huskers with 20 points and 15 rebounds. Jennings finished with 15 points, eight coming in a 2 minute stretch in the second half
"We dug ourselves a hole," Beck said. "I thought we played better in the second half."
Beck said the Jayhawks 'play left her shaking her head several times during the game.
"We didn't have the intensity to match them," she said. "They were clicking on all cylinders."
KANSA
3
Doug Hesse/ KANSAN
Freshman guard Charisse Sampson goes up for a shot during the women's Big Eight Championship game in Salina. Sampson grabbed three rebounds and had three assists in last night's 64-60 victory against Nebraska.
Aycock carries Kansas
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
With 1:30 remaining in the game,
sophomore Angela Aycock peeked
at the scoreboard and smiled.
Who could argue? Aycock averaged 19.6 points and shot 50 percent from the floor. More important, she provided leadership and key baskets when the Jayhawks needed them.
No, the game was not out of reach, but it sure was close. The Jawahres were about to be crowned the champions at the Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament, and she was about to be crowned the tournament's best player.
Last night's performance capped the weekend for Aycock. She scored 25 points on 11-for-16 shooting and pulled down 10 rebounds.
"It was one of my best games," she said, "if not the best."
Aycock finished two points shy of her career high, but nibraska coach Angela Beck said Aycock's performance was spectacul
"I've never seen Aycock play like that," she said. "She was outstanding."
Kansas coach Marian Washington said Aycock's performance last night showed how far she has developed since one year ago.
Washington this season has highlighted Aycock's desire to have the ball in crucial situations.
Last night was no different. Aycock scored her team's first nine points of the second half. She only missed two field goal attempts in the second half.
"I was looking for it," she said after the game.
Aycock said she wasn't alone on the court.
"Being a part of a team that's playing well is special," she said.
Sophomore forward Alana Slatter also was named to the all-tournament team. She averaged 14 points a game in the tournament and shot 53 percent from the floor.
AP Top 25
Kansas won both of its games last week and moved up one spot in the new poll released yesterday. North Carolina and Indiana retained their No.1 and No.2 rankings.
rank team record pts. pr
1. North Carolina (5) 26.3 1.617 1
2. Indiana (4) 26.3 1.541 2
3. Michigan (2) 24.4 1.473 4
4. Kentucky 23.3 1.436 5
5. Vanderbilt 25.4 1.310 7
6. Arizona 22.3 1.294 3
3. Michigan (2)
4. Vanderbilt
5. Vanderbilt
6. Arizona
7. Kansas
8. Duke
9. Florida State
10. Florida State
11. Cincinnati
12. Wake Forest
13. New Orleans
14. Arkansas
15. Milwaukee
16. Louisville
17. Iowa
18. Purdue
19. Massachusetts
20. Mississippi
21. Oklahoma St.
22. Xavier, Ohio
23. New Mexico St.
24. Bryant Young
25. 24-15 | 1229 |
26. Duke
27. Florida State
28. Florida State
29. Cincinnati
30. Wake Forest
31. New Orleans
32. Arkansas
33. Milwaukee
34. Louisville
35. Iowa
36. Purdue
37. Missouri
38. Oklahoma St.
39. Xavier, Ohio
40. New Mexico St.
41. Bryant Young
42. 24-15 | 1229 |
43. Duke
44. Florida State
45. Florida State
46. Cincinnati
47. Wake Forest
48. New Orleans
49. Arkansas
50. Milwaukee
51. Louisville
52. Iowa
53. Purdue
54. Missouri
55. Massachusetts
56. Oklahoma St.
57. Xavier, Ohio
58. New Mexico St.
59. Bryant Young
60. 24-15 | 1229 |
61. Duke
62. Florida State
63. Florida State
64. Cincinnati
65. Wake Forest
66. New Orleans
67. Arkansas
68. Milwaukee
69. Louisville
70. Iowa
71. Purdue
72. Missouri
73. Massachusetts
74. Oklahoma St.
75. Xavier, Ohio
76. New Mexico St.
77. Bryant Young
78. 24-15 | 1229 |
79. Duke
80. Florida State
81. Florida State
82. Cincinnati
83. Wake Forest
84. New Orleans
85. Arkansas
86. Milwaukee
87. Louisville
88. Iowa
89. Purdue
90. Missouri
91. Massachusetts
92. Oklahoma St.
93. Xavier, Ohio
94. New Mexico St.
95. Bryant Young
96. 24-15 | 1229 |
97. Duke
98. Florida State
99. Florida State
100. Cincinnati
101. Wake Forest
102. New Orleans
103. Arkansas
104. Milwaukee
105. Louisville
106. Iowa
107. Purdue
108. Missouri
109. Massachusetts
110. Oklahoma St.
111. Xavier, Ohio
112. New Mexico St.
113. Bryant Young
114. 24-15 | 1229 |
115. Duke
116. Florida State
117. Florida State
118. Cincinnati
119. Wake Forest
120. New Orleans
121. Arkansas
122. Milwaukee
123. Louisville
124. Iowa
125. Purdue
126. Missouri
127. Massachusetts
128. Oklahoma St.
129. Xavier, Ohio
130. New Mexico St.
131. Bryant Young
132. 24-15 | 1229 |
133. Duke
134. Florida State
135. Florida State
136. Cincinnati
137. Wake Forest
138. New Orleans
139. Arkansas
140. Milwaukee
141. Louisville
142. Iowa
143. Purdue
144. Missouri
145. Massachusetts
146. Oklahoma St.
147. Xavier, Ohio
148. New Mexico St.
149. Bryant Young
150. 24-15 | 1229 |
151. Duke
152. Florida State
153. Florida State
154. Cincinnati
155. Wake Forest
156. New Orleans
157. Arkansas
158. Milwaukee
159. Louisville
160. Iowa
161. Purdue
162. Missouri
163. Massachusetts
164. Oklahoma St.
165. Xavier, Ohio
166. New Mexico St.
167. Bryant Young
168. 24-15 | 1229 |
169. Duke
170. Florida State
171. Florida State
172. Cincinnati
173. Wake Forest
174. New Orleans
175. Arkansas
176. Milwaukee
177. Louisville
178. Iowa
179. Purdue
180. Missouri
181. Massachusetts
182. Oklahoma St.
183. Xavier, Ohio
184. New Mexico St.
185. Bryant Young
186. 24-15 | 1229 |
187. Duke
188. Florida State
189. Florida State
190. Cincinnati
191. Wake Forest
192. New Orleans
193. Arkansas
194. Milwaukee
195. Louisville
196. Iowa
197. Purdue
198. Missouri
199. Massachusetts
200. Oklahoma St.
201. Xavier, Ohio
202. New Mexico St.
203. Bryant Young
204. 24-15 | 1229 |
205. Duke
206. Florida State
207. Florida State
208. Cincinnati
209. Wake Forest
210. New Orleans
211. Arkansas
212. Milwaukee
213. Louisville
214. Iowa
215. Purdue
216. Missouri
217. Massachusetts
220. Oklahoma St.
221. Xavier, Ohio
222. New Mexico St.
223. Bryant Young
224. 24-15 | 1229 |
225. Duke
226. Florida State
227. Florida State
228. Cincinnati
229. Wake Forest
230. New Orleans
231. Arkansas
232. Milwaukee
233. Louisville
234. Iowa
235. Purdue
236. Missouri
237. Massachusetts
238. Oklahoma St.
239. Xavier, Ohio
240. New Mexico St.
241. Bryant Young
242. 24-15 | 1229 |
243. Duke
244. Florida State
245. Florida State
246. Cincinnati
247. Wake Forest
248. New Orleans
249. Arkansas
250. Milwaukee
251. Louisville
252. Iowa
253. Purdue
254. Missouri
255. Massachusetts
256. Oklahoma St.
257. Xavier, Ohio
258. New Mexico St.
259. Bryant Young
260. 24-15 | 1229 |
261. Duke
262. Florida State
263. Florida State
264. Cincinnati
265. Wake Forest
266. New Orleans
267. Arkansas
268. Milwaukee
269. Louisville
270. Iowa
271. Purdue
272. Missouri
273. Massachusetts
274. Oklahoma St.
275. Xavier, Ohio
276. New Mexico St.
277. Bryant Young
278. 24-15 | 1229 |
279. Duke
280. Florida State
281. Florida State
282. Cincinnati
283. Wake Forest
284. New Orleans
285. Arkansas
286. Milwaukee
287. Louisville
288. Iowa
289. Purdue
290. Missouri
291. Massachusetts
292. Oklahoma St.
293. Xavier, Ohio
294. New Mexico St.
295. Bryant Young
296. 24-15 | 1229 |
297. Duke
298. Florida State
299. Florida State
300. Cincinnati
301. Wake Forest
302. New Orleans
303. Arkansas
304. Milwaukee
305. Louisville
306. Iowa
307. Purdue
308. Missouri
309. Massachusetts
310. Oklahoma St.
311. Xavier, Ohio
312. New Mexico St.
313. Bryant Young
314. 24-15 | 1229 |
315. Duke
316. Florida State
317. Florida State
318. Cincinnati
319. Wake Forest
320. New Orleans
321. Arkansas
322. Milwaukee
323. Louisville
324. Iowa
325. Purdue
326. Missouri
327. Massachusetts
328. Oklahoma St.
329. Xavier, Ohio
330. New Mexico St.
331. Bryant Young
332. 24-15 | 1229 |
333. Duke
334. Florida State
335. Florida State
336. Cincinnati
337. Wake Forest
338. New Orleans
339. Arkansas
340. Milwaukee
341. Louisville
342. Iowa
343. Purdue
344. Missouri
345. Massachusetts
346. Oklahoma St.
347. Xavier, Ohio
348. New Mexico St.
349. Bryant Young
350. 24-15 | 1229 |
351. Duke
352. Florida State
353. Florida State
354. Cincinnati
355. Wake Forest
356. New Orleans
357. Arkansas
358. Milwaukee
359. Louisville
360. Iowa
361. Purdue
362. Missouri
363. Massachusetts
364. Oklahoma St.
365. Xavier, Ohio
366. New Mexico St.
367. Bryant Young
368. 24-15 | 1229 |
369. Duke
370. Florida State
371. Florida State
372. Cincinnati
373. Wake Forest
374. New Orleans
375. Arkansas
376. Milwaukee
377. Louisville
378. Iowa
379. Purdue
380. Missouri
381. Massachusetts
382. Oklahoma St.
383. Xavier, Ohio
384. New Mexico St.
385. Bryant Young
386. 24-15 | 1229 |
387. Duke
388. Florida State
389. Florida State
390. Cincinnati
391. Wake Forest
392. New Orleans
393. Arkansas
394. Milwaukee
395. Louisville
396. Iowa
397. Purdue
398. Missouri
399. Massachusetts
400. Oklahoma St.
401. Xavier, Ohio
402. New Mexico St.
403. Bryant Young
404. 24-15 | 1229 |
405. Duke
406. Florida State
407. Florida State
408. Cincinnati
409. Wake Forest
410. New Orleans
411. Arkansas
412. Milwaukee
413. Louisville
414. Iowa
415. Purdue
416. Missouri
417. Massachusetts
418. Oklahoma St.
419. Xavier, Ohio
420. New Mexico St.
421. Bryant Young
422. 24-15 | 1229 |
423. Duke
424. Florida State
425. Florida State
426. Cincinnati
427. Wake Forest
428. New Orleans
429. Arkansas
430. Milwaukee
431. Louisville
432. Iowa
433. Purdue
434. Missouri
435. Massachusetts
436. Oklahoma St.
437. Xavier, Ohio
438. New Mexico St.
439. Bryant Young
440. 24-15 | 1229 |
441. Duke
442. Florida State
443. Florida State
444. Cincinnati
445. Wake Forest
446. New Orleans
447. Arkansas
448. Milwaukee
449. Louisville
450. Iowa
451. Purdue
452. Missouri
453. Massachusetts
454. Oklahoma St.
455. Xavier, Ohio
456. New Mexico St.
457. Bryant Young
458. 24-15 | 1229 |
459. Duke
460. Florida State
461. Florida State
462. Cincinnati
463. Wake Forest
464. New Orleans
465. Arkansas
466. Milwaukee
467. Louisville
468. Iowa
469. Purdue
470. Missouri
471. Massachusetts
472. Oklahoma St.
473. Xavier, Ohio
474. New Mexico St.
475. Bryant Young
476. 24-15 | 1229 |
477. Duke
478. Florida State
479. Florida State
480. Cincinnati
481. Wake Forest
482. New Orleans
483. Arkansas
484. Milwaukee
485. Louisville
486. Iowa
487. Purdue
488. Missouri
489. Massachusetts
490. Oklahoma St.
491. Xavier, Ohio
492. New Mexico St.
493. Bryant Young
494. 24-15 | 1229 |
495. Duke
496. Florida State
497. Florida State
498. Cincinnati
499. Wake Forest
490. New Orleans
491. Arkansas
492. Milwaukee
493. Louisville
494. Iowa
495. Purdue
496. Missouri
497. Massachusetts
498. Oklahoma St.
499. Xavier, Ohio
500. New Mexico St.
501. Bryant Young
502. 24-15 | 1229 |
503. Duke
504. Florida State
505. Florida State
506. Cincinnati
507. Wake Forest
508. New Orleans
509. Arkansas
510. Milwaukee
511. Louisville
512. Iowa
513. Purdue
514. Missouri
515. Massachusetts
516. Oklahoma St.
517. Xavier, Ohio
518. New Mexico St.
519. Bryant Young
520. 24-15 | 1229 |
521. Duke
522. Florida State
523. Florida State
524. Cincinnati
525. Wake Forest
526. New Orleans
527. Arkansas
528. Milwaukee
529. Louisville
530. Iowa
531. Purdue
532. Missouri
533. Massachusetts
534. Oklahoma St.
535. Xavier, Ohio
536. New Mexico St.
537. Bryant Young
538. 24-15 | 1229 |
539. Duke
540. Florida State
541. Florida State
542. Cincinnati
543. Wake Forest
544. New Orleans
545. Arkansas
546. Milwaukee
547. Louisville
548. Iowa
549. Purdue
550. Missouri
551. Massachusetts
552. Oklahoma St.
553. Xavier, Ohio
554. New Mexico St.
555. Bryant Young
556. 24-15 | 1229 |
557. Duke
558. Florida State
559. Florida State
560. Cincinnati
561. Wake Forest
562. New Orleans
563. Arkansas
564. Milwaukee
565. Louisville
566. Iowa
567. Purdue
568. Missouri
569. Massachusetts
570. Oklahoma St.
571. Xavier, Ohio
572. New Mexico St.
573. Bryant Young
574. 24-15 | 1229 |
575. Duke
576. Florida State
577. Florida State
578. Cincinnati
579. Wake Forest
570. New Orleans
571. Arkansas
572. Milwaukee
573. Louisville
574. Iowa
575. Purdue
576. Missouri
577. Massachusetts
578. Oklahoma St.
579. Xavier, Ohio
580. New Mexico St.
581. Bryant Young
582. 24-15 | 1229 |
583. Duke
584. Florida State
585. Florida State
586. Cincinnati
587. Wake Forest
580. New Orleans
581. Arkansas
582. Milwaukee
583. Louisville
584. Iowa
585. Purdue
586. Missouri
587. Massachusetts
588. Oklahoma St.
589. Xavier, Ohio
590. New Mexico St.
591. Bryant Young
592. 24-15 | 1229 |
593. Duke
594. Florida State
595. Florida State
596. Cincinnati
597. Wake Forest
590. New Orleans
591. Arkansas
592. Milwaukee
593. Louisville
594. Iowa
595. Purdue
596. Missouri
597. Massachusetts
598. Oklahoma St.
59
Other Big Eight teams receiving votes: Nebraska 74, Iowa State 55, Oklahoma 12
SACRAMENTO
achel G. Thompson / KANSAN
Oklahoma State's Bryant Reeves defends against Kansas senior guard Rex Walters. Reeves, a sophomore center who leads the Big Eight in scoring and rebounding, is one of the leading candidates for conference player of the year.
Reeves' name fits his game
'Big Country' likely choice for Big Eight player of the year
The Associated Press
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
When Oklahoma State sophomore center Bryant Reeves first arrived in Stillwater, Okla., the summer before his freshman year began, he joined some of his future teammates, including pro basketball player Byron Houston, in pickup games.
first pickup game.
He still does. The nickname is "Big Country," and since those first pickup games, Rowe has worked to make his game fit the name.
"Byron Houston started the name in the first pick game, Reeves said. "I liked it."
This season, he improved to unexpected levels, taking his team along with him. He is the most likely candidate to earn the Big Eight Conference Player of the Year award. The All-Big Eight Team, Newcomer of the Year, Coach of the Year and Player of the Year honors will be announced today.
For the first time, coaches can vote only
for players not on their team. After Reeves scored 28 points and pulled down nine rebounds during a loss Sunday to the Jayhawks, Kansas coach Roy Williams quickly endorsed Reeves as the top player.
"Bryant Reeves played like one of the better players in college basketball," Williams said.
Reeves, 7-feet tall and 275 pounds, finished the regular season as the leading scorer and rebounder in the conference. He averaged 19.7 points and 10.2 rebounds a game while also leading the conference with a 62 percent field-goal percentage. He finished as the fifth-leading shot blocker, with 1.4 a game.
Reeves' numbers have risen dramatically from last season, when he averaged 8.1 points and 5.1 rebounds a game. Teammate Brooks Thompson, a junior guard, said that the big man's improvement impressed him.
"He's improved plenty," Thompson said. "Now we don't have guys like Byron Houston. We have Bryant, who's really stepped up."
Houston and guard Corey Williams started for the Cowboys last season and have moved on to the NBA. During the preseason, things looked bleak for the Cowboys on paper. They were picked by the media to
Reeves said he realized the need for improvement.
"I worked hard during the offseason," Reeves said. "I worked on the weights and worked on my game."
finish sixth in the Big Eight, and they had only one starter in Reeves.
worked gruffly on him.
From Gans, Okla., the tallest opponents he faced were 6-6. Now he has to contend with players such as Kansas centers Eric Pauley and Greg Ostertag, who are 6-10 and 7-2, respectively.
During Sunday's game, Pauley and Ostertag combined for 41 minutes. Reeves, the Cowboys' only true center, played 37 minutes.
in minutes.
"I am very fatigued after the game," Reeves said. "But during the game, it's something you can't think about."
something like that.
As Reeves' play has improved, so has his popularity. As he heads to the lockerroom after games, fans of all ages try to take the sweat bands that he wears on each arm. Reeves gladly gives them up.
"I just tell them to start grabbing," he said
"The first one that grabts them, gets them.
Kansas rugby teams split games against Nebraska
Kansan staff report
The Kansas rugby club sent two collegiate teams to play Nebraska in Lincoln, Neb. last weekend and came home with one victory and one tie.
Kansas coach Jeff Hoobler said the key to the varsity game was good play from Kansas' newcomers, three of whom started for the first time. They were freshmen Jeff Francis, Brett Cale and Mike Schwartz.
BRIEFS
one victory and the Cornhuskers 3-0 with a penalty kick late in the first half to move to 2-0. In the junior varsity game, Kansas matched Nebraska's defense in the scoreless game.
Schwartz. Ten of the Jayhawks' best players did not travel to Lincoln because they were trying out for a Midwestern All-Star team at the Western Collegiate Territory training camp in Lawrence.
Men's golf team finishes second in tournament
The Kansas men's golf team is in second place after two rounds of the University of Central Florida Invitational in Orlando. The Jayhawks, with a score of 592, trail Minnesota by four strokes after 36 holes of play.
Other scores for the Jayhawks include senior Brad Bruno and junior John Hess, who are tied for 26th place at 150, and senior Jim Young at 157.
Kansanstaffreport
Junior Matt Goggol is tied for fourth place after shooting rounds of 74 and 71 yesterday. Sophomore Tom Sims is in ninth place at 147 after rounds of 73 and 74.
North Carolina is in third at 594, South east Louisiana is fourth at 596 and Virginia Tech is fifth at 597.
Nansas completes the tournament with 18 holes today at the Eastwood Country Club in Oriando.
Women's golf team plays tough at Utah-Dixie Classic
Kansan staff report
Kansas junior Holly Reynolds took the lead after two rounds of golf yesterday at the Utah-Dixie Classic in St. George, Utah
the Carson-David campus
Reynolds shot rounds of 76 and 73, giving
her a total of 149 and one-stroke lead in
front of Christel Tomori of Oregon.
from 18 of Cumberland. The Kansas women's team combined for a total of 650 strokes, and the Jayhawks are in 13th place.
Texas A&M leads the event with a total of 618. The Aggies are 17 strokes ahead of second-place Oregon.
For Kansas, sophomore Am Holbrook had the next best score to Reynolds'. Holbrook's total of 163 was good enough for 41st place in the overall standings.
Michelle Uber, also a sophomore, has a two round total of 167 and is in 54th place.
The third, and final round, of the tournament will be played today.
Royals strike out in exhibition game
HAINES CITY, Fla. — David Cone made his first exhibition start for Kansas City yesterday and gave up one run in the Royals' 4-0 loss to the Baltimore Orioles.
rings, striking out two. The right-hander walked two in the second inning, and Harold Baines scored when Tim Hulett grounded into a double play with the bases loaded.
Cone, signed as a free agent for $18 million in three years, took the loss. He gave up one hit in three innings, striking out two.
The Associated Press
Chito Martinez hit a two-run homer, and Arthur Rhodes and five Baltimore relievers combined on a four-hitter.
Martinez, drafted by the Royals in 1984 and signed with the Orioles as a minor-league free agent in 1990, homered over the right-field fence in the sixth off Jeff Montgomery.
Montgomery.
Rhodes, a second-round pick of the Orioles in 1988, had hit two innings for the victory. Todd Stephan, a non-roster right-hander, struck out three in two innings.
The Royals, 0-4 in exhibition play, threatened in the eighth when Brian McRae and Jose Lind led off with singles, but failed to score.
George Brett's wife gives birth to baby boy
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo — Kansas City Royals designated hitter George Brett is a father for the first time.
his wife, Leslie, gave birth to an 8-pound, 9-ounce boy about 7:20 a.m. yesterday at St. Luke's Hospital of Kansas City. Jackson Richard Brett is 20 and one-half inches long and was doing fine early today, as was Leslie Brett, according to a statement from St. Luke's Hospital.
men from those in the past. "We're all exhausted," Brett said in a statement released by the Royals.
The boy is named for Brett's father, Jack, who died of cancer last year, and for Leslie's father, Richard, according to the team statement.
Brett, who had carried a long-distance beeper to the Royals training camp in Haines City, Fla., left camp Sunday night shortly after the team's exhibition game and flew back to Kansas City to be with his wife.
8
Tuesday, March 9, 1993
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Baseball player's chance pays off
Jaylen 5
Jayce 5
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Kansas senior catcher Jeff Niemieler awaits a pitch from a Grand View pitcher. Niemieler, who batted in six runs during the three-game series last weekend, broke the Kansas career RBI record of 128 on Sunday.
Catcher gives coach record-breaking play after leaving bench
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham, sitting in his hotel room after a loss to Minnesota in March 1991, heard a knock at the door.
M
In walked Jeff Niemier, then a sophomore outfielder who wasn't playing much. Niemier wanted to talk.
First National
"He said, 'Coach, I want to be the guy you put to the plate to drive in runs,' " Bingham said.
By Brady Prauser
"There was some pressure on me, but I wanted it," Niemeier said. "I was tired of sitting the bench."
Bingham, whose team at that point had lost four of its past five games, decided to give Niemeyer a shot, starting him at left field and first base for the last two games with Minnesota.
"He had several hits and drove in three or four runs for us," Bingham said. "The story is told after that."
Niemeyer never looked back, hitting safely in 23 of the next 24 games, becoming the starting first baseman and batting in 68 runs that season. His RBI total shattered former All-American Matt Gundelfinger's single-season Kansas record of 50 set in 1980.
Kansan sportswriter
Niemeyer also led the Jayhawks with a .379 batting average, nine home runs and 18 doubles, earning All-Big Eight Conference honors in 1991.
As the starting Jayhawk catcher for the past two seasons, Niemeyer reflected on his 1991 conversation in Minnesota with Bingham. He said Bingham told him to show what he could do on the field.
Carol Wirthman,
President and
Student Loan Officer
Sunday, Niemeyer made Grand View College pitchers tired and added another chapter to his story by breaking former Kansas outfielder Brian Gray's school record of 128 career RBI.
PETER A. WILSON
Niemeier had three singles, a double, two home runs and six RBI in the three-game series.
Student Loans At Your Fingertips: 865-0278
60 Main & Baird
Main Branch Ninja & Massachusetts
Lavender Avenue 60644-0124 (913) 853-0200
Member FDIC = Equal Opportunity Lender
Member ID #804609
At First National Bank, we are the Student Loan Specialists. With 30 years of experience behind us, we have a strong record of service to students like you. We're known for our friendly, quality service on Stafford, PLUS and SLS loans; our 24 hour processing ensures quick turnaround on your student loan application.
Both are no strangers to the base path: Berlinger holds the Kansas single-season hit record, and Monroe led the dayhawks in hitting average and stolen bases last season.
Come by our Student Loan Department or call today.
865-0278
It doesn't hurt matters any that senior second baseman JeffBlingler and junior center player Darryl Monroe are the first two Kansas batters in front of Niermeer.
"That brings out the best in me," Niemeyer said. "If you are any kind of competitor at all, you love to see a gny out there on second base when you're at the plate."
"Those guys, along with the rest of my teammates, are the reason I don't get too excited about the records because they deserve most of the credit," Niemeyer said.
But Niemeier does find excitement from his teammates, particularly the other six seniors.
"Those guys are my best friends," he said. "We've been through a lot of sweat and blood together. We want to take the program to the next level, and we aren't going to sell ourselves short."
When the Jayhawks are on base,
Niemeyer's eyes light up.
Kansas, 6-3, plays host to Pittsburgh State at 3 p.m. today. Yesterday, Pittsburgh won both games of a double header with Northeast Missouri State to improve its record to 6-3.
THE TERRORS
TERROR'S
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- SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX
SEX • SEX • SEX • SEX
sex is all around, but most folks would really rather *not* talk about it.
What do you say when a friend shows you a bruise from her last date? What do you say when a friend tells you she had a child in high school that she gave up for adoption? What do you say when someone tells you that you roommate is homosexual? What do you say when your companion wants to go farther than you do on the first date? What do you say when a friend asks you about contraception? What do you say when someone asks you out, but you aren't attracted to people of their gender? What do you say when a friend asks you about abortion? Why is sex so tough to talk about?
What do you say to a little "tough talk" about some of the difficult issues of sexuality?
"Tough talk" is about dialogue and listening, not distribs and lecturing. Bring your questions about relationships and sexuality, and we'll all struggle with the answers.
7 PM Thursdays at Lutheran Campus Ministry
7 PM midsunday at Lumberton
12th and Oread -- one block north of the Kansas Union
- SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX · SEX
SUDENTI UNION ACTIVITÉ
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
SUA
SUA
CALL 864-SHOW
MOVIES MOVIES
CALL 864-SHOW
THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN
SUASUA MOVIES MOVIES
SINCE 1968
Double Indemnity
Law of DESIRE
a film by Almodóns
RKP-7523418
Tues., Mar. 9, at 7:00 PM WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
Joyously sleazy!
Wed., Mar. 10, at 7:00 PM and Thurs., Mar. 11, at 7:00 PM
Thurs., Mar. 11, at 9:30 PM and Sat., Mar. 13, at 4:00 PM
DENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
ALPACINO SCARFACE
PRODUCED BY MARTIN BREGMAN
WRITTEN BY OLLIVER STONE
DIRECTED BY BRIAN DE PALMA
COMING THIS WEEKEND:
SEX
• SEX
• SEX
• SEX
CAUTION
*Surface is an intraseal film both language and deposition of large audience media*
THE BODYGUARD
MISTER SHOPS $2.50
R
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
200s
IT Employment
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional
Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
all real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes discrimination or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Announcements
100s
工
110 Bus. Personals
Bausch & Lomb Kay-Ban and Vuoret-France
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
99 Mass. 8550411
Watkins Health Center
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon - Fri 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Sat 8 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.
Urgent After hours charge)
Mon - Fri 4:30 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Sat 11:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Sun 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Lease up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $30, 100% Guarantee.
$32-0487
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
120 Announcements
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
ATTN: Social Chairperson
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicid
care, be concerned about someone who is叫
841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
For accurate natal & love companion charts about you & your lover, consult David, astrologer & counselor. 843-3004
LoveSTAR Attraction
for anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-294-2546
**MIDAY LECAP**
$14.95 Adult Video Sale
910-Avail Rd.
Wilmington, DE 11851
Haskell, K1-7504
H & J
Call for Party Favors
865-0974
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Lose 30 lb.
in 30 days!
Jeunique's
One Day Diet
Mary Weason
PDL Bldg 177
658-262-8701
x15-462-6096
Anyone can stick to a diet for one day when they know they can eat anything they want the next day.
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Live Comedy
Wednesday March 10
Featuring
Wild Man
Dan Ballard
AT
BENCHWARMERS
50 cent draws
suring nreak quad occupancy. Daytona Beach,
room, 2/15/706 F89-7319; room, limited
2/15/706 F89-7319
AIRLINES
Call Today!
for
- Summer travel plans
- Airline tickets home
Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
On-campus location in the Burge Union and 831 Massachusetts.
Maupintour
749-0700
Found: Fierce Stocking cap, Wed at Wescoe, Call &
describe 684-5790
140 Lost & Found
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 9, 1993
9
Last, Peacock feather earring with gold head trim
and black eye band. In Carnival
Crest. 27 If found call 642-8133.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
30 hr position with small design firm. Must be mature, responsible, with good communication Will train. Good advancement potential RIC 424-3922
SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN MICHIGAN
-Counselors
-Office
-Kitchen
-Maintenance
THE BEAUTIFUL COUNTY OF NORWICH
Greenwoods-For Boys
INTERVIEW
Wed., March 10th, 12:30-5:00pm
Thurs., March 11th, 9:00-2:30pm
110 Burge Union
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries
Earn $400 + / week in campers or $4,000 + / mo.
on boating boats Free transportation! Room &
Bathroom! Call 1-256-3456 ext. 4575
电话 1-256-3456 ext. 4575
CAMP COUNSELERS want for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, riding, campfire, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salmon 8110 or more, golf clubs, Seeger, 716 Maple, MD, II, 698-746-2444
Child Care. Caring person wanted to provide child care in our home for our son and daughter, ages 2-4. Located in Alvamar area. Flexible daytime hours. Ability to speak Spanish. No required education.
Children's counseling, instructors, hese people, bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen help, nannies/housekeeper, maintenance person for Mountain Summer Camp, Box 71, Boulder CO.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
915 W. 24TH 749-5750
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
CITY OF LAWRENCE
The City is accepting applications for all summer part and full-time positions. Positions are avail able in the following outfitters:
OUTDOOR DAY PROGRAM-SpecialISTS
SPORTS INSTRUCTORS
PLAYING GAMES
MUNICIPAL POOL
SPECIAL POPULATIONS PROGRAM
CONSTRUCTION
MAINTENANCE AND LABORER
INSPECTIONS
Cooks aids 7/30-10 pm. Weekdays. Ability to
eat children 10 rep m. Weekdays. Ability to
at least cook 15 prep 31 Maine 4 cheese.
Cherical/Word Processing. Flex 12 hrs. now & thru summer. 3.3 GPa & KSres. Exper w/ Microsoft Word for Windows. Mem-Ex Span Co. 308-5400.
jugging, kissing, singing, scuba diving, rollerblading, ropes, sailboarding, sailing, scuba tennis, track, wateraikers, weights, snorkeling, diving, bakeware, cooks, breads, maintenance nurses, secretaries. Men call or write: Camp Winadu. 5 Glen Lain, Manmarneck, N - Y 10644 81438-9863. Women Call Jennifer Whelan at 841-378-2232.
staff children's camps/northeast top salary, rm/bd laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities; archery, base jumping, field hockey, football, golf, gymnastics, hockey, horseback ride-hunt seat, juggling, karate, lacrosse nature, photography, dance, theater.
Cruise line entry level on board landside positions available. Summer or year round, great pay.
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old and have a good driving record. We will train you for a Commercial Driver License. 84-95-04, yy.300 m. NF. M.E.F.
Evening wait person(s) wanted. Chinese restaurant Experience required. Minimal knowledge of Lawrence areas. Must be dependable, hard working. Apply Peking Restaurant. Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school holidays. Tractor Truck necessary. cattle and maintenance preferred. Resume to Wakaura Partners, P.O. Box 1761. Lawrence KS 6044.
Helped wanked 1 a.m. - 10am F- $3.00 per hour to assist stroke patient. Call 5 am - 8pm 943-8530
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make £2,000 +
per month in Japan or conversational
room in Japan and JAPAN
room and board + other benefits. No previous
work experience required. For pro-
fessional jobs visit lw-119-603-126-146 jv7565.
$$$
Spring Break Party Cash!
New Donors earn $25 for 1st 2 plasma donations in 1 week Return donors earn up to $135 per month!
month!
749-5750
Laboratory Clean (Up Position
Located on Building 2. Few four-
hours a day (Flexible hours) and five days a week.
Located in Kelowna City, Kanus. Be able to work
days and nights in the city. Weekends are mandatory. 6:25 per hour.
Days are mandatory. 8:30 per hour.
Call Joanne in (913) 345-4800. Line up your job now. We are current,
in May.
Line up your summer job now. We are currently offering us a full-time position. Only drug free, nonsmoking need apply. Call 913-528-6326. Niche Combining Inc. Manual lashers daily 7-3am m.-P. Mowers Building Inc. Automotive daily 7-3am m.-P.
MARKETING INTERNSHIP Part time now- time this summer. New progressive Printing Co wants a amateur self-seller for commissioned jobs. Apply in persons, 61 Vermont, 8:30 to 34:0 M-F.
816 W 24th
Models needed pro. $175/300-day & TV/PM!
extra $175/200-day. No exp required. 941-9099
Nationally positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii and Texas. Round great Paul. 623-643-8900 or 623-643-8900
NEEDED 100 people to lose weight NO. WILL POWER NEEDED. New brand, new patented, 100% natural, 100% guaranteed, Dr. recompens, 303/778-3834
First time secretarial position. Must have Macintosh Microsoft Word processing experience. Position available from May. 1 to June 16. Hours are 8:00-10:00 Tues. & Thurs. noon to 3:00 Wed. plus additional days as needed. Send resume to RS, 3320 Clinton Parkway Ct., Lawnwood R, KS9 6047
60417 employed mom needs someone to care for 13 month old child in my home weekday afternoons. Must be a Christian, willing to work flexible hours, and have references. Please call 865-4040 for information.
SPORTS OFFICIAL NEEDED. ONE interested in umpiring youth baseball/softball or adult softball for Lawrence Parks & Reception Department. Contact Bob Stoll at 874-123-1121
Tennis jobs=summer children's camps=northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women can nannier Wheeler #481-6400. Men call or phone: 323-3765, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 10543 813-3983.
Waterfront Jobs WSJ summer children in camp-morn-the men and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterskiing or trick skis and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Men call or write. Camp Winda. 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, NY. Camp Winda. Wheeler at 841-6900.
Weekend air talent for KLWN and KLDR. Pror express experience for P.D.G. P. exp. LTD, RS 6900 EOE.
Energetic, enthusiastic person needed to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time during school year, full-time during summer vacations. Mail resume to Trinity Lutheran Church, 1245 Newhampure, Lawrence, RS 60431. Deadline 03-11-14.
225 Professional Services
CC Deskbook Publishing Hennes. Cover Letters.
Brochures, Flyers, Term Paper, Newsletters.
*FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial
Assistance to EMSS or Written to EMSS O. P. Box 3245, KG 9069
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
Need person, Mon. Wed & Fri. mornings. Full-time in summer. Showing apts. answering phones & general office work. Must be a Kansas resident, and must have been admitted to a meal at K U. Call 841-6043. M-F 9:30-5:30.
Operations manager at St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center. Duties include supervising staff, monitoring the budget and the annual fund, and overseeing all administrative operations of the center. Send resume to St. Lawrence Committee St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Cristiway Road, Lawrence KS 60444
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
HAFTERCOURT
Fake ID & alcohol offences
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Promo Photos and Headshots. B&W Darkroom Fast Service. Firstlight Photography. #r414-4234
Your RESUME beautifully typeset for $29
A distinctive resume can make all
An attractive resume can make a
difference in the job you want
Leave message for Kelly @ 843-7396
235 Typing Services
AffORDABLE TYPEING & EDITING. Honors
English Grad. will grade & edit any paper 24 hrs.
a day. Tutoring near Near campus. Lowest rates in
town. 832-1296
$1/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check
risk jobs.iph Call 789-4648
Experting typhoon by experienced secretary IBMC Corporal Eric Trappe, Mastilja Matlia 841210 East Lawrence, Call Mrs. Mattila 841219
1:der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms text into accurate pages of letters.
Papers due. Accurate, fast word processing High.
quality print $2.00 page. Call JJ @ 832-8792.
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Cor-
lorate ADPTR 841-8638
305 For Sale
7-day round trip airline ticket to exciting South
Southwest Airlines for $150. Leave March 29,
Must be 18 years old.
May 6, May 13, May 19, May 26
Word processing, applications, term papers,
dissertations, resumes. Edging, computation, rush.
Spreadsheets.
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
papers. Call Pam at 841-871-1977 Whenever
Call Pam at 841-871-1977 Whenever
Airline credit worth $200. Selling for $150. No Restrictions. Call Trina 794-4796.
300s Merchandise
IBM Compatible 86X SK, 79M MB hard drive, 3.5 & 5.25 floppy drives, mouse, keyboard, VGA monitor, Panasonic printer, 240M band modem, envelop.cord.13000 B/O, Call 865-8669
For Sale New 92 Specialized Hard Rock Sport
many extra's Great price: 842-5083
Computers: New and Used
P. C. Compatibles
P. C. Source 832-1126
spring Break trip to Texas, Kansas and New Mexico, and will participate in the International Student Services, 2强4-8176 CABLE DESCHAMBLEBS! Fight high costs with this盟盟 build your student needs. Send $10 for complete manual, plans, and parts list to Advance Industries, P.O. Box 34784, Corporation
excavation equipment
LXI Home stereo System. In our cabin with 2 speakers AM/FM stereo, cassette, turntable, CD
HVAC Realistic HVAC for $80 165-167 leave message
Mountain bike. Specialized hard rock. $150. Dewalt woodcut finish. BS, Call. Bax 842-760-3960.
Must sell 1886 Ford LTD. RSD P. S.W. $1200
OBo. Call 841-587 after 10 p.m.
Used Book Sale. March 12-14 Metcalf School
American Association of University Women's
Association
Need a Little Sunshine
The Ete. has new display of handmade pendants, crystals and precious stones.
Assorted Bear fetishes.
$ 59-$64.99
$ 89
Need a little Sunshine?
340 Auto Sales
Wedding Dress, size 10, Alfred Angelo as seen in Benjay Maynard $499. + Shoulder length $40.
86 Sibaru DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/FM Cass
Winter car, winter PC, Call 842-324 Leave
1980 4-door hatchback Nissan Datsun 510
/mt/make/TAPC, A/C Good condition $500 - 823 862
1980 Citation for sale. Runs well, $75 O.B.O. Contact Travis at 79-6506
360 Miscellaneous
STUDENTS why pay retail for travel? Wholesale travel research center offers opportunity to save $$$ Guaranteed savings. No nimmocks. Great for last minute spring Breakers. Larry at Laird 620-781-9333.
370 Want to Buy
Vanted: Tickets to Soul Asylum concert. Call Jake
65-2469
400s Real Estate
1601 NAISMH 8 & 4 B.2 Bath. Lg. rooms.
micro, etc. Bedrooms laundry,
dryers, large leafes. 1-669-787
BIR Pur apt. available now. New paint + mini
brushes 1 vs ruler 843-4217
Apt. Sub-lease thru July 2, BV很 close to campus Avail Now March rent free 749-3595
41dhrm. Aqt.-summer subuserds needed, Orchard Corners-installed, 2ndh, bus, pool laundry, Call
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apts. for August, but if you can travel upstate, the best option is nearby unfurnished apts, in the new buildings at West Hill Apts 1008 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NQ PETS: 841-380 or -360.
For rent. April 1 - August 1 1/2 month free, no
deposit. 2 bnb. 354 Ohio #1. call 748-7925
Avail Now "Spacious I Br" Clase to campus Low
Pricing New! HD w cable $d, $30.
Detroit pets OK $7, 169.
FREE CASE OF BEER when you sublease for the
campaign (headgear). Call Chris at 823-481-6700.
Boardwalk
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444
House for rent 2b dm lease, no pets 842-4603
Mackenzie Packe now loading for Aug. 1, 3/19
kitchen & bathroom set, microwave & dryer, all kitchen appl. 2 decks or patio patio. Wet insulated, energy effi
HeyRU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apartments is now leaving SUNY. He is being offered Limited Entry, Heat & Water paid, pool, spa, jacuzzi, & spa, garage parked. 385 Rainbow, CIS - NC 9561. Across
must sublease immediately 2 bdrm. $60 very low
til central heat/air. Please call 443-608-608.
Open 6 days a week for your convenience
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Nice, quiet 38K duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A, gas, heat. 1/2' BA, W/D hookups, garage. O/C no pets. References $450/mo. 843-2888.
- on bus route
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing.
Mon-Pri-Fri for appt. 843-6446.
*2 bedroom (1&1/2 baths)
-1 bedroom
Bird
843-4754 (call for appt.)
- 3bedroom(2bath laundry facilities
- on-site management
West Hills APARTMENTS
One BH. ApL, near campus. Avail. June 1. Hardwood floors. $290, 814-5797
Spacious apts.-furnished and unfurnished
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
- 1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
2111 Kasold843-4300
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for June or August
$305 to $365 per month
2 bedrooms, 950 sq ft
and unfurnished
1 bedrooms 735 sq ft
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
GREAT LOCATION-Near campus
OPENHOUSE
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
$375 to $450 per month WATERPAIDONALLAPTS.
(or other times w/appr.)
Plan Early. One or two female, non-smoker needs
plan. Poor lunch, on bus route 842; not
utilized. Poor lunch, on bus route 842; not
utilized.
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for indo or aod.
This ad for original buildings only
WATERPAIDONALLAPTS.
EAT LOCATION: Near camouf
SWAN
Open Daily 1-5p.m. Graystone Apts. & Introducing New Eagle Apts.
Swan Management
·Graystone
·1-2-3 bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas, heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $340, $365
- 2 bedroom $460, $470
- 3 bedroom $525, $585
office
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
Mon. Wed. & Fri. 12:00 - 2:00p.m.
Thu. 6:00 - 8:00p.m.
Please call Kelly for appt.
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE. BEACH
PRONT. OWNER DISCARD. Resort
5268
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House. Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 814-0481. Store by 106 Tennessee
24TH & EDDINGHAM
EDDINGHAM PLACE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 br apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
841-5444
Sublease. 3 mo. lease, 1 large bedroom. 2 blocks to KU 841-797 or 865-1524
Two bedrooms available now /A/C, cable, $25 per
mon, on bus route. BUS 861-0356.
SUMMER $3.0LEASE: Spacious 2 bedroom Apartment on bus route, close to campus and downtown. Designated quiet bldg. A great deal at $395 mo. Call 822-248.
- On KU Bus Route with 4 stops on Property
* 2 Laundry Rooms
* Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
We are now accept
MASTERCRAFT
Park25
mind!
Go to...
FURNISHED
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Studios, 1,2,2+3 & 4 bdrm
apts ... designed with you in
mind!
Campus Place-841-1429 14451 louisiana
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place-841-1212
411 B Mead
Regents Court-749-0445
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
MASTERCRAFT
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th& Arkansas
--quiet, mature, female roommate wanted for 2 bdm. Spanish Crust Apartments. Sublease from April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 + /£ utilities. Call 842-4244.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Naismith Place
- 28HR from 9:35
* Jacuzzi massage
* Jacuzzi massage
* private bachelors/Palos
* Pd cable TV/phones
* On-site management
* On-site management
Outside & Shaft Bd. C 81-145 8
5:15pm Mint 10-25a
Or Call Appointments
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I to share open imac. 3 BR townhouse in summer.
Phone: (817) 269-5490. Plan no:
Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur, Fri-Sun. Jon, 665-649-6990.
1 Bdrm in 4 Bdmr, 2 Bath, $193 + util. Buft stop Apple Lake Larch Corner Chambers. Call 845-382-6911
How to schedule an ad:
1963-64 National contract for sale. VA of a double room available. Male persons only. 614-827-6277 or 614-827-5068.
Need roommate June & July. Spacious townhouse
Near campus. Own room. $150/month / utilities
$45/month.
Female roommate wanted for 1 bdm & 8 bdm
Roommate needed: Close to campa
Hunt negotiable. Call 40-2498
Large 48R, 2BA furn. loft, apt. Orchard Corners.
Avail ASAP. No dep. neq. leave Mar.-Aug. $205
+/uilt, 3 great rooms, private Mar., +more fun than any form. $855-1199
Roommate needed to share furnished 4 bdrm apartments and utilities, on bin route. Looking for someone to help with cleaning duties.
Roommate needed to share furnished 4 dbrm
apartment ; utilities, or bus. route. Looking for
housemate in Eastchester.
commute Wanted NOW! $200/mo, water, gas,
and cable paid. Call Brian at 842-5233
- in person: 1199 Sharper Flint
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Staffer FliHi Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60044
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 ForWorks, Inc. (Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate)
J & J
STOCKYARDS
3-9
STOCKYARDS
Only Claire, with her oversized brain, wore an expression of concern.
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10
Tuesday, March 9, 1993
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ELAINE KIM PROFESSOR OF ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES AT UC-BERKELEY "A Korean American Perspective of the L.A. 'Riots'"
IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE ASIAN AMERICAN FESTIVAL
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Radon found in local houses
Group hopes home test kits reduce deaths
By Vicki Bode
The American Lung Association of Kansas is aiming to reduce the threat of radon, an invisible gas in buildings that is the second leading cause of lung cancer.
Kansan staff write
tung course. The association began selling home radon test kits in February in an attempt to lower the number of deaths caused by radon, said Jayne Garcia, program director at the association.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, radon causes 20,000 deaths a year and exists in 30 percent of the homes in Kansas.
able in Kansas." Garcia said.
"We started selling the radon test kits because they are not readily avail-
Kahlid Kaloud, radiation control inspector at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said that older homes, such as those in the Oread neighborhood, were more vulnerable to radon because they often had old, cracked basements.
Radon is an invisible, odorless, colorless radioactive gas found in soils and rocks. It leaks into homes through cracks in concrete floors and walls and dirt floors.
Houses that have pump pumps, which drain water out of basements, also allow radon to enter homes, Kalou said.
Peter Berendsen, senior scientist at Kansas Geological Survey, said that radon was a complicated gas to study.
"There haven't been enough studies done to determine where radon is prevalent," Berendsen said. "We can be very general in studying it."
Radon is created through the natural breakdown, or radioactive decay, of uranium, he said. The EFA tested rocks in Kansas to determine levels of
uranium, which could potentially turn into radon.
The confidential EPA study does not breakdown the levels by individual homes but by zip codes.
"We need to know the exact homes that have radon to be able to accurately study it," Berendens said. "But we know that radon is not a natural disaster."
Mike Russell, KU environmental health safety officer, said that radon could be found everywhere in the United States but that there was no pattern as to where the high levels would be found.
Radon does not affect buildings that are constructed correctly, he said.
"Three houses that are next to each other can be tested for radon and one house could have high levels of radon and the others could have low levels," Russell said.
"If the building is not constructed tight then radon can leak in," he said. "If there are holes in the concrete basement that is a problem."
Commission lobbies in Washington
$8 million in federal financing sought for building of parkway
By Todd Selfert
Kansen staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Three Lawrence city commissioners traveled to Washington, D.C., this week for the National League of Cities Conference in hopes of gaining $8 million in federal funding for building the Eastern Parkway.
The parkway would run northwest from the intersection of Kansas Highway 10 and Noria Road and would connect with Seventh Street in Old North Lawrence.
ing for building the Executive Branch. John Nalbandian, vice mayor, said he, Bob Schumun and Bob Schulte, mayor, were lobbying U.S. representatives and senators for money to pay for construction of the parkway. Mike Wildgen, city manager, also made the trio
with Seventh Street. "This is a chance for elected officials to get together and have people in Washington hear what's going on in our communities," Nalbandian said from the Capitol. "We're talking primarily about the Eastern Parkway because it is a concern for our community. We will need some help
ed. Lawrence voters approved a bond issue worth $4 million in November 1990 that helped start planning for the parkway.
ony project. Dave Corliss, assistant city manager, said the parkway, which was in the engineering phase, would help ease traffic problems in Lawrence.
Nabandian said the state would not assist in financing the project because the parkway was not considered a priority project.
"The project would help facilitate movement," Corliss said. "It would make it easier to get from one side of town to another and free up some traffic on 23rd Street."
"We've made some improvements to Seventh Street already like repaving the existing road," Corliss said.
Corliss said the city already had spent some of its original $4 million in preparation for the project.
already like repaying the charges. Nalbandian said the commissioners would attend a breakfast with Sen. Bob Dole this morning and would return to Lawrence tonight.
"Hopefully, we'll come back with the Eastern Parkway," he said.
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2 SWPs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both under 35, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet men w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down court long walks, movies, talking on the phone, & trying to find any scam to get us rich quick. Call box
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Common abbreviations
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W Women G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
♥ ♥
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
HSWF, 21. Non-Drinker. Looking for unique female friends and gays cure girls ages 20-44 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to close friends with trustworthy people. Box
Female 23 seeks plastic friendship --shopping, movies, get involved on campus. Grad student living in Lawrence. Occasional nights on the town! Just someone to hang out with. Call box 10/1012.
2. You'll place an ad in the lajtak Network section of the Kanan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
**after you ad runs in the Kansan**
you call a free 800-number to listen
to the messages people leave for
you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone). enter the mail-box number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You it be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
V
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Pittsburg State 7-0, Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102,NO.117
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 10, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Five vie for affirmative action post
Committee is interviewing the finalists
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The search committee for KU's new director of affirmative action has narrowed its list of candidates to five finalists.
The committee, which began interviewing the finalists on Feb. 24, will examine its last candidate on March 18.
the names of the candidates were given to the Kansan by a source who did not want to be named. Three of the five candidates, Marion Boenheim Maurice Bryan and Glenda Morris, confirmed that they were candidates. Phyllis Powell, who was interviewed
yesterday by the committee, could not be reached for comment. Tom Berger refused to comment.
Berger refused to comment Jackie McClain, who heads the committee, said there were about 50 applicants for the position. She said she thought that 10 candidates were screened and interviewed by telephone before the finalists were selected.
selected.
The committee first met Sept. 1, about 10 months after the former director, James "Skip" Turner, resigned. Turner resigned after he was put on paid leave by the University Berger succeeded Turner as acting director on Oct. 28, 1991.
The new director will be responsible for monitoring the University's hiring procedures and employment statistics to make sure they comply with federal equal opportunity and affirmative action laws. The office also handles grievance procedures.
McClain said the committee was looking for someone with experience and good credentials who would be
sensitive to minority issues.
"We want someone to create an environment that encourages diversity" she said.
McClain said that she was not concerned that only one candidate was a member of a minority group and that the director did not have to be a minority to do a good job.
A Native-American woman, Roberta Ferron, held the position before Turner, an African American. Two white women held the position before Ferron.
McClain said that women, people who have certain religious preferences, and war veterans, even though they are not ethnic minorities, are classified as minors in affirmative action. Berger is a veteran, Boenheim is a Jewish woman, Bryan is an African American man, and Morris and Powell are women.
The committee will vote on which candidate or candidates they will endorse after the final interview. The
The final five
The finalists for KU's director of affirmative action are:
Tom Berger, acting director of affirmative action at KU.
Motive action at the
western, director of affi-
ficial action and assistant to
the executive vice chancellor at the
University of Mississippi.
Maurice Bryan, director of the Center of Equal Opportunity at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash.
Glenda Morris, director of affirmative action services at California State Polytechnic University in Pomona, Calif.
Phyllis Powell, affirmative action offi ce at Ferris State University in Big Ranches, Mich.
recommendation will go to the Office of Affirmative Action for approval. It then will go to Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, who will make the final decision before the end of the semester.
Drew Kies, JANEAN
Flash of spring
House considers change in liquor law
Some KU students relax on a hill near Clinton Lake. From left, Sarah Hall, Oklahoma City freshman, Monique Bollier and Heather Huston, Praire Village freshmen, Yvette Raphel, Overland Park freshman, and Gail Russell, Topeka freshman, were among those who went outside into spring-like temperatures in the 60s yesterday. Forecasters say the end of the week will be much colder. See the weather forecast, Page 2.
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Beer buyers in Kansas soon may not have to make a special trip to the liquor store to get the "strong stuff."
New legislation in the Kansas House of Representatives would allow grocery and convenience stores in the state to sell beer that contains 5 percent alcohol or less.
Kansas and four other states restrict grocery and convenience store sales to beer that contains 3.2 percent or less alcohol. Liquor stores are restricted to the sale of beer with a greater alcohol percentage than 3.2 percent. All stores may sell non-alcoholic beer, which has 5 percent alcohol or less.
KANSAS
LEGISLATURE
Hearings on the bill began yesterday as supporters of the bill spoke in the Kansas House of Representatives Federal and State Affairs Committee. The bill's supporters said that there was no need for a 3.2 law in Kansas after the drinking age in the state was raised from 18 to 21.
The bill has drawn strong support from the state's grocery and convenience stores, which say they have lost out on a share of the beer market to liquor stores.
"We are hopeful we will regain our part of the market share that we have lost on over the years," said Casey's General Store attorney Robert Alderson. "We want to have a level playing field."
ly purchase beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less.
Much of the discussion during the hearing centered on whether 18 year olds still would be able to sell beer in and convenience stores.
Steven Keamey, a Coastal Mart representative, said that the current restrictions amounted to a "legislatively protected market share."
Alderson assured the committee that his company would not ask the Legislature for permission to sell liquor.
absent from 15 to 23
Before that, 18 year olds could legal-
grocery and convenience stores
State Rep. Kenny Wilk, R-Lansing
said there was nothing to keep an 18 year-old clerk from selling beer to an underaged friend.
In Kansas, 18 year olds can sell beer in grocery and convenience stores, but clerks must be 21 to sell alcohol in liquor stores.
The committee heard testimony from several of the bill's proponents that 40 to 45 percent of liquor stores' sales were beer sales. Already, they said, they have received calls from liquor store owners who are not pleased about losing beer sales to other types of stores.
what we're doing is a really dramatic shift that is going to leave some people out of business," said State Rep. Phil Kline, R-Shawnee.
Opponents of the bill will speak today.
8
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
From left, Aaron Anderson, Johnson freshman, Scott Harms, Omaha, Neb., freshman, and Ben Miller, Cedar Falls, Iowa, graduate student, stand on the Allen Field House court, where they shot their way to free tuition.
Making bucks through baskets
Putting the ball through the hoop pays semester's tuition for three
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
Ben Miller had seen it all before. Miller, Diller Falls, Iowa, graduate student, had already seen the basketball go through the net before his turn at the Naismith Hall Free Tuition Shootout at the women's basketball game against Kansas State on Feb. 28.
A sports psychology major, Miller and a friend used visualization, a technique they had studied, before Miller took the floor. His friend had Miller rehearse the shots in his mind.
Then came Miller's moment: a man, a ball and the basket.
Layup, good. Free throw, good.
Three-pointer, bank shot. Not
pretty, but it counted.
"After I made the three-pointer, I thought, '1 better make this because I'm pretty broke,'" Miller said.
Swish from half court.
Swish Miller was one of three people to earn in-state tuition for a semester during the contest, which takes place during halftimes of the women's home games. Aaron Anderson, Johnson freshman, and Scott Harms, Omaha, Neb., freshman, also made a layup, free throw, three-point shot and a half-court shot in 30 seconds or less to win the prize.
Miller, who played basketball at Division III Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, as an undergraduate, is a graduate teaching assistant in the department of health and physical education and receives a tuition waiver already. He has an alternate plan for some of the money.
"I called my fiance and told her that won and would take $500 and use it on our honeymoon," Miller said.
Anderson and Harms were awarded their checks in a ceremony during the Jayhawks' final home game against Kansas State
Miller is still waiting for the
check, pending confirmation of his victory. Naismith Hall, the event sponsor, has an insurance policy that covers somebody winning. The company requires videotape confirmation and witnesses.
Harms, a trumpet player in the women's basketball pep band, made his shots Dec. 12 at halftime of the Florida Atlantic game. He said he signed up because he thought he had a chance to be selected to shoot.
"Hardly any students go to the games." Harms said.
Shes named He was perfect from the floor until he uncorked the first half-court shot. It came up short.
Then came a desperate race against the clock. Harms reloaded for one last heave.
"I looked up at the clock and saw I had three seconds left," he said. "It looked like a good shot."
He was correct.
Anderson, a varsity kid, just came to the Colorado game on Feb. 5 to watch his friends on the junior varisty rally squel cheer at the women's basketball game. It was his first women's basketball game of the season. He said he was driving by the field house and decided to stop in for a while. He signed up for the shootout as he entered the field house.
Like Harms, Anderson made both the layup and free throw on the first try. He missed the threepointer, but converted the second attempt. With the clock winding down, Anderson ran to the center circle for his only attempt.
"I didn't have any clue how much time was left," he said. "As I stepped on the half-court line, I just turned and drew it."
Bingo.
Budge Anderson had experience with buzzer beaters. In high school, he made a half-court shot before halftime, giving his team the lead.
50 when shot was beaten.
"The one in college, definitely," he said. "This one was worth $900."
INSIDE
Comic books and sports cards are hot — not only as entertainment, but also as an investment. But let the buyer beware: It is a kickable market, so buy for fun. If money should be made, so much the better.
WARNER BROS.
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Graduate student seeks cure for AIDS-related infections
See story, Page 7.
Rv Terrilyn McCormick
Kansan staff writer
tions.
Ayomal Fernando, Sri Lanka graduate student, brought 14 different Sri Lankan plants, normally used as medicinal herbs, to the University of Kauasai for research last August. He said he hoped to find the active ingredients in the plants, extract them and use them for Western medicine.
In a fifth-floor Malot Hall laboratory, the traditional herbal medicine of Sri Lanka and medicine of the United States combine for a possible cure for AIDS-related infections.
Through his research at the University, Fernando has located a tree bark that has an active antifungal ingredient that possibly kill infections resulting from AIDS.
Fernando said that finding a cure for AIDS complications would be very gratifying
"This would help everyone, not just Sri Lankans," he said. "If I found a cure I would be thrilled, to the least." Lester Mitscher, professor of medicinal chemistry and Fernando's adviser, said. "This work is promising, but it takes years for the frustration of this kind of work to be realized." He said that it was rare that a student would still be working on the project in its final stages.
The bark used in Fernando's research is from a Sri Lankan tree that has little value in the Sri Lankan economy.
Fernando said he planned to go back to Sri Lanka in April or May to get a large quantity of the bark, make it into an extract and bring it back to the University for further research.
Brantingham County ARB offers a Western Fernando's research is funded by a grant from the World Laboratory, a Swiss organization that funds a Western education for graduate students in Third World countries. Fernando to learn We.
Also as part of his research, he is learning about the spread of AIDS. He is a member of the KU AIDS Task Force and the Douglas County AIDS Project.
The goal of the exchange is for Fernando to learn Western theories and research techniques and take them back to Sri Lanka for application.
in Sri Lanka for application. "This is very unique in the sense of a scholarship," he said. "The Swiss company provides the money for the research and travel."
Fernando is the first recipient at KU of the World Laboratory scholarship. The World Laboratory paired Fernando with Mitscher because of Mitscher's work. Mitscher was the first to discover another source of the anti-cancer drug taxol in the Himalayan Yew tree.
Kim Buche / KANBA
Ayomai Fernande, Sri Lanka graduate student, works in a Malott Hall laboratory.
Fernando said his match with Mitscher was appropriate. "Mitscher has traveled around the world with his research, so he knows about many different cultures," Fernando said. "It is nice that he understands the culture of my country."
2
Wednesday, March 10.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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ON CAMPUS
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brown bag lunch from 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will hold a University Forum from 11:40 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at ECM, 1204 Broad Ave, Mabel Rice will present "Children's Language Acquisition: Is there a Grammar Gene?" For more information, call 843-4833.
Gay and Lesbian Academic and Staff Advocates will hold a brown bag lunch at noon today in 208 Twente Hall. For more information, call 864-3100.
The department of art history will hold a lecture-demonstration, "The Art of Chinese Painting," by Pan Gongkai, former chairperson of the department of Chinese paintings at Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts in Hangzhou, China; at 2:30 p.m. today at 421 Art and Design Building For more information, call 864-4713.
The Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting for Fulbright and Graduate Direct Exchange Grants at 4 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3742.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Burge
WEATHER
Omaha: 40'/28'
LAWRENCE: 46'/33'
Kansas City: 45'/30'
St. Louis: 47'/36'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 73'/48'
Chicago: 33'/27'
Houston: 77'/54'
Miami: 76'/59'
Minneapolis: 28'/24'
Phoenix: 81'/54'
Salt Lake City: 57'/34'
Seattle: 62'/38'
Wichita: 53'/35'
Tulsa: 59'/42'
WEATHER
Omaha: 40°/28°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 73°/48'
Chicago: 33°/27'
Houston: 77°/54'
Miami: 76°/59'
Minneapolis: 28°/24'
Phoenix: 81°/54'
Salt Lake City: 57°/34'
Seattle: 62°/38'
LAWRENCE: 46°/33°
Kansas City: 45°/30°
St. Louis: 47°/36°
Wichita: 53°/35°
Tulsa: 59°/42°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Mostly sunny with NW winds around 10 mph.
High: 46°
Low: 33°
Mostly cloudy with N winds around 15 mph.
High: 40°
Low: 26°
Much colder.
High: 19°
Low: 9°
Union. For more information, call 843-6250 or 842-6887.
Armchair Generals will meet at 6 p.m. today. For more information, call 864-7118.
KU ENVIRONS will hold a forum about nuclear waste disposal at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Robert Eye, general counsel of the Kansas Department of
Health and Environment, will give the presentation. For more information, call 843-5532
*Watkins Memorial Health Center will hold an eating disorders support group meeting at 7 tonight in the second-floor conference room in Watkins. The topic of discussion will be self image and assertiveness. For more information, call 841-0086.
ON THE RECORD
A student's compact disc player, car stereo, speakers and amplifiers, valued together at $1,300, were taken Monday from a vehicle in the 2400 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage
reported.
was estimated at $500.
A Panasonic video cassette recorder valued at $307 was taken Saturday, Sunday or Monday from the audio visual center on the sixth floor of the Kansas Union. KU police
A white 1987 Toyota pickup valued at $4,000 was taken Monday in the 2300 block of Ridge Court, Lawrence police reported.
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KU Days at JCPenney
Wednesday and Thursday-March 10th and 11th Come in Wednesday or Thursday, show us your KUID and receive
JCPenney
25% Off
Shopping Spree
25% OFF
JCPenney
25% Off
Shopping Spree
On Regular-price* items you purchase. The JCPenney Savings Certificate is good all day Wednesday or Thursday at JCPenney, Lawrence. Pick up your 25% off Shopping Spree Certificate this Wednesday or Thursday with your KUID and Save 25% ALL DAY! Pick up your certificate at the Catalog Desk
*Discount applies only to regular price merchandise and is limited to JCPenney store stock on hand. Not for use on smart value merchandise, catalog merchandise or in combination with any other coupon.
Women's Swimwear Clinic
Saturday March 13th 10am-4pm
*Qualified associates to help fit you with the right suit.
*Free T-shirt with swimwear purchase ($14.99 value).
*Register for Free Beach Bag drawings.
J.C. Penney
25 off
online store jpenny.com
JCPenney
25% off
Shopping Centre
HOURS:
Sun.Noon-5:30pm
Mon.-Sat.9:30-9:00pm
23rd & Ousdahl Lawrence
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
3
BRIEFS
Speech to focus on riots 'impact on Korean-American businesswomen
The effects of the Los Angeles riots on Korean-American businesswomen will be the focus of a talk at 7:30 tonight in the Dyche Hall Auditorium.
Elaine Kim, professor of Asian American studies at the University of California at Berkeley, will be the final speaker of the Asian American Festival.
The festival began March 1 and will continue through Saturday.
KJHK, Kansan recognized by Playboy as among best
Playboy magazine has recognized the University of Kansas' radio station, KJHK, and student newspaper, The University Daily Kansas, as being among the nation's best college radio stations and newspapers in its April 1993 issue.
Mark Healy, editorial assistant with the magazine, said he chose the radio stations and newspapers by conducting interviews with organizations and people who distribute awards.
rapapoy listed LJHK along with KSJS from San Jose State University and WXYC from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
"Iheard a lot of good things about their programming and their talk programs." Healy said.
The magazine listed the Kansan, Indiana Daily Student from Indiana University and The Daily Brain from the University of California at Los Angeles as the top newspapers.
"More than half of the people I talked to suggested the Daily Kansan." Healy said.
Low donor turnout leaves
KU blood drive short of goal
In its first two days, the KU blood drive did not reach its daily goal of 250 donors.
The drive on Monday fell short by 109 donors, said Kathy McDonald, Kansas communications specialist for the American Red Cross.
ist for the American Red Cross. About 130 pints were donated yesterday, said Leah Davis, vice president for campus affairs for the Panhellenic Association. The association is co-sponsoring the drive with several other campus living groups.
The low turnout may give Kansas State University a victory over KU in a donation contest. K-State donated 819 pints in its blood drive last week.
Anyone older than 17 who weighs more than 110 pounds and is in good health may donate blood today and tomorrow. No appointments are necessary. The drive ends tomorrow.
Compiled by Kansan staff writers Jess DeHaven and Todd Seifert.
A worker rolls paint on a street.
Paul Kotz/ KANSAN
Sticky situation
Proposal to merge departments shelved
Wayne Hathaway, facilities operations employee, applies an adhesive to the asphalt at Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road. Hathaway worked yesterday to prepare the asphalt for a new crosswalk.
Psychology programs will remain separate
Kansan staff writer
By Dan England
David Shulenburger, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, Monday withdrew a recommendation to merge two psychology departments.
The recommendation, a result of program review, proposed a merger of the department of educational psychology in the School of Education with the department of counseling psychology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The merger was proposed as a way to save costs by eliminating the chairperson of one of the departments.
Shulenburger said yesterday that he met with the administrative council of the departments and informed them of the withdrawal Monday. He said he based his decision on faculty protest during a Feb. 24 public hearing. The hearing gave students and faculty the chance to speak for or against the proposed merger.
Nona Tollefson, head of the educational psychology department and a member of the hearing committee, announced the withdrawal yesterday at the second public hearing.
"It became apparent throughout the hearing most of the faculty didn't believe the merger would serve them well," Shulenburger said.
Despite the announcement, Richard Simpson, head of the committee, said it would present a recommendation based on the hearings to the University Senate Executive Committee.
PROGRAM REVIEW
One of the complaints from faculty members in the School of Education was that the school was already in the process of reorganization, and that the merger interfered with it.
smutenburger said he asked the school to look at broader recommendations, and to present a report to the new dean of education for approval by the end of September. Ed Meyen, former dean of education, left the department when he became executive vice chancellor in July 1992
Richard Whelan, interim dean of education, said the school would continue to study ways to reorganize in order to save money. He said a committee that was studying the reorganization before the proposed merger would be reformed.
Whelan said that more proposals of departmental mergers within the school probably would be generated by the study.
"They are one of the more effective ways to save costs," he said.
Edward Heck, professor of counseling psychology, spoke out against the merger in the first hearing and said yesterday he was relieved that the proposal for the merger was dropped because there were too many unanswered questions about it.
Service keeps up with students
"I really felt that the merger should have been thought through," Heck said.
Bv Jess DeHaven
Kansan staff writer
Contacting busy students when an emergency arises is never easy, but for non-traditional students with families and jobs, being unavailable can be a big problem.
can be a big problem.
OAKS — Non-traditional Student Organization has begun a message service this semester to help track down students when they are on campus and problems arise concerning children or a spouse.
Because the OAKS office is not always staffed, emergency calls about a serious illness or death
"Once you come up here and you're with 26,000 other students, you're invisible," said Gerry Vernon, Lawrence senior and OAKS treasurer. "When there are problems, there needs to be some way to get in touch with us."
Students sign up for the service in the OAKS office in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union. The students must leave copies of their schedules and sign a liability waiver. This allows members of the organization to find students who receive messages.
can be directed to the Student Assistance Center.
Randy Holmes, Lawrence senior and OAKS president, said the service was a response to requests from members of the organization.
"This is our first try and we'll have to see what works and what doesn't," he said. "So far though, things are going well."
who are Ronnie Bryant, Chanute sophomore, said many people had not signed up because they were not aware of the service.
"Many of us are friends and we hang out together, so naturally we know how to get in touch with each other," he said. "It's the people who aren't as involved that we want to reach."
"The more we looked into it, the more people got interested," he said.
vernon said that the service had been used once this semester, to reach a parent whose child was sick, and that things had gone smoothly.
"We'd like to see other organizations on campus start a service like this," he said. "There are a lot of students who need this service, and we can't handle them all."
Halls to open over breaks
Kansan staff report
Students living in residence halls who do not have anywhere to go during semester breaks will have a new option when they fill out their 1993-1994 housing contract.
The department of student housing said Monday that it would give students the option of living in either Lewis or Templin halls from the beginning of the fall semester until finals were over in May. The 10-month continuous occupancy plan will include housing during Thanksgiving, winter and spring breaks.
"It will just be a guaranteed place to stay," said Ken Stoner, director of student housing. "Students will be able to plan with the security of knowing some place will be open over break."
Historically, McCollum Hall has
neen offered to students during semester breaks, but has not received a high turnout, Stoner said. Many students were reluctant to sign up in fear that the hall would not open because of lack of participation.
"Some students told us that if we announced it earlier, more people would sign up," he said. "This might change the patterns and it might make it a feasible option."
Students wanting to live in the residence halls during the breaks will not have to pay any additional costs for the next academic year because the option will be in its testing stage. Stoner said.
Residents of halls other than Lewis or Templin who need a place to stay will be able to pay a nightly rate during the breaks depending on available space. The rate has not been determined.
If she says, "No" it's rape.
Daily Re-affirmation
Sponsored by:
Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
The Office of Student Life
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
I do not seek to escape from life, but turn to the indwelling good spirit to gain new inspiration and guidance of the good spirit within me.
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
SCOUTS
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS
Now Leasing Winter & Spring Newly Redecorated Units Air conditioning & Pool Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
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THE WORLD OF THE GODS
Intramural
WRESTLING TOURNAMENT
The weight will follow NCAA standards All participants must weigh-in on Mon, March 1 5th between 8 30-4 00pm. Report to room 208 Robinson There will be a Mandatory safety clinic on Tuesday, March 1 6th beginning @ 5 30pm in 210&211 Robinson Room 207 Robinson will be available for practice on Thursday, March 11th & Friday, March 12 form 7 00pm to pm
NATURAL WAY
ENTRYFEE
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ENTRYDEADLINE:
WED., MARCH 10'93
5:00PM
GREEK & OPEN DIVISIONS Sponsored by KU Recreation Services 208 Robinson or call 864-3546
DOS HOMBRES
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Now Accepting Fall 1992 Receipts For a 7% Rebate!
Bring in your KUBS receipts from cash or check purchases, and your KU student I.D., to the Customer Service counter of the Kansas or Burge Union stores.
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Redemption period ends 6/23/93
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
BIG DADDY'S
Sun &
Mon 3 doz. wings & pitcher of beer $10
Tue $1 Big Daddy Beers
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Wed 25¢ Draws
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925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center 749-4748
4
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Service program offers college payment option
President Bill Clinton has proposed a national service program for college students to help them pay for college. If acted upon, the plan would let students do community work to pay for their education.
Students would have the option of working before attending college or go to school and then work off the money already spent. The program matches college students with public service jobs in areas of pollution control, education, working with the elderly and homeless, law enforcement and many other positions.
The program offers many the opportunity to get a college education that they could not otherwise afford. It would also be a great boost to our government's public service. The program directly addresses students' fears of increasing tuition and about getting a job right out of college. It will give the students who are involved hands-on experience in the public service sector. The program will be a great option for those who choose to participate.
The cost of the program and the specifics have been offered to Congress as part of Clinton's economic package. The design for a pilot program this summer involves 1,000 students with an estimated cost of $15 million.
The national service program as a whole will be presented to Congress in a separate package. The cost of $389 million outlined in the package would cover an estimated 25,000 students' full-time tuition. The program is expected to expand and cover 100,000 students by 1997.
When the cost and benefits of this program are reviewed, a few things need to be remembered. First, it is not being presented to cure the current financial aid program's ills. Second, it is not a solution to the problem of students defaulting on student loans. It is a good idea for what it claims to accomplish: to give students the option of community service in exchange for a college education.
Congress also needs to make sure that the purpose of the program is not blurred and the public and students know for what they are paying. If passed, this program would be one accomplishment that insures that a college education would be available to all citizens, no matter their economic standing.
JOLINDA MATTHEWS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Clinton's deficit plan gets praise, criticism
My, but the long knives were out for President Bill Clinton and his economic plan this past week. Thank goodness the knife-wielders mostly stabbed themselves.
Roused from 12 years of somelon timidity, George Will and friends dusted on their verbal swords and took swing after snootly swing at Clinton. Isn't strange. From the beginning of Ronald Reagan's presidency to the end of George Bush's, the federal deficit grew from $40 billion a year to $340 billion — an 850 percent increase. Now comes a Democrat who proposes to reduce the deficit in the next four years by at least $80 billion a year, and he's skinned alive for not doing enough.
Not all criticism of Clinton's plan was undeserved, but there were clear differences between criticism aimed at improving the plan and criticism that simply dumped on it. People like Paul Tsongas subjected the details of the program to cogent criticism while praising Clinton's basic thrust. Many average U.S. citizens did
likewise. They expressed a willingness to sacrifice through higher taxes but worried that Congress and Clinton would not follow through with spending cuts ...
Clinton and Congress seem to have heard those concerns. They have now rejiggered the schedule so Congress will vote on the spending cuts before it votes on Clinton's tax increases or economic stimulus program. Clinton has expressed an openness to further budget trimming, and Democrats are working to develop additional votes for his administration.
Unlike Ronald Reagan and George Bush, Clinton has offered the outline of a coherent deficit-reduction program and is providing the leadership needed to make it work. Critics from the order of the long knives should swallow their swords or fall on them—and let the rest of the nation get on with the serious work of ensuring that Clinton's program succeeds.
Star Tribune Minneapolis
ECONOMY
READY?
5...4...3...
STIMULUS PLAN
TOLES
UNIVERSAL PRESS SYND.
3 © 1993 THE BUFFALO NEWS
IT'S WORKING ALREADY!
Clinton's economic plan creates new definitions
You don't have to be a Harvard economist to maintain a budget. Most people have one. Some use a simple notebook. Others punch numbers into a home computer. And there are those who keep the figures in their heads.
Whatever method is used, it's a simple enough process. You look at your paycheck, and it tells you how much is coming in.
Then you total your expenses, which tells you how much is going out.
You subtract the expenses from the paycheck. If anything remains, you're ahead of the game, and you can buy something, save, invest or whoop it
If you break even, you've kept the wolf from the door for another week. But if more goes out than comes in, you can have a problem.
To solve the problem, you have to either spend less, earn more, borrow, steal or become a deadbeat.
They claim to understand, but to the uneducated eye, it often appears that they don't. Or if they do, they're in a contest to see how thoroughly they can confuse each other and the rest of us. And if that's what they're trying to do, they're succeeding.
The traditional budget process is so simple. In fact, even a wino panhandler understands it. He knows that to maintain his lifestyle, he has to mooch enough money for a bottle of skullcopper, a bite to eat and maybe the price of a flophop cot.
COLUMNIST
So why doesn't the president of the United States, with all of his brainy economic advisers, understand it? Or the 435 members of Congress, with their thousands of staffs?
MIKE
ROYKO
Clinton introduced his economic program. Since then, the Republicans in Congress said his numbers made no sense and that he was spending more, taxing more and borrowing more than he admits to.
Of course, that is to be expected from Republicans. In their new role as the loyal opposition, they are expected to crab, sneer and back-stab. It is part of our great political tradition.
But even Clinton's own people can not seem to agree on how much is coming in and where it is coming from or how much is going out and where it is going. Every time one of his bright boys pops up on a television show we get a new set of numbers. The figures can even change between the beginning of the show and the sign-off.
Does it have to be so confusing?
True, we're talking billions, which isn't much change, although in Congress the mention of anything less than a billion brings on yawns.
It's been a while since President Bill
But years ago, the federal bookkeepers hunched over thick ledgers scratching in numbers with ink-dipped pens. And they managed to come up with understandable figures. Later, the clunking additions were considered a great leap forward.
bureaucrats using ink pens or adding machines. So what has happened? We have more bureaucrats, and we're more confused.
Now government is stocked with giant computers. These are being used to track a vast key of thousands of
In minutes, the computers can do the work of thousands of mathematicians and CPAs, but what is the result? We still can't get straight answers.
Or it might be that the numbers aren't the source of the confusion. The problem could be the new happy-speak language that Clinton has brought to economics. Taxes have become "contributions." Spending has become "investing."
But my favorite Clinton-speak is the new definition of rich, which my dictionary says means "possessing great material wealth."
The way Clinton defines the word for contribution-gathering purposes, a deputy fire chief in Chicago, with a wife who teaches in the public schools, could now be considered "tich."
It used to be that old rich meant fifth-generation millionaires living the good life off the family fortune.
Old rich suddenly means any geezer in Florida who mistakenly thought he was being prudent and self-reliant when he stashed something for his old age. The rascal will have to be careful not to find and sell too many lost golf balls or he might jump into the super-rich bracket.
Yes, it will all very confusing right now. But when Congress takes over the budget process, maybe some of the befuddlement will go away.
sure it will. And Madonna will enter a convent.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
barment of a lawyer and his small, hate-promoting gang of fanatics worthy of front-page coverage? We thought the front page was traditionally reserved for important local and national happenings, not sensationalistic features.
Second, the headline was a treastry. These children are not on the line for God! They are on the line for hatred, bigotry, fear and intolerance. All things that Christ presumably preached against.
■ Debra L. Stang
Lawrence
■ Edie Kelly
Lawrence
■ Sylvie Rueff
Lawrence
■ Sylvia Stone
Lawrence
■ Carol Rasor
Lawrence
First of all, since when has the dis
We can't believe that the Kansan actually put a story about Fred Phelps and his grandchildren on the front page of the paper. And worse, the headline read: "Children on the Line for God!"
Kansan's coverage of Phelps is biased; slanted to readers
ANDREW
GILMAN
Recruiters for groups forget that religion is personal
Who are these people anyway?
They're everywhere. They prey on the innocent or maybe just the pathetic, like me. I'm talking about the individuals on campus who recruit for their religious groups. If not well informed of these people, one could be quite intimidated.
I'm not talking about different booths setup in the Kansas Union, or the like, just the individuals who feel that it is their duty to make conversation with anyone they please. I don't know who teaches these people communication skills or what groups they represent, but the methods they use never cease to amaze me.
First, in my experience I've noticed that they are always walking in the same direction as me. Coincidence" I don't think so. Next comes an undying series of questions: name, year, major, where I live, marital status, grade point average, felony record, etc... Usually I become leery at this point. Why would anyone really care to know this much information about me? I have no idea.
"Oh,not so good,actually."
Further, I've noticed they agree with everything I say. They ask, "So do you play sports?"
STAFF COLUMNIST
"No, I just write for the newspaper." "Really, I never played any sports either," they reply. "How are your grades?"
00
"Really, I never did that well either," they say.
After a while, this dialogue becomes somewhat tiresome. Besides, I feel like I've played a horrible game of Twenty Questions. Usually this third degree leads to the inevitable. "Would you like to come to a meeting of (fill in the blank with your favorite religious activity) at 7 tonight?"
An answer of "no thanks" is not accepted. Usually this answer is an invitation for more questions. "What do you have to lose? It's only 30 minutes. Isn't it worth to you?"
it's true that each person would probably answer differently, but when all these questions come at once, it can be a situation that is rather uncomfortable.
I understand the need for some groups to attract new members, but by accosting innocent individuals the success rate is just not going to be that high. Apparently they believe in the element of surprise. I feel invaded each time this happens. I realize this is a country where we have the right to free speech, but at the same time, I also have the right not to speak. These people take it personally if you don't speak to them, and it's essentially impossible not to say anything unless you're wearing a no soliciting sign around your neck.
Maybe we are going to "hell in a hand basket" but being told this by a total stranger doesn't make me want to go to the meeting. In fact, it downright depresses me to attract people, maybe something a little more upbeat would be successful. Do you want to wake up in the Welcome tonight and watch 'Welcome Back Kotter' reuns?' To me, this would seem more likely to work.
Religion is an important issue as well as a personal one. Not everyone chooses to participate, and that's their right. Let's keep religion a voluntary issue, and let the people who have the questions ask them.
Andrew Gilman is a Norman, Oklah, soophore majoring in English.
KANSANSTAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET. Technology coordinator
Electronics Justin Knupp
Asst. Managing Monique Guislaim
News David Mitchell
Editorial Stephen Marrino
Campus KC Trauner
Sports David Mitchell
Photos Mark Rowlands
Features Lynne McAdobe
Graphics Dan Schauer
Tiffany Laash Hurt
Assistant Editors
Associate, Editorial Chris Moeser
Associate, Campus Joe Hander
Assist. Campus Lawrence Cunningham
Assist. Campus Stacy Morford
David Bankooki
Vicki Bode Mark Button
Jess Delavan Matt Howey
Matt Doyle Dan England
Ben Drive Frank McClane
Will Lewis Brady Pruseau
Matt Cornick
Jim Reece Brett Rigs
Todd Selfert Blake Spurrey
Jay Williams Ezra Wolfe
Copy Chiefs
Scott Anderson Shelly Solon
Copy Editors
Heather Anderson Aaron Baker
J. Bair, Christine Estrada
John Paul Fogel Kristaf Foger
Kevin Furlong Katie Greenwald
Karon Hadley Jon Hunter
Tilary Lasker Hart Chris Jenson
Nikolas Nastasen Christine Laue
Allison Uppert Tim Marks
Stacy Morford Muneen Hassan
Tracy Richie Coney Shepun
Julie Wasson Jay Willams
Photographers
Andrew Amone Jason Auid
Kim Buche Kip Chin
Richard Daviel Kathy Discolso
Douglas Hesse Jason Hyman
Renee Knebeber Paul Kolt
Irene Lanier Rachel Thompson
Graphics Artist
Dave Campbell Andrew Hodges
Katherine Mawlever Derek Kolen
Designer
Erin Fogarty Katherine Mawlever
Derek Nolen Sean Tevls
Julie Wasson News Clark
Stephany Kimball
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
BILL THOMAS
Production
PAT BOYLE
Accounting
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr...Brad Broom
Regional Sales mgr...Wade Baxter
National sales mgr...Jennifer Porter
Co-op sales mgr...Ashley Hessel
Production mgr...Amy Stumbo
Marketing director...Angela Glowinger
Creative director...Holly Perry
Art Director...Dave Habeler
Classified mgr...Matt Tomey
Special Sections...Rythia Footh
Programs...Mark Domnik
Classified Assistant...Laura Guth
Zone Managers
Zone managers
Jennifer Blowey...Kim Brown
John Carton...Amy Casey
Jodi Cole...
Retail Account Executives
Linda Boodeker Retail Account Executive
Kate Burgesa Ken Cole
Jason Eberly Jennifer Evenson
Justin Garberg Stephine Greenwood
Josh Hahn Tammie Johnson
Allison Kaplan Sue Kratky
Robin King Jessica Lenard
Shelley McConnell Chris Morrisley
Mike Murray Ker Rathbun
Ed Schagner Judith Standley
Gretchen Van Hoet
Brebcca Boresow Kriety Enlow
Mellasa Jenkins Laura Manka
Russel Haa
Nicole Abbott Jennifer Laird Cathy McWilliams Troy Tawter
Mendi Stauffer...
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
5
Regents' budget awaits approval
Salary increases included in plan
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate yesterday approved by a voice vote the Board of Regents $1.05 billion budget for next year that included a slight increase in faculty and student employee salaries.
An annual vote is scheduled for today. If passed, the bill would go to the House Appropriations Committee.
The bill provides for a 2.5 percent increase in faculty and student salaries. Gov. Joan Finney in January recommended 3 percent for faculty and 5 percent for students.
Before that, the Board of Regents had proposed 5 percent raises for faculty and 4.5 percent for students.
The Senate bill also included a proposed 8 percent tuition increase for in-state students and 10 percent for out-of-state students at the three largest Regents universities; the University of Kansas, Wichita State University and Kansas State University.
Before the Legislature's halfway point last week, the appropriations bill had been in the Senate Ways and Means Committee, where the salary increase recommendations were reduced.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
The bill also included a 3.5 percent increase for other university operating expenditures and an eventual $40 a-credit-hour fee increase for law school student. The bill did not include arecommendation for a 1percent retirement benefit increase for faculty, which will be considered later in separate legislation.
State Sen. Gus Bogina said this year's Regents budget was $15 million more than last year. He said the budget increase was necessary because of increased enrollments. The budget is $6 million less than what the governor had recommended.
But when the bill came up for full Senate discussion before the voice vote yesterday, several senators said that this year's Regents budget was too high. State Sen. Todd Tiahrt, R-Goddard, spoke of the impact the Boeing laffoffs in Wichita would have on the state.
"It's somewhat frivolous for us to pass a budget with such an increase." Taibrt said. "We need to start stepping up to the fact that we don't have as much money to spend this year as we did last year."
Potholes trouble Towers residents
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
Although repairs are underway, students living at Jayhawker Towers are getting tired of battling mud and potholes with their cars in search of a parking spot.
Jayhawker Towers provides a tri-level parking lot on the east and west sides of the apartment buildings. The ground level of the east parking lot echoes with the thump-tump of cars hitting metal plates covering potholes on the upper level. Its surface resembles a gravel road after a heavy rain — muddy and rutted.
Marton Sanders, St. Louis junior and Towers resident, said that these problems had existed in the parking garage since snow fell in early January.
"There are way too many pot holes and they can really mess up your car and tires." Sanders said. "When you're trying to swerve the pothes, you might hit another car. It's a real hazard. It's pretty bad considering I value my car a whole lot."
Angie Morgan, Russell sophomore and Towers resident, said that she was worried by jacks that
had been supporting a secondlevel cracked beam for about a month.
"It makes me nervous," she said.
"It makes me wonder when it's go to collapse."
Morgan walked slowly to her car, gauging carefully where she would place her next step. She explained how difficult it was to drive on the ground level.
"You have to drive so slow and even then you bottom out," Morgan said. "I'm not a mechanic, but I know it's not good for my car."
The department of student housing is aware of the students' concerns and plans to lay asphalt as soon as the ground level dries out, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
stoner said the potholes on the upper levels of the parking garage and the cracked beam would be filled as soon as Finney & Turnipseed, the Topeka firm designing the repair work, placed its bid.
Potholes have been a problem at the lots for the past three or four years but were not a safety hazard, Stoner said. Steel plates are used each year as temporary covers until the holes are filled.
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"Scarface" is an intense film both in the use of language and depiction of violence. We suggest mature audiences.
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WRITTEN BY OLVIER STONE
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CAUTION
"Scarface" is an intertitle both in the use of language and depiction of violence. We suggest master audiences.
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Never let
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WRITTEN BY OLIVER STONE
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In Honor of International Women's Day:
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K. I. Through the Eyes of
Please join us as several International women students discuss their perspectives on man topics ranging from the differences in the role and responsibilities of women to "rules" for behavior. You will be asked to provide your own perspective.
Focus 24
BROTH REDKEN
Tuesday, March 16, 1983
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
7:00-9:00 p.m.
What happens if you refuse to take a breathalizer test when pulled over for a DUI?
Focus 21
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No driving for one year.
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Diane Braddler, Graduate Assistant, International Student Services
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148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
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Sponsored by the Ehrhard Taylor University Office of International
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Tickets on sale in the Mall Hall Box Office; KU student tickets available through the SUA Office, Kansas Union; all seats reserved; $18 & $16, KU and K-12 students $9 & $18, senior citizens and other student 17 & 18; to charge tickets by phone, using a code at www.kusai.edu; about shuttle advice at the Tickets Desk at Arts Center; call 864-3824.
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Approximately 600 KU students have a hold on their Permit To Enroll because they have not documented their Mandatory Immunization. The hold must be removed before you can enroll for Fall 1993. To be cleared for enrollment you must bring your Permit to Enroll to Watkins Health Center Immunization Department.
University policy requires that all new and readmitted students* provide documentation of the Mandatory Immunization (the MMR - measles, mumps, rubella) received after 12 months of age. There is no charge for a required immunization. Immunization Department Hours: Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Walk-ins are accepted. For information: © 864-9533.
- Students born before 1957 are exempt but must submit a Health History form to Watkins Immunization Department.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Victim testifies in civil rights case
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Rodney King took the witness stand yesterday for the first time since his videotaped beating and said he was attacked by police officers, including one who screamed, "We're going to kill you nigger, run!"
King, speaking in a soft voice, said he never attacked the officers who are accused of violating his civil rights.
"I was trying to stay alive," King told the jury. He said that during the beating he was "coughing and laughing blood out of my mouth."
King's testimony was his first detailed public account of the night his speeding car was pursued by California Highway Patrol and Los Angeles police officers. He was beaten after finally coming to a stop.
The testimony in the federal trial of four white police officers came more
than two years after the March 3, 1991, videoed taping that led to a state trial, acquittals and three days of deadly rioting.
King, 27, said the officers asked at one point how he felt.
"I said I felt fine," King said. "I didn't want them to know what they were doing to me was really getting to me. I didn't want them to have the satisfaction."
Under questioning by Justice Department attorney Barry Kowalski, King insisted he never resisted arrest and suggested that a female Highway Patrol officer, who first tracked him down for speeding on a freeway, could have handcuffed him if Los Angeles police had not intervened.
He said he was face down on the ground, trying to cooperate, when officers leaped upon him and "one of them applied pressure like he was trying to snap my wrist in half." He said
he screamed out in pain, demonstrating his shout for the jury, and then heard someone shout "Back!"
"They all backed away from me and I'm still on the ground waiting to be handeuffed and shortly after that I was shocked by a Taser," King said.
Moments later, as he was on the ground he said he heard someone shout. "We're going to kill you nigger, run!"
Kowalski asked what King heard while being clubbed and kicked.
"I'm not exactly sure but I heard while they were hitting me chants of 'killer, nigger, how do you feel killer?"
King acknowledged that on the night of the beating he had been drinking while watching a basketball game on television, and he admitted to speeding.
When asked whether he truly remembered the officers say "nigger" or "killer", King said he wasn't sure which word was used.
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THE SUPERCOLLECTORS Baseball cards and comic books are not just for kids anymore. Adults are buying them as an investment.
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansan staff writer
B baseball cards and comic books There are usually some in every basement. Faded, waterstained and dusty. But for serious collectors of comics and cards, a safe holdall
be a better home for their precious printed paper.
They can be a serious investment of just a few dollars. They can be worth collecting as a bakeware. There is no way of making a sure bet.
Adults are being drawn in increasing numbers to what has been perceived as a children's hobby: comic book and sports card collecting.
The attraction to collecting is intensified by the idea that a cheap book or card can turn into a valuable commodity.
And comics do sometimes rocket in value, an exam
ple being the recent "Death of Superman" issue.
Stuart Shutts,
owner of Comic
Corner, 1000
Massachusetts
St., said that
issue originally
sold for $2.50
retail.
"A month and a half later it was selling for $40," he said. "That's a better increase than you'll find in investing in stocks and bonds."
But
But investing in comics can be daunting. The collector never knows which issues will
Young, co-owner of the shop,
"we'd be semi-bired by
value, and finding a buyer for the comics can be diff cult at times.
LeRoy Young, co-owner of Kwaiyat Comics, 1111 Massachusetts St., said a comic book worth $25 in New York City might be worthless in Lawrence. The price is largely dependent on the local demand, he says.
"People come in here all the time asking which books will go up in value," he said.
Photo Illustration by Paul Kotz/ KANSAN
Brenda Young said the people who made the most money were those who had collected comics since childhood.
But even if no one knows which comics will increase in value, some dealers tie based on past performance.
MARVEL THE SUPERMAN GALLERY
In addition to old favorites, such as "Superman," and new favorites, such as "The Punisher," many new comic books are being marketed. It is difficult to know how many comics are published because many are local or underground comics. LeRoy Young, comic dealer, estimated there were as many as 1,000 different titles.
of because "Almost everything Valiant puts out goes up in value," he said. "By the time the next issue comes out, the previous issue has doubled in value."
will go up in value, 'he said'.
"But if we knew what would go up," said Brenda
Shuts it a company called Valant was putting out books that would probably go up in value. Valant has good stories and art, he said, and the value is pumped up because Valant prints fewer issues.
will make tips based on past performance
LeRoy Young said the best way to collect comics is to collect a book that interests the collector. That way, if the comic doesn't increase in value, the collector still has the entertainment of reading the book.
DIVE IT WE MAKE IT
lectors are very lucky, they may end up with a comic worth thousands. The first issue of Superman, a "golden age" comic, recently sold for about $80,000, LeRoy Young said.
Comic book collectors divide books by time periods. The golden age lasted from 1939 to the 1960s. The silver age was from the '60s to 1975. The modern age began in 1975.
agreed that comic books have become more popular recently. LeRoy Young suggested that the promotion for the death of Superman issue helped increase the popularity of all comic books by bringing in people who were only marginally interested in collecting. When interested people came in to pick up the Superman book, they not only saw books that they had collected as children, but also newer books with better art than has been seen in the past.
The comic book dealers all
By the way, LeRoy Young said, Superman is due to be resurrected in April. What happens to the value of the death of Superman issue is anyone's guess, he said.
The most popular comics? Anything by Image and Valiant. Both are publishing companies.
vel comic series and started their own company, Shutts said.
We sell about 150 copies of "Spawn a month," Shutts
vanant, both are publishing companies.
Image was formed by disgruntled artists who left Mar-
t
said.
"Spawn" is a lushly illustrated Image comic book overflowing with detail and color.
overwhelming. "Comics in the old days had mediocre art," Shutts said. "Now, the comics that sell have good art, but not necessarily good stories."
Paul Tobia, Wichita sophomore, said new comics that were different from the old superhero-type comics might account for the increasing popularity of comics.
might account for the high popularity of "I read Vertigo comics," he said. "They're more like fiction with pictures, not superheroes saving the world."
Like comic book companies, sports cards companies have come out with a better product, said Jeff Dolezal, owner of J.D.'s Baseball Card and Sports Nostalgia Shop. 711 W. 23rd St.
"Most companies now have a regular product and a high-end product." he said.
high school product.
Dolezal started collecting baseball cards when he was a kid. His parents ran a drugstore, and he said he had easy access to the cards.
Dolezal, whose shop has
open for 1911 year said the most popular sports cards were those with the most popular sports this year it is This year it is Shaquille O'Neal In previous years it has been Michael Jordan.
"In baseball, the most popular cards are hot rookies," he said.
The idea is to buy the rookie card, and if the player turns out to be a great player, the value of the card will increase.
"People collect because they hope someday their cards will be as valuable as a Mickey Mantle rookie card," Dolezal said.
as,
ar
A Mickey
Mantle rookie
card is worth about
$32,000. he said.
r s,
ar
y d s
y y l s
e fun
t're
But as with comic books, people should enjoy what they collect, rather than just looking at it as an investment, he said.
I try to get people to have fin with it," he said. "If you're doing it just for money, you'll be unhappy with it."
WILLIAMS HAWKFIELD
Paul Kotz / KANBAN
Jeff Dolezal, owner of J.D.'s Baseball Card and Sports Nostalgia Shop, helps Kevin Hay, Lawrence resident, at the store at 711 W. 23rd St.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MARCH 10, 1993 PAGE 7 KU Life
Issues and trends at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Lead story
Among the abstract watercolors chosen by the Manchester (England) Academy of Fine Arts for its prestigious annual show in January was "Rhythm of the Trees," whose "certain quality of color balance, composition and technical skill," said the judges, earned its place among the 150 works selected from the 1,000 submitted. The painting, composed of various color smudges, was done by 4-year-old Carly Johnson and submitted by her mother as a joke.
Questionable Judgments
British Rail Corp. plans this month to determine how close its maintenance workers should stand to the tracks when working with new trains whose speed reaches about 140 mph. Some of its workers will be tied to posts 2 to 3 meters from the track so their reactions can be measured as the trains whiz by.
Altvin Lastimado Jr., 18, was arrested in August at the Wahiawa, Hawaii, Public Library and charged with assault. He had been holding a woman against her will in his home, where he began to utter a satanic chant. In the middle of the chant, he forgot the words and told the woman he was going to the public library to look them up. The woman got free and called the police, who intercepted Lastimado in the "occul" section.
In January, the Clinicas de Salud Del Pueblo company in Brawley, Calif., told employees that they would be docked a day's pay if they showed up for work with an exposed hickey. Though the company did not explain its policy, a UCLA psychiatry professor asked by the Associated Press said hickeys could be distractions at work: "Someone with a low sex drive may look at it as a bruise. Someone with a lot of sex on their mind will look at a hickey as if they're watching Sharon Stone in 'Basic Instict.'"
Last Year Cesar Duran's appeal of his conviction on drug charges was affirmed by a federal appeals court. Duran was arrested because his wife took a pair of L.A. Gear high-top sneakers back to the Footlocker store at Janesville, Wis. Wash, because she could not figure out how to lace them up. She had forgot-
Continued on Page 8
8
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
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KU LIFE
Psi Chi
The National Honor Society for Psychology Majors Applications for Spring 1993 Induction due at the Psi Chi Meeting Thursday, March 11 7:00 pm in 547 Fraser
Since
Pick up materials at the Psychology Office 426 Fraser
WATKINS
1907
"We Care For KU"
Fat,
Sugars
Milk Meats
Vegetables Fruits
Grains
Eat Right America! March is National Nutrition Month.
Making smart decisions about food is important for your good health. Ann Chapman, Registered Dietitian at Watkins, can answer questions about any aspect of your diet, whether you are concerned about normal or distorted eating; weight loss, gain, or maintenance; or athletic diets. For information on charges: $\textcircled{1}$ 864-9520.
Appointments: $\textcircled{2}$ 864-9575.
Health Education Seminars
Watkins Health Center, First Floor Conference Room
How To Get Fit and Stay Fit
How to Get First and Stay Put
Acquaintance Rape: What You Should Know
Mar, 10 at 1:30 p.m.
Mar, 12 at 1:30 p.m.
Mar, 15 at 1:30 p.m.
Mar, 16 at 1:30 p.m.
Body Image Issues: Time for Self-Acceptance
Health Educators are available to present programs on many health topics. 864-9570
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864.9502
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
If all the "good ones are taken," how did they meet?
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Continued from Page7.
ten that three bags of marijuana were stored in the shoes. A store clerk turned her in, and a search of her home implicated Cesar.
WEIRD
Last summer, Gary, Ind, and Chicago sanitation departments said that more than 1,000 sewer manhole covers had been stolen over the previous year. Each cover weighs around 100 pounds but sells for only about $1 on the scrap market.
- Convicted prostitute, Mary Ellen Tracy, 50, was accepted as a volunteer nature-trail tour guide for elementary school students in Santa Claria, Calif., in November. Several years ago,
Tracy was a notorious "priestess" of a "church" in which she said she had sex with 2,700 members as part of a sin-cleansing ritual. In January, the nature center that employed her found out about her past and dismissed her.
Crime De La Weird
■ In February, in Tel Aviv, Yahiya Avraham, 80, refused the pleas of seven rabbis to grant his wife a divorce, to which under Jewish law, both spouses must agree for it to be proper. Avraham first refused her a divorce in 1962, and because Jewish law permits imprisonment as a means to pressure a spouse to
give the required consent, he has been imprisoned ever since at Ayalon Prison. The rabbis promised him a fancy apartment and various religious blessings, but he said, "Can't do it, Can't do it, go away."
Inexplicable
In February, the Kenosha, Wis., City Council withdrew a controversial proposed ordinance to strengthen the city's anti-nuity regulations. They had wanted to add a provision banning "covered male genitals in a discernibly turgid state." But they heard from too many law-abiding men who were worried that they could be arrested if they innocently got an erection while fully dressed in public.
1993 Copyright Universal Press Syndicate
ELAINE KIM
PROFESSOR OF ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES AT UC-BERKELEY
"A Korean American Perspective of the L.A. 'Riots'"
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
9
Jayhawks defense helps pound Gorillas
Kansas pitchers have thrown 22 scoreless innings
By Brady Prauser Kansan sportswriter
Entering yesterday's game against Pittsburg State, Kansas pitchers had not allowed a run in 13 innings.
Make it nine more.
Powered by a five-run, two-out scoring spree in the second inning, the Javahaws beat the Gorillas 7-0.
Senior Jimmy Walker pitched five innings for his first victory, striking out four and allowing four hits to improve Kansas' record to 7-3.
Freshman Clay Baird and senior David Soult appeared in relief to preserve the shutout. The three Kansas pitchers limited Pittsburgh to six hits during the afternoon and extended the Jawhays 'scoreless-inning streak to 22 over the last three games.
Walker, 1-1, made his first start since an opening-day loss to Grand Canyon. He said he was more relaxed yesterday than in his previous start.
Walker probably enjoyed Kansas' half of the second inning.
"I just tried to go out and have fun today," Walker said. "Everyone on the team did. I want to enjoy what everyone else does, and that's where a good performance comes from."
With two outs and two men on base,
sophomore third baseman Brent Wilhelm went ape on a 3-1 Gorilla pitch,
hitting it over the left-center field fence for a 3-0 Jayhawk lead. Sophomore shortstop Dan Rude then singled and later scored on senior second baseman Jeff Berlinger's double off the screen behind the center field fence.
Kansas senior first baseman John Wuycheck slides into third base against Pittsburgh State. Wuycheck had one hit, one RBI and two stolen bases in the Jay hawks' 7-6 victory yesterday.
Kansas 7, Pittsburg State 0
Senior designated hitter Kent Mahon increased Kansas' lead to 5-0 when he doubled to score Berbinger. However, Pittsburg State threatened to retaliate in the top of the third inning. With one out, the Gorillas
ab r h rbl
2b Berlinger 1 5 1
dh Mahon 2 0 1
pr Turney 1 0 1
ph King 1 0 0
f Ipuo 4 0 0
c Niemier 5 1 1
rf Taurinio 1 1 0
cf morro 3 1 0
1b Wuycheck 2 1 1
3b Wilhelm 2 1 1
ss Rude 3 1 0
p benninghoff 1 0 0
29 7 7
Andrew Arnone / KANSAN
Pittsburg State (6-4)
| | ab | r | h | rbl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| if Qualls | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| ss Williams | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| cf Cicero | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|dh Keeney | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
|ph dh Kames | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
|1b Miller | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|2b Rich | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
|ph Kratz | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
rf Fertile | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
rf Iceland | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
m Murray | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
3b Vandervoort | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| | 29 | 0 | 6 | 0 |
Kansas | IP, H | R | ER | BB | SO |
Walker | 5.1 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Baird | 2.2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Soult | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
Pittsburg St. IP H R ER BB SO
Ferraro 6.1 7 1 7 7 5 3
Wilson 1.2 0 0 0 3 1
E Murray, Wihmin PD Kansas L. Pittsburgh
E Murray, Wihmin PD Kansas G. Pittsburgh
L 10Kansas M. Pittsburgh G. 28Kan-
lons. Berlinger, Mahon, Nemerier HR
Wilson, Tairacke, Tairacke, Tairacke
T. Quinterz, T. Quinterz
loaded the bases on two successive singles and a walk. But Pittsburgh State's B.J. Williams lined out to Kansas junior center fielder Darryl Monroe, who then fired to second base to catch a Gorilla runner off base for a double play to end the inning.
Walker landed Monroe and the rest of his teammates' performances.
They picked me up today." Walker said. "Later on, I'm going to pick them
up."
Kansas coach Dave Bingham had similar thoughts.
"It was a total team effort," Bingham said. "A lot of guys contributed today."
Kansas finished with seven hits by
as many players.
The Jayhawks completed the scoring in the seventh inning when senior catcher Jeff Niemier hit a double that scored one run, and senior first baseman John Wuycheck drove in the final run with a sacrifice飞.
Pittsburg State junior Denny Ferraro, 1-1, pitched seven innings for the loss.
1085. Bingham said he was pleased with Kansas' offensive production. He also had praise for Walker.
*That was an improved performance by Jimmy today." Bingham said. "He was less afraid of making mistakes."
Kansas plays host to Missouri Western today at 3 p.m. Junior left-hander David Meyer, 0-1, will start for the Jayhawks.
Three Jayhawks receive honors
Jordan, Woodberry Walters selected to All-Big Eight teams
Kansan sportswriter
By David Dorsey
Kansas senior guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan and junior guard/forward Steve Woodberry received post-regular season honors yesterday when the Associated Press All-Big Eight men's basketball teams were announced.
Walters, who leads the Jayhawks with 14.2 points a game, made the first team and was the second leading vote getter behind Oklahoma State sophomore center Bryant Reeves.
With the exception of Reeves, the first two teams were dominated by guards. Nebraska junior Eric Piatkowski, Iowa State senior Justus Thigpen and Colorado sophomore Donnie Boyce round out the rest of the first team.
Jayhawks in scoring in two of their last three games. He scored a career-high 26 points last week against Nebraska.
Rex Walters
Woodberry, 6-foot-4 and 180 pounds, made the second team and was the only reserve to receive honors. Although he is not among the conference leaders in any of the statistical categories, he has led the
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that Wood-
berry was his team's most versatile player and called him the best 40-minute defensive player that he has coached at Kansas.
"I think he could and I think he should make the first team." Williams said yesterday before the teams were announced. "More important than if a guy starts or not is how many minutes he plays and what he does when he's out there."
Woodberry, fifth on the team with a 10.1 scoring average, is third in minutes played, third in steals.
BIG8
CONFERENCE
"He just brings so much to our team." Williams said.
Jordan, who is fifth in the league in assists and ninth in steals, averages 11.7 points a game. He was one of 11 players to receive an honorable mention.
Associated Press All-Big Eight Team
First Team
Second Team
Steve Woodberry, Kansas Jr., not among conference statistical leo,
Terry Evans, Oklahoma Sr., leads conference in assists (4.7)
Michael Beane, Missouri St., fourth in conference assists (4.7)
Melvin Booker, Missouri St., second in conference scoring (16.1)
Honorable Mention:
Bryant Reeves, Oklahoma St. soph., first in conference scoring (19.7)
Rex Walters, Kansas ss., first in conference in free throws (86.7%)
Johnson Wiggins, Iowa ss., third in conference scoring (19.4)
Justus Thigpen, Iowa St. soph., third in conference scoring (17.5)
Donnie Bovec, Colorado soph., second in conference scoring (19.1)
Adonis Jordan, Kansas sr., was one of 11 players selected.
* Statistics include non-conference games.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Williams said that his starting backcourt's scoring numbers might be down from last season, but that he still had the best backcourt in the conference.
Last season Walters and Jordan combined for 29 points a game. This season, they've combined for $^{26}$
Williams said his backcourt could not be blamed for not fulfilling expectations. Especially, he said, because the expectations were too high.
"Defensively, they are a heckuva lut better than last season," Williams said. "And when you add Woodberry, I'm not so sure you lose a list statically."
"in golf," Williams said, "a lot of people can go from a 20 handicap to a 10, but it's a heck of a lot tougher to go from a 10 to a zero. That what those guards had to do. Other guards started out at 20 and went to 10, and people are saying that they had a better year."
KANSAS GOLF
Junior opens spring with victory in Utah
Holly Reynolds continued where she left off in the fall.
The junior on the Kansas women's golf team won her fourth consecutive tournament, and first of the spring season, at the 15-train Utile-Dixie Classic in St. George, Utah.
Reynolds shot a three-over par 75 yesterday to win the tournament with an overall score of eight-over par 224. She shot 76 and 73 on Monday.
However, the women's team did not fare as well as Reynolds. The Jayhawks finished tied for 12th place with Wyoming at 974. Texas A&M won the tournament with a score of 927.
Reynolds, who won medalist honors at the Cyclone Classic, Yale Invitational and Shocker Fall Classic in the fall, earned the medalist honor by six strokes over Shannon Maier of Oregon, Kristina Edfors of Texas A&M, Marianne Gareau of Texas A&M and Becky Forsom of Washington State.
Men's team finishes sixth at invitational
After being in second place after 36 holes, the Kansas men's golf team fell to a sixth place finish in the 17-team University of Central Florida Invitational at the Eastwood Country Club in Orlando, Fla.
The Jayhawks shot a team score of 310 yesterday and finished at 902, six shots behind co-champions North Carolina and Minnesota.
Senior Brad Bruno was the top Kansas performer with an 8-over-pal total of 224, for an 11th place tie. Bruno fired a 2-over-pal 74 yesterday.
Junior Matt Gogel stood in a fourth place tie after 36 holes, but he scored 81 in the final round. His total score of 226put him in a tie for 23rd. Sophomore Tom Sims tied for 27th with a score of 227.
Senior Jim Young and junior John Hess finished in a tie for 47th at 232. Young made the biggest improvement for Kansas with a 3-over-par round of 75 after shooting 80 and 7 on Monday.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
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---
SPORTS IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Swimming championships result in the unexpected
By Matt Dovle
Kansan sportswriter
Many surprises came out of last weekend's Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships at the Oklahoma City Community College Aquatic Center.
The Nebraska men's team's 14th consecutive championship did not surprise many.
However, the Nebraska women's team surprised everybody with its strong second-place showing, finishing 5.5 points behind Kansas, the champion for two consecutive years.
"We felt that all season we were pretty undernured," said Nebraska swimming coach Cal Bentz, the Big Eight women's coach of the year.
Bentz said that some of the swimmers on the women's team were not giving the 'Huskers performances earlier in the season that would merit a higher ranking than their final No. 24 ranking.
One Nebraska swimmer who elevated her performance at the Big Eight meet was freshman Melanie Dodd.
Dodd earned the women's Outstanding Performer honor by winning the 50-yard freestyle, 100 freestyle and 200 freestyle.
The men's Outstanding Performer honor went to Nebraska freshman Justin Finney, a surprise according to Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf.
"Zhawn Stevens is the outstanding men's swimmer in the Big Eight, no question about it." Kempsaid.
Barrus Stevens won the 200 individual medley. 400 individual medley.
and 200 breaststroke, and was a participant on the winning 400 medley and 400 freestyle relay teams. He set meet records in the 200 individual medley and 200 breaststroke.
"I'm a little bit disappointed that I didn't win it, but I can't take anything away from Justin because he had a great meet," said Stevens, who was the 1991 Outstanding Performer.
Finney won the 100 butterfly and 200 butterfly in meet record times. His time of 48.03 seconds in the 100 butterfly automatically qualified Finney for that event at the NCAA Championships.
One Kansas swimmer who did not perform at the level she had during the season was Katie Chapeau.
The freshman was disqualified in the 100 backstroke on Friday, and took the consolation championship in the 200 backstroke on Saturday after not qualifying for the final.
Chapeau thought she won the 100 backstroke race with a new meet record time of 55.45 seconds, but as the race concluded officials notified Kempf that Chapeau stayed under water too long at the beginning of the race.
After competition concluded Friday night, Chapeau swam a time trial in the 100 backstroke for consideration for the NCAA Championships, and turned in a time of 55.75 seconds. Kemp said that time should be fast enough to get her to the NCAs.
Kansas will find out this week how many swimmers have qualified for the NCAA Championships.
Kansas tennis player improves ranking
Kansas sophomore Rebecca Jensen, 17-1, moved up eight spots to No. 8 in the new Intercollegiate Tennis Association's poll that came out yesterday.
Kansan staff report
Jensen's lone defeat this year came in the second round of the Rolex National Indoors on Feb. 5 to the No.1 player in the nation, Julie Exum of Duke.
Jensen is also ranked in doubles with sophomore doubles partner Nora Koves at No. 19.
"She's definitely one of the top 10 players in the country," Kansas coach Chuck Merzhacher said.
The highest ranking a Kansas women's player has ever attained during the season is No. 7, which former Kansas All-American Eveline Hamers reached a year ago.
The Kansas women's team, 6-4, is also ranked. It moved up one position to No. 19, even though Notre Dame, then ranked 22nd, beat the Jayhawks in a dual last Sunday.
Both Kansas and Jensen will have an opportunity to improve their rankings this weekend when the Jayhawks travel to Austin to play 2. Texas. The Longhorns' No.1 singles player, Susan Gilchrist, is ranked No.3 in the nation.
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108 Personal
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140 Found and Lost
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205 Help Wanted
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all real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1985 (the "Fair Housing Act"); emphasis on discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handbook, familial status or national origin; or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disadraws
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, race, gender, nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansan regulation or
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205 Help Wanted
30 hr position with small design firm. Must be mature, responsible, with good communication skills. Will train. Good advancement potential. RUC 342-3922.
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CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michi
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Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $100 or more plus RAD sequester Segee (785 Maple, Nidl., IL).
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CITY OF LAWRENCE SUMMER JOBS
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen help, nannies/housekeeper, maintenance person for Mountain Summer Camp, Box 71. Boulder, CO 80324.
The City is accepting applications for all summer part- and fall-time positions. Positions are available online.
Complete application at Administrative Services.
Calls to 1-800-267-3595. No phone calls please. Deadline: Friday, April 13
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Clerical help need immediately. Must have 5 yrs experience w/ at least 2 yrs, experience using WordPerfect 5.0 or above). Report Writer and a learner in technical field is also required, reports and documentation, filing, and typing. Some travel may be required. Flexible hrs Ssn 1630 EDD/A/M F/V/H. 385, Lawrence Lrs EDD/A/M F/V/H.
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Cruise line entry level on board landside positions available. Summer or秋冬 round, great pay.
**stadchild's camps* northeast top salary, rm/bd/laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities,戏剧, dance, drama, drums, fencing, field heckey, football, golf, guitar, gymnastics, hockey, soccer, nature, photography, piano, rockerling, rollerblading, nature, photography, wood, support.kitchen steward/workers, bakers, cooks, bus drivers maintaining the camp, Camp Winadu, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 10543 (914) 381-5988 Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 841-
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Data processing personnel needed immediately for data weekend and weekday work. Must have 5 yrs of data processing experience some travel may be required. Please contact the HR Manager. I guarantee 660448. EOE/AA/M/F/V/H
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Flu Co. Ic needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21岁 old and have a good driver license. Must have driver's license. Driver License. 8-20 hrs/wk. Very flexible.$r/Call Michael B42-0544; 3:30am-6:30m-M-FEED.
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Help wanted bam - 16am M-F. $5.00 per hour to assist stroke patient. Call 5-118 m-f 849-9303 INTERNATIONAL INFECTION TEACHING teach basic conversational English abroad, Japan and Taiwan. Many provide room and board and other benefits. No previous training required. For预约, call 1-866-623-1146 or 1-75765.
KU student needed as live-in building manager at First United Methodist Church. Compensation includes housing and monthly stipend. Employment is not required for church office at 841-7500.
Located Laboratory Clean UP Position
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Models wanted waived for female
hair salon clients Males and Females, must be available 3/1-7/19 If interested call
426.487.7311 www.johnsonclinic.com 2004.03.204
Models wanted for the "Girls of Kansas City" and "Men of Kansas City" calendars. Please call Tony
Nationally positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii, summer/yr) Great place for a full-time job.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
11
Spring Break Party Cash!
$$$
New Donors earn $25 for 1st 2 plasma donations in 1 week Return donors earn up to $135 per month!
749-5750
816 W 24th
NEEDED 106 people to lose weight NO. WOW PILLWERE NEEDED new,刚 patient, ed 100% natural, 100% guaranteed, Dr. recompened, 300-778-8844
Needed immediately. Junior Accounting Professionals and Paraprofessionals for temporary position, including experience and/or relevant experience required. Knowledge of accounting practice is required; institution a includes research operating department setting up asset ledgers, some travel may be required. Same letter and resume required. Fax: 612-754-9397 V/F/H.
Fair time Secretary position. Must have Macintosh Microsoft Word processing experience. Position available from May 1, for 6 months. Hours are 8:00-5:00 Tues & Thurs, no more than 5:00 Wed plus additional days as needed. Send resume to HR@x200.com, X200 Clinton Parkway Ct, Lawrence NS, KS 80412
Self employed mom needs someone to care for 13 months old child in my weekday afternoon. Must be a Christian, willing to work flexible hours, and have references. Please 800-484-1000 or email: recharge@momcare.com
SPORTS OFFICIAL NEEDED? An interested in umpiring youth baseball softball or adult softball for Lawrence Parks a Reception Center. Contact Bobby Stankoff at 843-721 immediate.
**MUM JOB!** Camp Birchwood, a Minnesota
camp for girls seek college students to work as
clients with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
English and Western riding. Camp Birchwood,
a Minnesota camp for girls seek college students to work as
clients with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
English and Western riding. August 18th. For an application call 401-525-3720.
August 18th. For an application call 401-525-3720.
Summer Positions Available
Fred B. Okta & Bart Gilleen Country Club Plaza
Pred. P. O'Malley & Grill on Country Club Plaza seeks personal, quality minded people to fill server, cook and bartending positions Day or Night, full and part time positions available
Belgium, to arrive after 2pm at fred P. Gitta's 4779 J.C.
Nobarcha for Fried P. Gitta's 4779 J.C.
Beverly Hills, to arrive after 2pm at fred P. Gitta's 4779 J.C.
Frasis jp. umbermier children a camp-northeast
Frissis jp. umbermier with good tennis background who
can teach children to play tennis Good salary,
room & board, travel allowance Women call Jen-
winder Wheeler at 841-6086 Men call or write.
Camp Winnadu $ 5 Glen Lake Manorock, N. Y. 10542
Weekend air talent for KLWN and KLZR. Priser experience required to train in CURSOR in PID-P.O.
Youth Ministry Coordinator
Waterfront Job WSJ-SUMmer children's camp-past-nearest men and women who can teach children swim, coach swim team, waterskiers/ski technician, trub fishing, camp counselor, Good salary, room & board, travel allowance Men call or write Camp Winado. Sibs Glen Lane, Masonary, NY N 10454 1841 3815 Waterfront Job WSJ-SUMmer children's camp-past-nearest men and women who can teach children swim, coach swim team, waterskiers/ski technician, trub fishing, camp counselor, Good salary, room & board, travel allowance Men call or write Camp Winado. Sibs Glen Lane, Masonary, NY N 10454 1841 3815
225 Professional Services
Youth Ministry Coordination
Emergency Leadership to provide programmatic & administrative leadership for youth activities of congregation. Part-time work in school year, full-time work be at least a Bachelor's salary. Approx. $9,00; yr. Send resume to Trinity Lutheran Church. 1248 New Hampton, Lawrence KS 65034. Deadline: 02-21-17
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
235 Typing Services
EC Desktop Publishing Remenes. Cover Letters.
Bridges Papers. Term Papers. Newsletters.
Brochures.
Rick Frydman, Attorney
833 Missouri 834-4023
$1. Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
rush jobs. Call Paul 749-648-648
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial
scholarship, & grants. No cost or income reqn-
dle to EMS. Call 855-740-2391 or write to
Rita McCann. Mon Wed. Fri & mornings. Full-time
in summer. Showing apts, answering phones
& general info. Kansas Resident. Kansas resi-
gent at least 2.0 hrs per week in least
12hrs. at K U Call 841-6041. M-F 5
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
the difference in the job you want Leave message for Kelly @ 843-7586.
DONALD G. Stroble
Donald G Stroble Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
1: der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms word into accurate pages of letters.
**830-2905**
Prince Photos and Headshots BW Darkroom.
BW Photography Portfolio for a variety of your RESUME beautifully typified for £95.
Lawrence Glass Tinting
Specializing in all types of glass tinting
Affordable STYING & EDITING Hours
Abi Grbend will type & edit any paper 24hrs,
tutoring avail. near campus. Lowest rates in
town.832-1296
Home Business Automotive
- BUGSHIELDS
• BEDLINERS
• RUNNING BOARDS
• BUMPERS
Export lying by experienced secretary IBMC Consultants. Call Mr. Mattia 841-1219
---
Papers up! Accurate. A fast word processing High quality print. $2.00 price. Call Jill @ 822-8YTE.
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Center. ALFETP 9pm, 822-8566
841-7019
737 E. 22 $ ^{ND} $
Word processing, applications, term papers, disk-
rieb, job files, resume preparation,
job awards. Masters Degree: 8444
E-Mail: mail@videotools.com
Resumes
122m
100m
122m
100m
- Professional Writing
* Cover Letters
* Laser Printing
Transcriptions 1012 Mass 842-4619
PA RW Professional Association of Resume Writers
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
journals. Send resume to John R. Ferguson
experience. Call Paul at 841-977-1977 Whenever
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Airline credit worth $200. Selling for $150 No Restrictions Call Trina 749-4756
CABLE DESCRAMBLERS! Fight high costs with this insulated ANC cable, send $10 for complete manual, plans, and part list to CABLE DESCRAMBLERS, P.O. Box 3874, Corpus Christi, TX 78742.
Computers New and Used
P. C. Compatibles
For Sale New 92 Specialized Hard Rock Sport
Many extras. Great price $84-883
Emda Ellie 89 100 kmh Low mileage, good campus access. Asking for $40 on offer. Best Offer.
IBM Compatible 386 XE, 179 MH hard drive, 3.5 & 5.25 floppy disks, keyboard, VGA monitor, Pascasino printer, 2400 baud modem, Pascasino B001-01B, O.C. Bill 865-3889
Improve mens 18K gold ring band with
messenger men 18K gold ring band
Asking $30 Call 602-2501
message leave
LXI Home Stereo System. In its own cabinet with 2 speakers AM FM stereo, cassette, turntable, CD ready $200 Realistic receive $50 865-167 leave
Professional 15mm Pentax Camera without flash (i841) E149 Call 865-290 leave message
Mountain bike. Specialized hard rock. $150 -
dress chest skate finish, $85. Call Brad. 844-263-7900.
Snowboards! Only once you need 153 Kemper Chaos and a like-new 153 Kemper Freestyle for unbeatable price. Hurry up before too late! Call 864-2342-601 p.m.
Used Book Sale, March 12-14 Metcalf Shopping
Center, 670 West 3rd Street, American Association of
University Women.
Wedding Dress, size 10. Alfred Angelo as seen in Bedridden Max $38. - Soulder length veil $44.
8 Suharu DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/FM Cass.
A/C Green Wristband $300 430-424 -1538
340 Auto Sales
180 Citation for sale. Buns well. $575 O.B.O. Contact Travis at 748-6560
360 Miscellaneous
**STUDENTS why pay retail for Travel* Wholesale travel research center offers opportunity to save $$$ Guarded savings. No giimmits. Great for last minute Spring Breakers. Call Larry. at 1-800-345-6721.
Business Opportunity Also Available
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: Tickets to Soul Asylum concert. Call Jake
865-2469
1600 NAIISMH 3 & 4 Bath, 2 Bath. Lg. rooms.
Storage space. Used for laundry,
mature variable leaves. 166-8977
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 BR Bur. apt. available now. New paint + mini blinds. 1 yr learer 843-4217
4kDrm. Aqi - summer sublease needed. Orchard
Corners-furnished. 2 bth, bus, laundry. Call
us.
FREE CASE OF BEER when you sublease for the summer season. Call Christie at 821-0146. Call Christie at 821-0146.
LEASE NOW FOR FAIL. Room 3 = BR duplex on bus line. basement, garage. FA, CP, W/D bookup. No pets. Lease & refs. req $800 mo./negotiation. 843-774 after 5. Owner/Agent.
8x21
Sublease thru July 2, BK very close to cam-
sale. Avail Now March rent free 749-3585
Avail Now! Spectacles I Br. Clone to campus Lowly
Purchase! Mesh Glasses dp. $38, padded.
lipgloss imp. Pets OK 796-3571.
lipsgloss imp. Pets OK 796-3571.
*stackieKen Place now leasing for Aug 1. 3 % yr. luxury laptops, close to campus, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appliques, refrigerator & dryer, energy efficient. Call 749-1166
For rent: April 1 - August 1, 1 month free, no deposit
2 bldm $2mn Ohio #14 - 748-5792
Now leasing for Fall
at Aspen West Apartments. 2 BR, 1 BLY
of no jets, water paid, on bus route. 1000 sqft
for rent.
row taking deposits for summer/fall leasing.
Man-Pricing for apts 640-644.
nice, bedroom. April-end free Collection Woods. $380 plus the $10 microwave. payout: $424 - 649 after tax
Nice, quiet 38 BBps in southwest location. All kitchen appli. C(A, gas, heat.) B(A), W/D
hookup garage. No pets. References: $45/no.
442 700
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
SUMMER SPECIALS
•1,2,& 3 bedroom units
•3 month leases
•avail.end of May
House for rent 2 bd rm, lease, no pets 842-4403
(call for appt.)
Boardwalk
BOARDWALK
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444
Pepper Tree Apartments. Sublease June 1-July 31
1 BRA I Bird 643-8609
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterboard allowed*
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
VILLAGE
SQUARE
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Plant Early. One or two female, non-smoker needs
medication. Contact: 800-247-3251; utility:
Pool facility, buid out, route 842; 914-652-3251.
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Wardrobes
- On KU bus route
- Carport available
- 1 bedroom $340, $365
- 2 bedroom $460, $470
- 3 bedroom $525, $585
15 NAMBURG
1st bus tour
15th bus route
Private bachelor Pates
P- private TVeries
P- private TV series
On manage
Outside 82nd Chl. 641-1815
S 19pm Fri 10-23rd
O Call for appointments
011 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
Mon. Wed. & Fri.: 12:00 - 2:00p.m.
Tues. & Thurs.: 6:00 - 8:00p.m.
Please call Kelly for appt.
section 2 bedrm apt. Summer sublease all-day paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3252
843-1971
RAINBOW TOWERAPTS
- Exercise Room & Clubroom
* Heat and Water Paid
*Across from KU Med*
*Studio, 1 & 2 bdmpt Apts*
*Garage Parking*
*Heated Pool, Sauna &*
Naismith Place
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE BEACH-FRONT. ONES DISCOUNT Radisson Resort. Parties on the beach. 2/3 BR 112-472-1414.
Limited Entry... Convenience...
EDDINGHAM PLACE
One BR. Apt. near campus. Avail. June 1. Hard wood floors. $290.841-5797
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 1-5
Now Pre-Leasing For Fal
3838 Rainbow Blvd.
831-9363
5 Mins from Downtown & Plaza
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Microwave Ovens
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
- Some with Fireplaces
- Bedroom Town Homes
*Garages: 2% Baths*
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an
*Luxurious 2,3, &4 Bedroom TownHomes
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt Necessary
841-8400 or
841-1287
841-5444
Professionally managed
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
Open Daily
1-5 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
& Introducing New
Eagle Apts.
S
Swan Management
*1-2-3 bedroom apts*
*1-2-3 bedroom apts*
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
summer sublease studio apt at Trailrane. Available May on bus route $100 mo.
from 12 noon to 4 pm on Saturdays.
SUMMER SUSELLE - Spacious 2 bedroom Apartment on bus route, close to campus and downtown. Designated quiet blvd. A great deal at $95 msn Call 823-248
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer
friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or
841-0848. Stop by 146 Tennessee.
Two bedrooms available now! A/C, cable, $235 per month, on bus route B 851-016
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts - furnished and unfurnished
- 1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft $305 to $365 per month
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
WATERBADONALL APTS
GREAT LOCATION - Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Wed. Thurs.
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(other times w/appt.)
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II -call for into or apart
Super-buge + 4+dbm house near campus for summer bushelse with option for fall. Wood floors, 2 kitchens, 3 patches, a/c/ & baths $800/per month for summer. Call 642-4826.
Volleyball Court
On KU Bus Route with
On Kob Bus Route
4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
We are now acceptl e roommate needs to share a 2Bt, 1Ba 2yr 0,
impc. in area scenic. Must be a non-smoker, clean
and responsible; on bus route Starts Aug 1,
$197.50 usd
on the bus route Starts Aug 1, at
earnest at am8-36973
Park25
FURNISHED
Studios,1,2,2+3 & 8 & bmh
apts...designed with you in
mind!
Campus Place-841-1429
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
HanoverPlace-841-1212 14th & Mass
We presently have available a select few 1&2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Orchard Corners-749-4226 15th & Kasold
Regents Court-749-0445 1905 Mass.
842-4455
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
Ouail Creek
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Bird
2111 Kasold 843-4300
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Bdmr in a 4 Bdmr, pool 2 Bdmr, 810u +util. Usb
stop Apple Lane Orchard Corners C刀 84-8589
3 Bdmr in a 4 Bdmr, pool 2 Bdmr, 810u +util. Usb
How to schedule an ad:
TM to share open imac: 3 BRE townhouse in sum-
mer $16,000. TM to share 2 BRE townhouse in sum-
mer new start in June, Jon Jun-864, 864-749 leave
imac.
Large 4 BR 2 BA furnit. left apt. Orchard Corners.
Large 4 BR 2 BA no dep req. Mail-Aug-205
+/ util. 3 great roommates, privacy, + more fun than
any. Keep 865-1199
1983-94 Nassim contract for sale; *of a double
manageable. Male persons only* Call 8642-8227
or 8642-2819
Female roommate wanted for 1 bdm & 8 bdm
roommate. Call 49-426 or email negotiable. Call 49-426
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
By phone: 8644-4358
Ads音房 may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Male or Female roommate needed ASAP 1780/mo
+/- until. No prep费. On Bus
BUS
*quest*, mature, female roommate wanted for 2 bdrm. Spanish Crest Apartments. Sublease from April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 + 1$ utilities. Call 842-4324
Need roommate June & July. Spacious townhouse
Near carpenter, $150/mo - utilities
789-1434 789-1434
Bohemian M wanted NOW $20/ mo. water, gas,
and cable paid. Call Bain at 840-523-5321
- In person: 119 Shannon Flint
Stop the Rancher from B. a.m. and S.p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be paid, cash or check, or charged Medicare/Walgreens.
By Mail: 1911 Stafford Flint, Lawrence, KS 80454
You may print your classified order on the form and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. You may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Via account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
**Sharing Rates:**
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
**Retards:** When a classifier is classified and that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the charges. Failures on annotated cards when pre-paid by check with cash are not available.
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Blink box numbers:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00
Num. of Insertions
Deadlines:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Classifications
Cost per line per day
1.95 1.2X 4-7X 0-14X 15-28X 30-X
1.85 1.10 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.45
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.65 0.60 0.40
1.76 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 0.85 0.60 0.55 0.50 0.35
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
148 tux & carpet
209 hotwanted
225 professional services
225 prides services
386 for sale
386 for sale
386 miscellaneous
Please print your ad one word per box
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
379 want to buy
485 for rent
430 recommate wanted
Name
ist___ Classification___
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper.
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☑ Check enclosed ☑ MasterCard ☑ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad.
Account number:
MasterCard
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of California Daly Kaisan, 119 Sturner Street FIlm Hall, Lawrence KS. 60045
The University of California Daly Kaisan, 119 Sturner Street FIlm Hall, Lawrence KS. 60045
THE FAR SIDE
© 1980 FarWorks, Inc./Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
By GARY LARSON
MARK M. RD.
MARRIAGE
COUNSELING
"The problem, as I see it, is that you both are extremely adept at pushing each other's buttons."
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Put some thought into your computer.
CLARES
MacWrite II
MacWrite
II
$85^{00}
WordPerfect
Word Perfect for Macintosh $125^00
HERITAGE & GRAFTING
Art Journaling
New Trends
Weekly
Microsoft WORD
Microsoft
Word
$99^{00}
O
O
Macintosh LC III
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union - Level Two 864-5697
VISA
MasterCard
DISCOVER
Some restrictions apply. Come into the Computer Store for details. Please add 5.9% sales tax.
Dr. DeSalvo will speak about stress management.
Areyou stressed
THE POLICE BEEF
Meeting at 8:30 pm Thurs., Mar.11 Watkins first floor
Learn to Fly
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction-Charter
Service-Rental
842-0000
Enlargements Up To 12"X18" In Only 3 Hours!!!
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
NOMINATIONS WANTED
THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN IS NOW ACCEPTING NOMINATIONS TO HONOR OUTSTANDING WOMEN STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF FOR ITS ANNUAL
WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM
WOMEN'S HALL OF FAME
NOMINATIONS ARE BEING ACCEPTED FOR THE FOLLOWING CATEGORIES:
WOMEN'S HALL OF FAME
OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STAFF MEMBER
OUTSTANDING WOMAN TEACHER
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STAFF MEMBER
OUTSTANDING INTERNATIONAL WOMAN STUDENT
OUTSTANDING NONTRADITIONAL WOMAN STUDENT
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STUDENT IN COMMUNITY SERVICES
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STUDENT IN STUDENT SERVICES
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STUDENT IN LEADERSHIP
OUTSTANDING WOMAN STUDENT IN ATHLETICS
OUTSTANDING PIONEER WOMAN
DEADLINE FOR NOMINATIONS: Friday, March 19th at 5:00 p.m.
Nomination forms may be obtained at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, 864-3552.
The Women's Recognition Program will be held on Tuesday, April 20th, 8:00 p.m. in the Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Commission on the Status of Women is funded by the Student Senate
CHRIS ROCK • ALLEN PAYNE
PHIL HARTMAN • CHRIS ELLIOTT
Sex, rap and family values?
CONSUMER
ADVISORY
EXPLICIT LYRICS
COMEDY
CB4
THE MOVIE
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Present by BRIAN GRAZER SEAN DANIEL Production "CB4" from JOHN BARNES
CHRIS ROCK NELSON GEORGE Present by CHRIS ROCK NELSON GEORGE and ROBERT LUCASH
SEAN DANIEL Present by BRIAN GRAZER Present by NELSON GEORGE and TAMRA DAVIS
CB4 THE MOVIE
CONSUMER
ADVISORY
EXPLICIT LYRICS
CB4
COMING SOON TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
Now This Is What You Call
A Criminal Record
CB4
THE
SOUNDTRACK
PARENTAL
ADVISORY
EXPLICIT LYRICS
PARENTAL ADVISORY EXPLICIT LANGUAGE
In-Your-face Cuts From
PUBLIC ENEMY
BOOGH DOWN PRODUCTIONS
MC REN
HURRICANE FEATURING
THE BEASTIE BOYS
FU-SCHNICKINS
PARENTAL ADVISORY
P.M. Dawn
BLACKSTREET
FEATURING TEDRY RILEY
TRACH SPINGER
CB4
On MCA CDs And Cassettes
MCA®
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
...
PLACE AN AD FREE
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
Qo
19 year old SWM: Hey Liesli I'm looking for a girl to spoil with my lovin'. I'm a silly poster here at time with you. I can't be alone at time with you. No SPdPs please. Call #10328. Artist now showing, National Capitol State Capital, Palm Beach Airport, Kansas City looking forward, any age, any race. HIV box B15 (mens B15)
Authority questioning reality, hacker w/b a passion for Cyberpunk and an intensive collection of Cameras, Cables, Gear, Intelligent conversation w/a woman w/ compatible imperfections. Must enjoy dancing, partying, candlelight pictures, & video games. I can paint ians & utgights not apply. Call 10139.
Do you worry about repeating conversations, having thick ankles, and eating too many fruit flavored wafer cookies? Do you brag about your parents constantly? Or maybe you just want to be there worrying about the same things; if you have brown curly hair and green eyes. Call box # 81018. S/W/M NonTraditional student, with a sense of humor about life, seeks female to share time and experiences with. Don't be shy. Call me. What have you got to lose except may loneliness? Box # 81018.
SWM, 25, is looking for a woman, 18-22, who likes movies, old movies, long romance movies, and/or playing with friends. She really wants dating, but right now not looking for a romantic relationship. I want to have some fun. Call SWM.
SWIM 6'4", 180 lbs. looking for someone to run with in a jacket 4-14 miles at a moderate pace 3 times a week. If you need a partner to keep you honest to your fitness program, give me a call or buy a boxed SWIM, very slightly neurotic, seeks deranged partner for quality time in the quiet garden.
swM 22 looking for singles and couples any sex, age or race for intellectually convulsive convexity.
MSW 644 Grad Student musician, creative, off-bear,
easy-going, in to live music. Monk Python, MKJ.
GREAT job, and taking forever about anything and
anything, including alternative music with
female similar interests. #10291
SWM looking for someone who appreciates the
experience and is willing to take on the "Experiment." Call box # 1011
mW smokers SWP travelling companion (to New Orleans during Pillow Fight) to Fort Bragg, NC. Book at Bike Rentals Book A t 10314
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
The world is already full of wanna-beeNat. I is beautiful. I'm looking for someone of sound mind with enough backbone to be true to themselves before others. My interest are Munk, weighs, and the usual adventure. I don't drink beers to enjoy life. All calls will be responded to book #101169
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
♂
"If you like pina colada and getting caught in the brace, if your not into yoga and have half a brain. Then, we're the women in this group." 1, 2, 1, but
Love seeing intriguing P. B. I have a tight virgin belly button, do you? I work it up to a base, and I'm not wearing any underwear. So, "If you won't go telling me, 'n call me," will baby talk me? Or will I? *Foots* 2014
Bi SWF 21, non-drinker. Looking for unique female and gay cuts ages 20-44 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to have close friendships with trustworthy people #20/41 Grad. 29/50, WS. We recently separated our girls from the same family in companyship. I am athletic, intelligent and outgoing Keeping physically fit and dancing are one of my passions. I am socially conscious and believe in self care. I love black and white. I keep a rather tight schedule, but would like to spend spare hours with mature, intelligent, attractive, male with same interests If dinner is as innovative as you get on a date, don't
mw3404w8. long braided hairnet seeking SWM
long brass and IE&S. Enjoy laughing, the outdoors and
a good MGD. Any man with a Dalmatian, call me.
Uptight doesn't inquire. #20140
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
GAM 24 hard worker, studies a lot, also makes time to go out. Enjoys stargazing, walks on a moonlit night and stimulating conversation 'till dawn with jazz music. Seeking someone older, romantic, mature, conservative, non-traditional or grad student. Very discreet. Non-smoker, social
88
Common abbreviations
GW stud look for someone to lie a list in common. Like nature walks, great outdoors, sporting events, dining out, going places, doing things that require concentration, learning how to lean on will also need someone to be there when needed. Not afraid to be seen or with an older stand-non-smoker light driver. Be aware of any sex, SWM 22 look for something you may not intellectually simulating conversation and maybe mutual gratification. #00062
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
♀♂
20 year old inexperienced WF looking for someone female 19-23 to explore friendship with adventurous possibilities. I'm an artist, a teacher, a traveler, and the Cocteau, I'm too shy to open up to women I find attractive and I resorted to this! Don't worry about a commitment left just get acquainted. Call box
BJ SWF, 21, Non Driller. Looking for unique female and gutsy girls ages 20-44 who like to go dancing and laugh and be crazy. I want to close friendships with trustworthy people. Box
Female 23 seeks plasticic friendship -shopping, movies, get involved on campus. Grad student living in Lawrence. Occasional nights on the town! Just someone to hang out with. Call Box #10312
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You will place an and in the laytag Network section of the Kanan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don’t interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
.
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102.NO.118
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
hev call it the pit
T
they lay in the pat
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shreded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
AUGUST 1983
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forgate basketball players in snake-skin boots two-steping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of life, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It is not the most cusy of accommodations," says Shelle Roselle丹, assistant editor of *The Note*, a lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit
In January, the "Cop Killer" singer himself brought a taste of Los Angeles to the concert.
K~you
a promotional feature of the University Daily Kinsan
Pet care during spring break. Page 5
New spring fashion ideas. Page 14
Getting ready for spring break. Page 18
Spring Break '93
KANSAS
LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff write
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
10r store owners told the House
val and State Affairs Committee
as much as half of their sales
beer sales.
ichita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverand that beer was only a small other stores' total sales
m incensed as a sole proprietor retail store that the big chains sell hundreds and thousands of feel that they must take 50 perf my beer business to show a said Patricia Opitz, a Topeka store owner.
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was of the 12 bill opponents to
en they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Mitchell "It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and gus to be competitive."
r the hearing, he said his busi-
soil would be hit hard by the legn
because beer made up about
recent of his total sales.
.in a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer."ussion during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content at more locations.
was stated that the amount of ing stronger beer would not ase—that it was simply a matter ere it was bought," said Francis b a state and national Christian erence Union volunteer. "I dis- Availability is the key here. If ndy, you buy it."
er bill opponents warned the sentatives that if grocery and蒸 stores got 5.0 beer, the lature would soon see a glut of蒸 store requests to sell any of liquor.
e Pandora's box will be open," Richard Ferguson, president of as Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
ponents of the bill spoke on day. No action was taken.
ctions
ne candidates
CICS: presidential candidate; Edward
Olstine, ojtistian and engineering sen-
sice presidential candidate; Jeff Rus-
Olstine, ojtistian and president
WTE: presidential candidate. John Shoer. Toupei junior and liberal arts andices staffer. Vice president candida. Tim Dawson. Toupei junior and Nume-
MANISHA: presidential candidate
Cox, Oppaline, III. junior. Vice presi-
candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
Juror.
C. T.J. O. N. I.: presidential candidate:
McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahoma, senior and librarians and science senator. Vice presi-
candidate: Marcelois Romero, Topera
and off-campus senator.
Senate Elections Commission
KANBAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
hev call it the pit.
T
they can it the pt.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredred drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snakeskin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
The pit is under the flat roof of the Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
1983
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
In January, the *Cop Killer* singer himself brought a taste of Los Angeles to the
K~you Spring Break '93 Table of Contents
International Interests. page 2
Panama City. page 3
Health Concerns. page 4
Pet Care. page 5
Alcohol. page 6
Staying in Lawrence. page 7
Theft & Robberies. page 8
Volunteers. page 9
Later Spring Break dates. page 12
Travel Agents. page 13
Clothing. page 14
Swimwear. page 15
Author Profile. page 16
Best Books. page 17
Tanning. page 18
KU Staff. page 19
Credits
Special Sections Manager...Blythe Focht
Assistant Managing Editor...Justin Knupp
Copy Chief...Shelly Solon
Copy Editors...Katy Greenwald
...John Paul Fogel
...Tracy Ritchie
...Corey Shoup
Designer...Greg Farmer
Photo Editor...Mark Rowlands
Photographers...Kim Buche
...Irene Lanier
Cover Design...Jean Haegele
Special Thanks to Professor Rick Musser and his Reporting II class and these students:
Traci Carl, Dan Carver, Thomas Cuevas, Jennifer Freund, Sharon Henry, Brian James, Stacy Kunstel, Barbara Schultz, Shannon Schwartz, Kathleen Stolle, Jennifer Swan, Carlos Tejada and J. L. Watson. Also Thanks to Therese Everett and Angelina Lopez
Break offers chance to learn U.S. history
Program will take students to Texas
Special to the Kansan
By JL Watson
While many U.S. students strap on skis or soak up the sun on spring break, many international students are brushing up on history and culture by visiting U.S. landmarks.
Lisa Chang, Taipei, Taiwan, freshman,
hasn't made a final decision about where she
will go, but has narrowed her choices to
either Chicago or Texas.
"I if I go to Chicago I want to see the downtown area and Chinatown, and if I go to Texas I want to visit San Antonio," Chang said.
Texas is an ideal location for a spring break trip because it has a great deal of variety and is relatively nearby. It has become such a popular place that the Office of International Student Services is planning an eight-day trip to the Lone Star state.
Diane Brandmiller, graduate assistant at the center, who planned the trip, thinks that students who go will benefit from the experience. "I tried to work out a trip that has a little bit of everything," she said. "We're hoping to see the contrasts of the people of the state."
The tour includes stays in Dallas, San Antonio,
Laredo, Austin and Fort Worth.
"We try to work out trips that will be within the students' budgets," Brandner said.
The cost of this year's trip is $225 and includes transportation, housing and some extras such as a ticket to the Pro-Rodeo in Fort Worth.
Brandmiller said the trip was limited to 45 students. So far 25 students have signed up. The trip is not limited to international students.
dents.
"Last year we had students who brought friends from other schools and family members," Brandmiller said.
Myria Astanioti, Nicosia, Cyprus, senior, is planning to go with Brandonmiller's group.
"By going with a group I get to see places I wouldn't get to see if I was alone," she said.
would get to see a W. Waubenberg,
For Eliana Pozo, Quito, Ecuador, graduate
student, traveling with a group means less of
a hassle.
"I don't have to worry about anything," she said. "The time on the bus is also a lot of fun. Last year we took a lot of pictures and sang songs along the way."
"I went to Florida for winter break so I knew I didn't want to go there again," she said.
Noriko Shinabuko, Okinawu, Japan, special student, is heading north for the break.
sabu:
Shimabuku and a friend are planning a trip to Canada. They are not following a specific itinerary.
"I'll just let my friend's brother plan it because he goes to school there," she said. "I just want to go and have fun."
Wimps Need Not Apply.
TREK USA
American Bicycle Technology
SALES SERVICE
SUNFLOWER
BIKE SHOP
843-5000
LAWSHELL, KANSAS
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
SPRING BREAK '93 * K-you * March 10, 1993
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
qor store owners told the House leral and State Affairs Committee t as much as half of their sales e beer sales.
Wichita liquor store owner point out that liquor stores are permitted ally to sell only alcoholic beverals and that beer was only a small t of other stores' total sales.
am incensed as a sole proprietor
a retail store that the big chains
o sell hundreds and thousands of
us feel that they must take 50 perf
of my beer business to show a
"ft," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
store owner.
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
last of the 12 bill opponents to
ak.
When they take our one item it will be devastating. "Carl Mitchell d." It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and ing us to be competitive."
"m in a college town," Webb said. sa young crowd. Young is beer."
fier the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about percent of his total sales.
discussion during the hearings also al it with the social issue of making er with higher alcohol content al able at more locations.
It was stated that the amount of nanking stronger beer would not crease — that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francisod, a state and national Christian imperance Union volunteer. "I dissee. Availability is the key here. If chandy, you buy it."
other bill opponents warned the presentatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the glauface would soon see a glut of ovenience store requests to sell any ses of liquor.
The Pandora's box will be open," d Richard Ferguson, president of nasa Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
'roponents of the bill spoke on esday. No action was taken.
ections
The candidates
**BOCUS:** presidential candidate: Edward wuinan, Ootlatin jungle and engineering senator. Vice president candidate: Jiff Russel, Oatlatin jungle and president of the junior senator.
**UNITE:** presidential candidate. John Shoe
TOPPER, toakupi junior and liberal arts and
ciences senator. Wide presidential candidate.
Wopper, tookupi junior and Nuncker
senator.
LUNGANSAH: presidential candidate:
lengard Cox, Palatine, III. junior. Vice
presidential candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
II., junior.
A.C.T. I.O.N.: president; candidate
McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahoma; senior and
litera arts and sciences senator; Vice
president candidate; Marsol Rosso, Topeka
vor and off-campus senator.
Senate Elections Commission KANBAI
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
Kansan staff writer
NEWS:864-4810
By James J. Reece
T
hey call it the pit.
they can hit the pit
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredred drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
1986
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to ahappy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
SUA plans trip to Panama City
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
noble. She leaves the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
it's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenberg, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
In January, the "Cop Killer" singer himself brought a taste of Los Angeles to the
Florida beach offers a change from the 'usual'
Traci Carl
Special to the Kansan
"Padre was getting kind of old." Gura said.
"It was just time for a change. I guess."
Mary Gura, St. Louis junior, has been to South Padre Island, Texas, for the past two spring breaks. He's ready for something new.
"It was just time for a change. This year Gura will be one 120 KU students and an estimated half million college students who will forsake other popular beach areas for the panhandle city of Panama City Beach, Fla.
Beach, people of Panama City Beach are ready for Guira and the other 499,999 students, said Patty Weathers, an employee of the Beach Chamber of Commerce.
"We want them all to come and enjoy our sugar-white beaches," she said in a telephone interview. "In fact, I've got my 'We have a great beach attitude' T-shirt on right now."
Student Union Activities is sponsoring the KU group's fourth trip to Panama City Beach. The trip costs $185 and includes two meals and condominium accommodations from March 19 to 27. Students provide their own transportation.
"We got in early and secured a luxury condo," said Sue Morrell, SUA manager.
cando, said Sara. Most students will car pool for the 17-hour drive, which is six hours shorter than the drive to Daytona. Gura said he planned on taking a trip road with about 20 of his Sigma Nu fraternity brothers.
They decided on Panama City Beach because they had heard a lot about it, he said.
"I've heard it's the new place to go for spring break," Gura said.
spring or fall. Panama City Beach, which used to be called the "Redneck Riviera," is changing its image.
Morrell said that the first year the group went, in 1990, there seemed to be more "snowbirds" than students. Snowbirds are Canadians and northeasterners who usually spend the winter in Florida.
"It was not a spring break haven," Morrell said. "If it was, it was for the locals."
ty Video Countdown.
Now, most of the snowbirds leave at the beginning of March and then the students take over. Weathers said.
said, it was a hive of activity But by 1991, the beach was so popular that MTV was tapping footage for their Top Twenty Video Countdown.
said.
But if the students don't get an invitation to dinner, they'll probably be at Spinners or Club Lavela, two hangouts that claim to be the world's largest beach bars.
The few snowbirds who stay don't seem to mind the students, though. Morrall said.
"It's not uncommon for these snowbirds to invite the kids over for dinner at night," she said.
world's biggest backyard
Both bars feature pools, waterfalls, and
stages, said Jim Brodiss, president of Bay Media Inc., an affiliate of the radio station that persuaded MTV to visit Panama City Beach.
"You can get lost in these clubs," Brodiss said. "One has 80,000 square feet of deck space. You walk out the back door and you are on the Gulf of Mexico."
The bars provide the talent and the outdoor amphitheater, and MTV does the taping, he said. MTV will be there March 5-7.
The looftie room
Pool parties, nightlife, club activities, parasailing and bungee jumping are some of the activities MTV has taped in the past, Bordiss said.
said. MTV will will air March 12-14
The footage will air March 12-14
said.
"Last year we took them deep sea fishing," Bordiss said. "We try to de-emphasize the beer aspect. We try to show the diversity of the beach."
the beach with the two beach bats, seven other bars are along a 10-mile stretch of the beach. "Each catches to a segment of spring break," Bordiss said.
Bordeaux. Besides the bars, Panama City Beach is popular because it is closer and cheaper than other popular spring break spots like Davana, Weathers said.
It also is cleaner and safer. That attracted SUA, Morrell said. Driving or pitting tents on the beaches is prohibited, she said. Kegs and glass containers also are prohibited.
"It's probably one of the most beautiful beaches I've seen in my life," Morrell said.
beaches I've seen here in Tampa. Brodiss said he thought students liked Panama City Beach because the people and the police were friendly.
"I don't think the police here are overzealous," Brodiss said. "They understand young people."
people.
Brodiss said Police Chief Lee Sullivan worked well with the students because he appreciated their business.
"He realizes that tourism is our biggest industry and he realizes that the reason Fort Lauderdale lost a lot of their tourism was because of the way they treated the young people," Bordiss said. "If you treat them with respect, then they act respectful."
respect, therethere was work for the Panama City Beach police for 24 seasons said the biggest problem that they had was that people would pass on the right.
that people would pass off to that last three or four years have been great," Sauls said. "We pour out a lot of beer and whiskey, but we don't have many arrests, not for the amount of kids we have here."
here.
Emily Elmore, Leawood sophomore, said she chose to go to Panama City because she thought the crowd would be older and more mature. She went to South Padre Island last year, but she wanted something different this year, she said.
"It was a lot of fun, but it was kind of teenybopbill," Elmore said. "It was a younger crowd."
crowd.
But Lance Brown, graduate adviser for SUA, said he thought the trip still would have the traditional beach and bikini elements.
"I think it'll be your typical spring break, the typical college stuff," Brown said. "Use your imagination."
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March 10, 1993 * K-you * SPRING BREAK '93
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove
kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
iquor store owners told the House federal and State Affairs Committee at as much as half of their sales are beer sales.
"I am incensed as a sole proprietor a retail store that the big chains hoil hundreds and thousands of ems feel that they must take 50 percent of my beer business to show a coft," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka store owner.
A Wichita liquor store owner point out that liquor stores are permitted gale to sell only alcoholic beverages and that beer was only a small part of other stores' total sales.
john Webb,网宝 of Webb's Fine
Lives and Spirits,800 W,23rd St, was
e last of the 12 bill opponents to
break.
"When they take our one item it could be devastating." Carl Mitchell id. "It's like asking us to run a race, en cutting one of our legs off and knitting us to be competitive."
I'm in a college town," Webb said. "s a young crowd. Young is beer."
After the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about 1 percent of his total sales.
Discussion during the hearings also salt with the social issue of making ver with higher alcohol content available at more locations.
It was stated that the amount ofinking stronger beer would notgrease — that it was simply a matterwhere it was bought," said FrancisOdid, a state and national Christian imperance Union volunteer. "I disree.Availability is the key here. If shandy, you buy it."
other bill opponents warned the presentations that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the gislature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any ses of liquor
The Pandora's box will be open," id Richard Ferguson, president of usas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
Proponents of the bill spoke on esday. No action was taken.
ections
The candidates
*PCUSS: presidential candidate; Edward
Watson, Olia teacher and engineering
science. Vice presidential candidate; Jeff
Russell, Olia teacher and president of the juni-
niship.*
UNITE: presideen candidate. John Shoah topper. Teokju junior and liberal arts and sciences senator. Wor president candidate. Teokju junior and Nunhee senator.
NUNGANSAH: presidential candidate:
margaret Cox, Patricia, III, junior, Vice
presidential candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
Y., junior.
A.C.T.I.O. N.:II; presidential candidate
Tommy Macintosh, Tulsa, Okla.; senior and
lib arts and sciences senator. Vice presi-
ential candidate: Tommy Romero, Topeka
nobil and off-campus senator.
President Senate Elections Commission
KARAWAI
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
NEWS:8644810
By James J. Reece
Kansanstaffwriter
ey call it the pit
T
hey call it the pit.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
it is not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
JUNE 1982
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
In January, the *Cop Killer* singer himself brought a tast of Los Angeles to the
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By Thomas Cuevas Special to the Kansan
Break can be fun but unhealthy too
When spring break ends, the worry sets in, say Watkins Memorial Health Clinic officials. Visits to Watkins increase in April, the month following spring break. Students show up in increased numbers wanting to be tested for a wide variety of conditions directly related to sexual intercourse.
Spring break: a lot of sun, a lot of beer, a little romance in the sand and afterwards, fear. That's right—fear.
Last year there were approximately 600 visits to Watkins in April,150 more than the average of about 450 visits a month.
Students say "I was drunk," or "I had sex with a prostitute, "or "the condom broke," said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins. Those concerns translate into an increased demand for evaluation and testing.
rockey said that students wanted to be checked whether the problem was urethral irritation, concern about herpes, a missed menstrual period, a urinary tract infection, genital warts, "crabs" or anxiety about exposure to someone with another type sexually transmitted disease.
Ironically, the number of positive tests results for the more common STD's do not change significantly after break.
Yockey said that although there was not a
significant difference, just looking at the positive lab results does not paint the whole picture.
Some of the increased worry is real, according to Yockey. In some cases there's not a positive test result to record. For instance, lice has no specific test, either they are present or they aren't.
"After spring break we may see 25 patients per week with crabs when we usually see only 10." Yockey said.
The good news is that the problem seems to be improving. Three years ago, there were 950 anxiety visits to Watkins during the month of April. Then the Safe Break program began. Safe Break is an educational effort by Watkins health education department.
"The numbers have decreased each April since the start of the program," said Yockey. In 1991, there were 750 April visits to Watkins for sexually related conditions.
"Five years ago students did not have ready access to information about communication skills, contraceptives, or about STDs," said Candyce Wailley, nurse at Watkins.
She said that students needed to learn negotiation skills such as influencing a partner to use a condom or spermicidal jelly.
"Students need to accept the facts and plan ahead," Waitley said.
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KANSAS
LEGISLATURE
SPRING BREAK '03 * K-you * March 10, 1993
Beer bill concerns merchants
ByBen Grove
Kansanstaffwrite
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away avail part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
por store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee as much as half of their sales eber sales.
am incensed as a sole proprietor
retail store that the big chains
sold hundreds and thousands of
as feel that they must take 50 per-
cent of my beer business to show a
Bl," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
store owner.
Wichita liquor store owner point out thatliquorstores arepermitted to sell only alcoholic beverals and that beer was only a smallt of other stores' total sales.
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was last of the 12 bill opponents to
ak
When they take our one item it will be devalestaging. "Carl Mitchell." "It's like asking us to run a race, n cutting one of our legs off and ing us to be competitive."
fier the hearing, he said his business also be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about a percent of his total sales.
"in a college town," Webb said, sa young crowd. Young is beer."
discussion during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content available at more locations.
it was stated that the amount of ninking stronger beer would not rease—that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francis O'Donnell, a state and national Christian imperance Union volunteer. "I dissee Availability is the key here. If handy, you buy it."
mer bill opponents warned the presentations that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the gisture would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any es of liquor.
proponents of the bill spoke on esday. No action was taken.
The Pandora's box will be open,
4 Richard Ferguson, president of
osas Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
ections
The candidates
(PCBUS): presidential candidate; Edward Austin; Claitier junior and engineering senator; Vice presidential candidate; Jeff Russet; Claitier junior and president of the firm.
RNTE: presidential candidate. John Shoer
topper. Topeka junior and liberal arts
and senator. Vice president cali-
dent. Tim Diawon. Topeka junior and Nume-
tor.
JUNGANSHA: presidential candidate;
Lamar Cox, Pataline, III, junior. Vice-
presidential candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
II, junior.
A.C.T.O.I. N.O.I. presidential candidate:
Montana McIntosh, Tulsa, Okaia, senior and
libra arts and sciences senator. Vice-president candidate: Markus Romero, Topeka
and off-campus senator.
Student Senate Elections Commission
KANBAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
T
hey call it the pit.
they can hit it.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shreded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of life, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
This is the bad side of tow.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
it is not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of *The Note*, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
THE BAND'S FEET DOWN THE STairs.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
In January, the "Cop Killer" singer himself brought a taste of Los Angeles to the Southern ground. The Outbreak
Kim Buckle 1984-1993
Gina Mueller, owner of Pet Sitters Plus, 3904 Monterey Court, cares for pets in their own homes while the owners are out of town. She says she started her business out of her love for animals. She charges $14 to visit a home two or more times a day.
Pet care requires planning
Kennels, clinics and pet sitting are a few options
Kathleen Stolle Special to the Kansan
adise.
When it comes to short-term pet care, leaving a pet in a familiar environment is the best choice, said Liebl, a veterinarian at Clinton Parkway Animal Hospital, 4340 Clinton Parkway.
A pet owner's last responsible act before cutting loose for spring break should be to make careful arrangements for Spot and Fluffy, area animal care professionals advise.
ton Parkway.
"I think most pets are most relaxed in that situation." Liebl said. "I think it not as big a deal for dogs as it is for cats. But I think if you asked the dog, he'd probably say he'd prefer to stay home."
to say home.
Leibl suggests that the vacationing owner arrange for a reliable friend, family member or pet-sitting service to check in at least twice daily to feed, water and exercise the animal.
Liebl also advises owners to prepare for emergency situations.
"It's always wise, if you do have someone take care of your pet, to leave information on the pet, such as medication and emergency phone numbers," he said.
Gina Mueller, owner of Pet Sitters Plus,
304 Monterey Court, has cared for everthing from spiders to an Irish wolfhound since starting her business last March. Mueller said that the owner's habits became hers, whether she was working as a full-time house and pet sitter or just checking in periodically.
outloud.
"Generally, I try to care for their animals the way they care for their animals," she said. "Some people want me to come and spend an hour just petting the cat and I'll do that."
Approximately 50 percent of her business comes from KU students and professors, and Mueller's spring break calendar is beginning to fill. Mueller charges between $9 and $15 per day, depending on the number of daily drop-ins requested, and regardless of the number of pets, she said.
A second option for pet owners is to board their pets at kennels or clinics, Liebl said. Depending on what services are offered, such as play time or extra walks, Liebl estimated boarding fees would range from $6 to $10 per day.
Owners may also find friends or relatives willing to take the animals into their homes for less than a clinic or kennel would charge and with more one-on-one attention.
may be left alone for long. Pressured us food feeders also are available for cats and dogs, Emerson added, but are recommended for only about a day.
For those owners who can't bear to part with their furry friends, taking the animal along is an option. However, Liebl warns, hotel accommodations and the typical spring break party scene may present some snags for both pets and their owners. More relaxed activities, such as camping, Liebl says, would probably be best for the net.
says, "would people say, 'If they have traveled with the pet before, and they've enjoyed that, and the pet's used to it, that's fantastic,'" Liebl said.
Not all pets require high maintenance. Fish, for example, are relatively self-sufficient when supplied with an automatic or time-release feeder, according to Sherry Emerson, co-owner of Pet World, 711 W. 23rd St. Certain reptiles may demand less attention, too, Emerson said, and even birds may be left alone for weekends.
When pets who decide to take a vacation of their own during spring break, city animal
"Generally, animals are picked up by us if they are appear to be under absolutely no one's control," she said.
control officers will escort them back home or take them to the local shelter, Sgt. Susan Hadd said.
one's control.
According to Melissa Goldman, animal caretaker at the Lawrence Humane Society, Inc., 1805 East 19th St., said owners may reclaim their pets within three business days of capture for a nominal fee. After that, the animal becomes property of the shelter and, if healthy, is put up for adoption
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KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
aquor store owners told the House
deral and State Affairs Committee
at as much as half of their sales
are beer sales.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
I am incensed as a sole proprietor a retail store that the big chains to sell hundreds and thousands of ms feel that they must take 50 pern of my beer business to show a oft," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka mjor store owner.
Wichita liquor store owner point-out that liquor stores are permitted gaily to sell only alcoholic beverages and that beer was only a small part of other stores total sales.
When they take our one item it will be devastated." Carl Mitchill said. "It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and inging us to be competitive."
onn Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
enn and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
) last of the 12 bill opponents to
eak.
I'm in a college town," Webb said.
'a young crowd. Young is beer."
inter the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the litigation because beer made up about percent of his total sales.
saying crowd. Young ones discuss during the hearings also with the social issue of making er with higher alcohol content disable at more locations.
it was stated that the amount of ninking stronger beer would not rease—that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francis oad, a state and national Christian uperance Union volunteer. "I dissee. Availability is the key here. If handy, you buy it."
but oil opponents warned the resentatives that if grocery and venience stores got 5.0 beer, the dulature would see a glut of venience store requests to sell anys of liquor.
The Pandora's box will be open," I Richard Ferguson, president of ipss Retail Liquor Dealers Associproponents of the bill spoke on sday. No action was taken.
ections
March 10, 1993 • *A-you* • SPRING BREAK **89**
the candidates
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward
Atten, Glauteacher and engineering sen-
vice president candidate: Jeff Rouss
Glauteacher and president of the junior
NOTE: presidential candidate. John Shower. Tapeo junior and liberal arts and senator sensate. Vice presidential candidate Tim Dawson. Tapeo junior and nominee
UNIANGINA: presidential candidate
Cox, Cosine. III, Junior. Vice presi-
tative candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
III, junior.
C. A. T. I. O. L. N. ; presidential candidate;
M. McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahoma; senior and
juris and science graduate;
M. R. Marmol Romero; Toekee
off campus senator.
for and off-campus senator.
are:
Senate Elections Commission KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING:864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
Lawrence's musical underground
NEWS:864-4810
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
hey call it the pit.
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
T
hey call it the pit.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredred drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snakeskin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of ice, underground music. This is the bad side of town
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
it is not the most cusky of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
PENTHESS
In January, the "Cop Killer" singerhimself brought a taste of America to the city.
0 0
Police expect s Officers ready for large groups of partying, drinking students
By Jennifer Swan
Special to the Kansan
Doing keg stands and beer bongs is not a part of the normal daily routine of most people.
Unless they are on spring break
Olness they are on. Efforts to preach responsible drinking to vacationing college students may be on the rise, but those who have to deal with the annual party-goers say this year will be the same old story.
"Kids go on break with a sense of freedom that they feel gives them the right to drink like fish and act the fool," said David Geyer, Fort Lauderdale police department captain. He is affectionately known to spring breakers on the beach as "the cop in the jeep."
ers on the beach "Drinking is still the most popular pastime for students on break," he said. "They come down here hoopin' and hollerin'. I think some of them drink from breakfast to bedtime."
Paula Miller, Washington, Mich., senior,
said when it came to assessing the average
college student's spring break itinerary,
Geyer hit the nail on the head.
Geyer he said. "People drink all day and night," she said. "They take a break for dinner, sober up and then drink some more."
But Geyer said drinking had caused some of the worst accidents he had seen in his 19-year career.
"A couple of years ago we had two young men jump right off their balcony," he said. "Balcony leaping used to be an intramural sport around here during spring break."
Predictably, Geyer said the best way for students to stay out of trouble was to drink responsibly.
"As long as they are not infringing on the rights of other people, youthful exuberance can be tolerated," he said. "But dancing out into the middle of the street will get you pulled in."
Miller said she had a run in with the police when she went to Fort Lauderdale for spring break in 1989.
"They came up to me, took my beer away and said they would call my parents," she said. "I only had to deal with them once. They just try to scare you because they really can't do anything. Everyone is so out of control, it is impossible to keep them all in line."
Tom Atkinson, South Padre Island police department captain, said extra precautions were taken during the spring break season to keep the students who visit Texas from wasting away in Margaritaville.
"We overlap them and work extra hours. We are also bringing in other agencies to help and hiring some off-duty officers from departments in the valley."
"we change our shifts around," he said.
Atkinson said alcohol consumption presented the biggest problem for police in South Padre Island. But he said the percentage of college kids who got in trouble was small.
selves in real trouble.
"A lot of people go to Mexico while they're here," he said. "Many of the people who live there are very religious and family oriented. They consider disruptive conduct a personal insult. The bar owners need the students so they try to be tolerant."
small.
"People say, 'I can't believe how many people you brought in last night,' " he said. "But the total is less than one percent of all the students. The number of people brought to the station is nothing compared to the thousands who come to Padre."
"But they will only put up with so much," he said. "The police won't hesitate to jail You. And their jails won't exactly the best in the world."
Atkinson said students who drink excessively south of the border could find themselves in real trouble.
A group at KU is doing its part to see that alcohol doesn't lead to trouble for KU students.
dems.
The Watkins public health education department will offer Safe Break, a program designed to promote safe behavior during the break. Julie Hunsinger, Watkins health educator, said students behaved differently
when they are miles away from home and school.
"People do things because they see other students doing them," she said. "They know some of these activities are wrong, but when they are surrounded by hundreds of other college students, they chime right in."
Huntingstir said she hoped to make sure KU students were prepared to make good decisions when they reached their vacation destinations.
"We will be setting up displays and distributing information about drinking responsibly on spring break, having safe sex and other spring break issues," she said.
and butterfly. Safe Break will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on March 15 to 19 in front of Wescoe Hall.
Hah:
"We are holding Safe Break right before the students leave to keep the information fresh in their minds," she said. "We want them to remember that even though other students are doing risky things it's not wise for them to follow."
Capt. Geyer said students should be careful about staying sober so they were aware of the people around them.
of the people who attend school.
"People need to know there are a lot of locals who try to take advantage of them or take their possessions during parties," he said. "Most college kids are way too trusting. But this is not a college campus. You've got to know when you come here that you're not in Kansas anymore."
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES
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842-1212
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1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that
rket.
por store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee as much as half of their sales beer sales.
am incensed as a sole proprietor
a retail store that the big chains
o sell hundreds and thousands of
as feel that they must take 50 per
of my beer business to show a fit," said Patricia Opitz, a Topeka or store owner.
Wichita liquor store owner point out that liquor stores are permitted ally to sell only alcoholic beverages and that beer was only a small t of other stores' total sales.
When they take our one item it will be devastating. "Carl Mitchall. It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
in Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
eats and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
last of the 12 bill opponents to
ak.
6
m in a college town," Webb said. ta young crowd. Young is beer."
After the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about 10 percent of his total sales.
session during the hearings also
It with the social issue of making
r with higher alcohol content
table at more locations.
that was stated that the amount of taking stronger beer would not cease that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francis O'Neill, a state and national Christian superiority Union volunteer. "I dislike Availability as the key here. If handy, you buy it."
her bill opponents warned the resentatives that if grocery and venience stores got 5.0 beer, the塑境 would soon see a glut of venience store requests to sell any is of liquor.
Richard Ferguson, president of sas Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
opponents of the bill spoke on sday. No action was taken.
ections
ne candidates
*FOCUS* presidential candidate: Edward S. Olatime, oltimate and engineering senator. Vice president candidate: Jeff Russo. Olathe junior and president of the group.
JUNITE: presidential candidate; John Shoer, Topeka junior and liberal arts and senator. Vice presidential candidate; Tim Dawson, Topeka junior and Numeral senator.
UNGANSAH: presidential candidate:
haird Corso, Pataline III, Junior. Vice-president:
Charles Frey, Brockport,
Ⅵ, junior.
SPRING BREAK '93 * K~you ~* March 10, 1993
C. T. I. O. N. I: presidential candidate;
Micintosh, Tulsa, Okla., senior and
artists and sciences senator. Vice presi-
dative candidate; Mariel Romero, Topeka
and off-campus senator.
ident Senate Elections Commission KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
NEWS:864-4810
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
hev call it the pit.
CANINE
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
they can it the pit
It's a dance floor like no
other in Lawrence — a place
where adrenaline is king
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jacket. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two steepening in a cowboy
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
Gina Mueller, owner of Pet Sitters Plus, 3904 Monterey Court, cares for pets in their own homes while the owners are out of town. She says she started her business out of her love for animals. She charges $14 to visit a home two or more times a day.
Kim Buche / KANSAN
Sne says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
...
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts both the music and the politics
Pet care requires planning
Kennels, clinics and pet sitting are a few options
Kathleen Stolle
Special to the Kansan
When it comes to short-term pet care, leaving a pet in a familiar environment is the best choice, said Tom Liebl, a veterinarian at Clinton Parkway Animal Hospital, 4340 Clinton Parkway.
A pet owner's last responsible act before cutting loose for spring break should be to make careful arrangements for Spot and Fluffy, area animal care professionals advise.
ton Parkway.
"I think most pets are most relaxed in that situation," Liebi said. "I think it's not as big a deal for dogs as it is for cats. But I think if you asked the dog, he'd probably say he'd prefer to stay home."
Lebl suggests that the vacationing owner arrange for a reliable friend, family member or pet-sitting service to check in at least twice daily to feed, water and exercise the animal.
Liebl also advises owners to prepare for emergency situations.
it's always wise, if you do have someone take care of your pet, to leave information on the pet, such as medication and emergency phone numbers," he said.
Gina Mueller, owner of Pit Sitters Plus,
3004 Monterey Court, has cared for every
thing from spiders to an Irish wolfhound since starting her business last March. Mueller said that the owner's habits became hers, whether she was working as a full-time house and pet sitter or just checking in periodically.
"Generally, I try to care for their animals the way they care for their animals," she said. "Some people want me to come and spend an hour just petting the cat and I'll do that."
Approximately 50 percent of her business comes from KU students and professors, and Mueller's spring break calendar is beginning to fill. Mueller charges between $9 and $15 per day, depending on the number of daily drop-ins requested, and regardless of the number of pets, she said.
A second option for pet owners is to board their pets at kennels or clinics, Liebl said. Depending on what services are offered, such as play time or extra walks, Liebl estimated boarding fees would range from $6 to $10 per day.
Not all pets require high maintenance. Fish, for example, are relatively self-sufficient when supplied with an automatic or time-release feeder, according to Sherry Emerson, co-owner of Pet World, 711 W. 23rd St. Certain reptiles may demand less attention, too, Emerson said, and even birds may be left alone for long weekends.
Owners may also find friends or relatives willing to take the animals into their homes for less than a clinic or kennel would charge and with more one-on-one attention.
For those owners who can't bear to pair with their furry friends, taking the animal along is an option. However, Liebl warns, hotel accommodations and the typical spring break party scene may present some snags for both pets and their owners. More relaxed activities, such as camping, Liebl says, would probably be best for the pet.
ressurized self-feeders also are available for cats and dogs, Emerson added, but are recommended for only about a day.
u they have traveled with the pet before, and they've enjoyed that, and the pet's used to it, that's fantastic," Liebl said.
When pets who decide to take a vacation of their own during spring break, city animal
control officers will escort them back home or take them to the local shelter, Sgt. Susan Hall said.
Had said.
"Generally, animals are picked up by us if they are appear to be under absolutely no one's control," she said.
According to Melissa Goldman, animal caretaker at the Lawrence Humane Society, Inc., 1805 East 19th St., said owners may reclaim their pets in three business days of capture for a nominal fee. After that, the animal becomes property of the shelter and, if healthy, is put up for adoption
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That is what would happen, they said. If the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only 'tour stores can sell beer with
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KANSAS LEGISLATURE
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
March 10, 1993 • K- you • SPRING BREAK **23**
Beer bill concerns merchants
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
owners are worried the legislauld rob them of much of that
store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee; much as half of their sales epsales.
incedens as a sole proprietor
tail store that the big chains
all hundreds and thousands of
feel that they must take 50 per-
mily your beer business to show a
"said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
store owner.
chita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverand that beer was only a small other stores 'total sales.
en they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Mitchell It's like asking us to run a race, putting one of our legs off and run to be competitive."
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
st of the 12 bill opponents to
In a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer."
r the hearing, he said his busi- aslo would be hit hard by the legn because beer made up about rent of his total sales.
young crowd. Young is beer." mission during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content ble at more locations.
was stated that the amount of stronger beer would not use — that it was simply a matter ere it was bought," said Francis a state and national Christian erance Union volunteer. "I dis- Availability is the key here. If ndy, you buy it."
or bill opponents warned the sentatives that if grocery and nuance stores got 5.0 beer, the mature would soon see a glut of nuence store requests to sell any of liquor.
> Pandora's box will be open," Richard Ferguson, president of as Retail Liquor Dealers Associponents of the bill spoke on lay. No action was taken.
actions
candidates
1: president's candidate:艾德
2: the junior and engineering
service president's candidate: Jeff
thuastie and president of the junior
TE presidential candidate: John Shoe
TE toponik junior and liberal arts and
sen senator. Vice president candidat
Dawson, Toponik junior and Nume-
rian
SANHSA presidential candidate:
Rod, Coral Palmia, III. Junior Vice
president; Charles Reynolds, Brockport,
vior.
T. I. O. N. I.: president candidate:
Michelsini, Tulsa, Oklahoma and senior
and sciences senator. Vice pres-
candidate: Mariani Romero, Topeka
and off campus senator.
t Senate Elections Commission
KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
ney call it the pit.
they can it the pr
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unravelled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
forget fraternity and sorority members bopping on a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy
tess of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues
"It's not the most cusky of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had be the music and the politics
100
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Beer bill concerns merchants
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only 'liquor stores can sell beer with
ater alcohol content, and liquor
owners are worried the legislauld rob them of much of that
Police expect same old crowd
Officers ready for large groups of partying, drinking students
"We overlap them and work extra hours. We are also bringing in other agencies to help and hiring some off-duty officers from departments in the valley."
when they are miles away from home school.
By Jennifer Swan Special to the Kansan
Unless they are on spring break.
Doing keg stands and beer bongs is not a part of the normal daily routine of most people.
Efforts to preach responsible drinking to vacationing college students may be on the rise, but those who have to deal with the annual party-goers say this year will be the same old story.
"Kids go on break with a sense of freedom that they feel gives them the right to drink like fish and act the fool," said David Geyer, Fort Lauderdale police department captain. He is affectionately known to spring breakers on the beach as "the cop in the jeep."
"Drinking is still the most popular pastime for students on break," he said. "They come down here hoopin' and hollerin'. I think some of them drink from breakfast to bedtime."
Paula Miller, Washington, Mich., senior,
said when it came to assessing the average
college student's spring break itinerary,
Geyer hit the nail on the head.
"People drink all day and night," she said. "They take a break for dinner, sober up and then drink some more."
But Geyer said drinking had caused some of the worst accidents he had seen in his 19-year career.
"A couple of years ago we had two young men jump right off their balcony," he said. "Balcony leaping used to be an intramural sport around here during spring break."
Predictably, Geyer said the best way for students to stay out of trouble was to drink responsibly.
"As long as they are not infringing on the rights of other people, youthful exuberance can be tolerated," he said. "But dancing out into the middle of the street will get you pulled in."
Miller said she had a run in with the police when she went to Fort Lauderdale for spring break in 1889.
"They came up to me, took my beer away and said they would call my parents," she said. "I only had to deal with them once. They just try to scare you because they really can't do anything. Everyone is so out of control, it is impossible to keep them all in line."
Tom Atkinson, South Padre Island police department captain, said extra precautions were taken during the spring break season to keep the students who visit Texas from wasting away in Margaritaville.
"We change our shifts around," he said.
Atkinson said alcohol consumption presented the biggest problem for police in South Padre Island. But he said the percentage of college kids who got in trouble was small.
"People say, 'I can't believe how many people you brought in last night,' " he said. "But the total is less than one percent of all the students. The number of people brought to the station is nothing compared to the thousands who come to Padre."
Atkinson said students who drink excessively south of the border could find themselves in real trouble.
"A lot of people go to Mexico while they're here," he said. "Many of the people who live there are very religious and family oriented. They consider disruptive conduct a personal insult. The bar owners need the students so they try to be tolerant."
A group at KU is doing its part to see that alcohol doesn't lead to trouble for KU students.
"But they will only put up with so much," he said. "The police won't hesitate to jail you. And their jails aren't exactly the best in the world."
The Watkins public health education department will offer Safe Break, a program designed to promote safe behavior during the break. Julie Huntingster, Watkins health educator, said students behaved differently
"People do things because they see other students doing them," she said. "They know some of these activities are wrong, but when they are surrounded by hundreds of other college students, they chime right in."
Huntingsi said she hoped to make sure KU students were prepared to make good decisions when they reached their vacation destinations.
"We will be setting up displays and distributing information about drinking responsibly on spring break, having safe sex and other spring break issues," she said.
Safe Break will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on March 15 to 19 in front of Wescoe Hall.
"We are holding Safe Break right before the students leave to keep the information fresh in their minds," she said. "We want them to remember that even though other students are doing risky things it's not wise for them to follow."
Capt. Geyer said students should be careful about staying sober so they were aware of the people around them.
"People need to know there are a lot of locals who try to take advantage of them or take their possessions during parties," he said. "Most college kids are way too trusting. But this is not a college campus. You've got to know when you come here that you're not in Kansas anymore."
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Mon-Thurs
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Sunday
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1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
ore owners told the House State Affairs Committee such as half of their sales sales.
licensed as a sole proprietor
I store that the big chains
hundreds and thousands of
that they must take 50 pery
beer business to show a
ud Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
are owner.
ita liquor store owner point-
al liquor stores are permitted
o sell only alcoholic bever-
that beer was only a small
aher store's total sales.
Nebb, owner of Webb's Fine
id Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
of the 12 bill opponents to
they take our one item it evastating." Carl Mitchell s like asking us to run a race, ting one of our legs off and s to be competitive."
n a college town," Webb said. oung crowd. Young is beer."
the hearing, he said his busi-
sion would be hit hard by the leg,
because beer made up about
en of his total sales.
assion during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content at more locations.
as stated that the amount of ng stronger beer would not se—that it was simply a matter it were bought," said Francis a state and national Christian crance Union volunteer. "I dis- Availability is the key here. Ifdy, you buy it."
r bill opponents warned the
entatives that if grocery and
science stores got 5.0 beer, the
would sure see a glut of
enfluence store requests to sell any
alcohol.
Pandora's box will be open,
jehard Ferguson, president of
s Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
ponents of the bill spoke on ay. No action was taken.
C
ctions
candidates
51% presidential candidate: Edward
Olsa; junior education and engineering
senior presidential candidate: Jeff Rus-
tina; junior president of the junior
SPRING BREAK '93 * X-you * March 10, 1993
TE: presidential candidate; John Shoeb
Topka junior and liberal arts and
senior senator. Vice presidental
candidate Dminson, Topka junior and Nume
SANSAHIs presidential candidate:
Cox, Palatine III, illi. Vice presi-
candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
Junior.
T. I. O. N.! : presidential candidate:
Mcintosh, Tulsa, OKa, senior and
labs and sciences senator. Vice presi-
candidate: Marielle Romero, Topela
and off campus senator.
1 Senate Elections Commission
KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
Lawrence's musical underground
NEWS:864-4810
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
T
hey call it the pit.
you can it in the pic
it's a dance floor like no one
in Lawrence — a place
here adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a flenzy of shredred drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snakekin boots two-stepping in a cowboy
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1890s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had be the music and the politics
MILAN
Many students plan to stay in Lawrence
City soon to be filled with peace and quiet
While their classmates take to the slopes or head to the beach, many KU students will be staying in Lawrence for the week.
By JL Watson Special to the Kansan
Freddy Henderson, Dodge City graduate student, plans to stay in Lawrence while his roommates hit the road.
Travel agents breathe a sigh of relief. Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St., closes down. Downtown parking spaces remain empty. Spring break has arrived and everyone has left town, right?
That is what would happen, they said. If the House passed a bill that allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only "liquor stores can sell beer with
"I've never gone anywhere for spring break," he said. Henderson cited a lack of money and the need to work in his studio as his main reasons for staying in town.
He said he might go on a one-day trip,
maybe a drive in the country or a tour of the
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas
City. Mo.
Jonathan Wilke, Stillwell senior, also will be staying in town for the break. Like Henderson, his reasons for staying mainly are financial.
"Those of us who don't slide on Daddy's
water alcohol content, and liquor
Let it Grow.
Recycle Your Kansan.
coattails have to stay and work," he said.
"Lawrence is much quieter when the students aren't here. I'll probably spend a lot of time running and riding my bike." Wilke said.
Wilke said he planned to work extra hours as an artist and clerk at Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts St., during the break, but said he also had planned some recreational activities.
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
By Ben Grove Kansan staff write
Local businesses notice the absence of the students, but many don't plan to alter their sales strategies.
"I have some friends coming in from out of town, and I want to show them around," she said. "We'll probably get a beer at Free State, and I'll get to catch up on some movies I've been wanting to see."
Nicole Ramirez, Lebo senior, also plans to take advantage of the free time in Lawrence.
---
Students who stay in Lawrence for the break can expect shorter lines at the grocery store and less traffic. They might not have stories of sunburns or moguls, but they may get something even better—a little peace and quiet.
bike
"Nothing really changes," said Greg Hale, Lawrence senior, who works as a bartender at The Jazzhaus, 9261/2 Massachusetts St. "There is somewhat of a drop off in business and there is a smaller atmosphere, but people still come in."
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store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales sales.
incensed as a sole proprietor al store that the big chains ll hundreds and thousands of sel that they must take 50 per my beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka store owner.
hita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverage that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
n they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Mitchell "like asking us to run a race,itting one of our legs off andus to be competitive."
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
t of the 12 bill opponents to
n a college town," Webb said.oung crowd. Young is beer."
the hearing, his said his busi-
so would be hit hard by the legi-
cause beer made up about
gent of his total sales.
ession during the hearing also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content at more locations.
as stated that the amount of ng stronger beer would not be—that it was simply a matter it was bought," said Francis a state and national Christian rance Union volunteer. "I dis- availability is the key here. If dv. you buy it."
r bill opponents warned the entatives that if grocery and science stores got 5.0 beer, the ture would soon see a glut ofience store requests to sell any of liquor.
Pandora's box will be open,
hardforguard, president of
s Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
March 10, 1993 * K-you * SPRING BREAK '93
oments of the bill spoke on ay. No action was taken.
actions
candidates
srs presidential candidate: Edward O'Malley junior and engineering service president candidate: Jef Ruffau junior and president of the jury
TE: presidential candidate; John Shoer, Tupa junior and liberal arts and senator. Vice presidential candidate; Tim Dawson, Tupa junior and Nunez
SANBAHN presidential candidate:
Cox, Palatine III., ill. Vice presi-
candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
vapor.
MICHAEL L. O'N1; president; candidate:
T-MICHAEL, Tuka, Osaka, senator and co-
ordinator of the senate.
Married Mario, Topeka,
and off-campus senator.
7
t Senate Elections Commission
KANSAH
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
VOL.102,NO.118
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
Kansan staff write
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
hey call it the pit.
they can it the pie.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unravelled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of the Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jacket. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
one says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerns had beh in the music and the politics
1975
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff write
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only "liquor stores can sell beer with
owners are worried the legisla id rob them of much of that
water alcohol content, and liquor
Break travelers beware of thieves
Bv Brian James
Special to the Kansan
When Tim Louderback, Liberal senior, carriéd the last of his spring break luggage into his Houston motel room last March, he did not bother to close the door behind him. The two men who followed him into his room made him wish he had.
The men told Louderback to be quiet and sit down on the bed. They proceeded to take a purse and a camera, then ran out of the room and sped off in a truck. The crime lasted less than one minute.
According to people in the travel industry, theft and robberies are all-too-common spring break occurrences for which many students need to be prepared.
The experience changed how Louderback travels.
In all, Louderback and Tina Nicole Burke, his flame from Liberal, lost more than $1000 on their trip. Burke's purse alone accounted for $800 of the total loss. In it they had stashed their checkbooks, credit cards, wallets, cash and eye glasses.
"When we go on trips now, we take only what we need. We don't put our travelers checks and belongings in one place—we might put them in a couple different bags and in the car," he said.
He has learned to be more cautious in strange situations.
"We really weren't alert enough to our surroundings," he said. "The police officer said the guys were probably staking out the parking lot watching for someone who wasn't aware or paying attention. And that was us."
Louderback recommended staying in indoor hotels, because walking through a hallway was generally more safe than a parking lot.
"If you have to stay in a hotel, pick a room that is not on the back side of the building, preferably close to the office and on the upper level," he said. "If your room isn't visible to other people, you could be an easy target."
Thom Hepford, service manager for Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive, said that the parking lot was the most common place for crime at hotels.
"The smartest thing is to not leave radar detectors, stereos, tapes and compact discs in the car where they are visible. Thieves can have your window broken, your stuff gone in a few seconds and leave you in a world of hurt," he said. "Use the hotel safe to put all those valuables in."
Hepford also said hotels recommended that guests lock and bolt their doors whenever possible.
"Don't open the door without checking first who is there. Don't assume just because they say they're maintenance people that they really are. Call the front desk to verify it." he said.
Leann Schmidt, a travel consultant for Lawrence Travel Center, 1601 W.23rd St., said that self-confidence and using common sense while traveling were effective safety precautions.
"Generally, if a person doesn't flash a lot of money around and avoids certain situations, they'll be fine," she said.
Vacationers' homes make easy targets for burglars
Special to the Kansan
By Carlos Tejada
Last Thanksgiving, members of the Kappa Sigma fraternity returned from break to find $10,000 worth of belongings had been stolen.
Their CDs, CD players, and clothing had disappeared from individual rooms.
Kappa Sigma learned its lesson the hard way-a lesson that could be repeated during spring break if other students are not careful.
Burglary during spring break is common, says Lt. Mark Brothers of the Lawrence police department, especially for apartment complexes and Greek houses. Student housing seems to be a safer place to leave belongings.
For spring break this year, fraternity members will move house values elsewhere, said Burt Haigh, Tulsa, Okla., senior and Kappaigma president.
"We know that during spring break you don't leave stuff in the house, because there's too much risk," he said.
The houses are extremely accessible, Haigh said, and added that the only way to keep possessions safe is to leave them somewhere else. Residents plan to leave their valuables with friends who live in apartments.
But leaving their sound systems in apartments may not be such a good idea, either.
Apartment complexes with a high percentage of student tenants are in the most
danger of being robbed, Brothers said. Unfortunately, there is little residents can do to stop it.
"It's just very difficult to get any reasonable kind of security in an apartment complex that empties out for a week-long period," he said.
Brothers said apartment residents should cancel mail service for the week. A full mailbox indicates an empty apartment, he warned.
And if students cannot stop burglars, at least they can know what was taken. Residents should keep a detailed inventory of their possessions, including brand names, serial numbers and unique markings. This makes identifying stolen items easier.
"It's very difficult to get back anything if you can't pick it out," Brothers said.
For those driving home, Brothers said, taking along portable valuables such as radios and computers is a must.
The encouraging news is that valuables in student housing aren't in much danger at all, according to Lt. John Mullens of the KU police.
Residence halls are filled with maintenance workers during the break, and scholarship halls usually have one person stay during break. Residents of Stouffer Place usually stay in Lawrence to work, Mullens said.
"People who lose things are generally those who leave early and figure their roommate will lock the door," Mullens said.
Tell 'Em Where You're From!
Fashionable shorts,tees and hats for those hot spring destinations are available at the KU Bookstores. Before you check out of town, check into the KU Bookstores at the Kansas and Burge Unions.
KU
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
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store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales er sales.
incensed as a sole proprietor all store that the big chains 1 hundreds and thousands of el that they must take 50 perm beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka towner.
mita liquor store owner point-
that liquid stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic bever-
d that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Spirits, 800 W.23rd St., was the of the 12 bill opponents to
n they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Mitchell's like asking us to run a race,itting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
n a college town," Webb said. oung crowd. Young is beer."
the hearing, his said his busi-
sword be hit hard by the legb because beer made up about
ent of his total sales.
session on the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content de at more locations.
as stated that the amount of ug stronger beer would not be—that it was simply a matter it was bought," said Francis a state and national Christian rance Union volunteer. "I dis- Availability is the key here. Ifdy, you buy it."
a bill opponents warned the entatives that if grocery and encees stores got 5.0 beer, the ware would soon see a glint of encees store requests to sell any liquor.
Pandaora's box will be open," chard Ferguson, president of Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
onents of the bill spoke on w. No action was taken.
ctions
candidates
US presidential candidate: Edward
Oatlie junior and engineering
presidential candidate: Jeff Rus-
tle junior and president of the
junior
FE, presidential candidate; John Shoe
Toperaja junior and liberal arts and
es senator; Vice president candidate
firm Dawson, Toperaja junior and Nume
NANSAH: presidential candidate
Cox, Patel, III, illiterate, junior vice
candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
Iron.
k.F.O.N.I. presidential candidate:
Michigan, Tulsa, Ohio, senior and libia
and sciences senator. Vice presi-
candidate: Marial Romero, Topeka
and off-campus senator.
Senate Elections Commission
Senate Elections Commission KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS: 864.4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
hev call it the pit.
neither can it the pic.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc-jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear politics had be the music and the politics
THIS IS NOT THE WORLD'S ONLY CITY. IT IS ONE OF THE MOST DISTINCT AND EXTREMELY FANATIC CITIES IN THE WORLD.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Alternative breaks offer volunteer options
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only "liquor stores can sell beer with
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
liquor stores can not
center alcohol content, and liquor
By Barbra Schultz
Special to the Kansan
Sunblock and relaxation may be the biggest concerns for KU students during spring break, but a growing number are worrying about things like the primitive irrigation in Rio Arriba County, N.M.
"We may all be digging irrigation ditches," said Thad Holcombe, campus pastor with the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, "because it's one of the poorest counties in the United States."
ECM is sponsoring two spring break trips this month, one to New Mexico and the other to Kansas City, Kan. The St. Lawrence Catholic Center also is sponsoring five alternative break trips designed to immerse KU students in social issues.
students in 864 bus barristers.
Holcombe is acting as the facilitator for a group of 37 volunteers, 18 of them from KU, who are set to converge at the Ghost Ranch Conference Center, about 65 miles northwest of Santa Fe, N.M. The volunteers, who represent five universities, will attend lectures on environmental ethics and hope to work from 20 to 24 hours in the community between March 20 and 28, Holcombe said. The job possibilities for volunteers will be diverse.
"We may be doing some adobe work, working in medical clinics, teaching in the school system or working in day care," said Holcombe. "We may be doing some work in a high desert research farm there at the conference center or working in the museums."
Holcombe said that word of mouth helper boost KU invoblement for trips this year, the second that ECM had sponsored spring break alternatives. Holcombe said that he suspected a lot of the students were trying to
avoid the stereotypical party atmosphere of places like South Padre Island, Texas.
As part of the community interaction, Testa said, volunteers will be turned out into the streets in pairs.
"They want to get below the surface," Holcombe said.
"We send them out on the streets early in the morning with like a dollar," said Testa.
Atong with the environmental issues, which are pre-eminent in the county, the chance to be alone in the wilderness and to see the predominantly Spanish-American and Native-American culture attracted participants.
On the fifth trip to Chicago, students will be visiting a jail and a shelter that helps women who are trying to get out of prostitution. The groups also will be working with homeless shelters and soup kitchens.
"It's not school and it is the real world and you get to see what life is like in another part of the world, because it is very different there, culturally, than it is here," said Brandenburg.
Students won't have to travel far for the other ECM-sponsored trip, "Inner City MiniPlunge." Participants will be staying at St. Paul's School of Theology at the United Methodist Seminary in Kansas City, Mo, from March 20 to 24. Crosslines, a Kansas City, Kan, service agency, is helping to coordinate the volunteers' efforts by setting them up with clients who need some painting or repair work done on their homes.
Also, the price is right. "To Eden and Beyond: An Introduction to Environmental Ethics" will cost participants from $240 to $250, according to Holcombe.
Some students are looking to get out of the academic mode for a while.
Brandenburg helped out at a preschool on the Ghost Ranch trip last year and cleaned out a grain storage room that was experiencing a problem with mice. She is returning this year with the New Mexico trip because of the area's beauty and culture.
"It's very relaxing to get away and do something with your body instead of studying with your brain all the time," said Jill Brandenburg, Parsons junior.
Testa said that three groups are going to Chicago this year rather than one, and that the Tiuana trip is a new addition this year.
Testa estimates that 80-85 students are signed up to go on the Center's five trips this year as opposed to the 50-60 students that went last year. For prices ranging from $150 to $400, students will trek to Kentucky for community outreach and home repair projects; to Denver to work with the homeless; to Satila, Mexico where they will meet with the people and work with distribution efforts; and to Tijuana, Mexico, which has recently experienced some flooding, to do some construction and visit children's clinics. Students on the Tijuana trip will also go into the community to see how U.S. policy decisions affect conditions there.
The volunteers will also likely work in area soup kitchens, said the Rev. Jay Henderson, campus minister for the United Methodists, who is co-directing the trip with the Rev. Mark Rambo, campus minister for the American Baptists. The price for this trip is $60 a person.
Five years ago, Russ Testa, Topeka senior, went on a spring break volunteer trip to Appalachia with the St. Lawrence Catholic Center. Now, Testa, an assistant outreach minister, is coordinating the Center's alternative breaks for his fourth year.
"We'll give them some addresses for some soup kitchens and stuff like that and that's about it. It's a pretty intense thing. There's not a lot to do; it's really pretty boring walking around the streets all day. It gives a way, hopefully, of being able to empathize a little bit with the homeless situation."
The trips are emphasizing volunteer interaction with the people.
"I think just having our presence there is in many cases a lot of volunteer work," said Testa, "because it shows a lot of the people in those areas that there are people that still care what's going on in the world and it helps to instill a little bit of hope in the world sometimes."
Testa said that a lot of the volunteers this year signed on in response to an ad in the newspaper or through friends who had gone in the past.
going on to talk. "I think a lot of times at KU, you're kind of sheltered," said Bauman. "I think it should open my eyes a little bit. I think over the whole country, people are getting more in tune with what's going on and I think that something like this just gives them a chance."
Molly Bauman, Lawrence junior, will be one of the students pounding the pavement in Chicago. Bauman's sister went on the Chicago trip last year and encouraged her to go this year. Bauman said she was considering volunteer options in the future and said she wanted to get a better idea of what's going on in the United States.
Testa said, "It's very rewarding, personally. The things we do for the people are nothing compared to what they are able to give back to us in knowledge and experience and a better self awareness of what's going on."
KUPanbellenic wishes
you
safe
a
fun
and
Spring Break
owners are worried the legislatrd rob them of much of that
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841-6080
*store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales or sales.
incensed as a sole proprietor all store that the big chains il hundreds and thousands of sel that they must take 50 perm beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka tore owner.
hita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverd that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
u they take our one item it be devastated," Carl Mitchell's like asking us to run a race, titing one of our legs off and to be competitive."
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St. was
of the 12 bill opponents to
a college town," Webb said.
oung crowd. Young is beer."
during the hearings also
the hearing, he said his busi-
so would be hit hard by the leg-
because beer made up about
en of his total sales.
session during the hearing also ith social issue of making it higher alcohol content at more locations.
is stated that the amount of stronger beer would not be — that it was simply a matter it was bought," said Francis a state and national Christianance Union volunteer. "I disavailability is the key here. Ifdy, you buy it."
bill opponents warned the intiatives that if grocery and dence stores got 5.0 beer, the ture would soon see a glut of lence store requests to sell any fluor.
Pandora's box will be open," chard Dergerson, president of Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
oments of the bill spoke on y. No action was taken.
tions
candidates
uS: presidential candidate: Edward
Dtatior the junior and engineering sa-
presidential candidate: Jeff Rus-
the junior and president of the juni-
t. presidential candidate; John Shoe
Toekpaen junior and liberal arts
and its senator. Vice president civil
war, Toekpaen, Toekpaen junior and Nun-
derburg.
ANSAHA: presidential candidate
Dox, Cox, Pattie, III, junior. Vice presi-
candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
Rior.
T. I. O. N. I.: presidential candidate; Michelle Toska, Tukea, senior and life sciences senator, Vice presi- candidate; Marion Rodson, Topeka
candidate: Mansoil Romero, Republi
nd off-campus senator.
4 Senate Elections Commission KANSAS
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
NEWS:864-4810
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
T
hey call it the pit.
hey can it the pic.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drummsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reuphol, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear politics had both the music and the politics
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Don't get benched...
Play it safe over Spring Break.
SPRING BREAK '93 * K - you * March 10, 1993
Healthy Men Needed Receive up to $250
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is currently seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study
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--greater alcohol content, and liquor
carried the hotel.
International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. Lenexa Kansas
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with
owners are worried the legislature rob them of much of that
*store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales or sales.
incensed as a sole proprietor rail store that the big chains ill hundreds and thousands of sal that they must take 50 pery beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka store owner.
chita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverend that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
in they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Mitchell it's like asking us to run a race, putting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was it of the 12 bill opponents to
in a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer." assession during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content at more locations.
the hearing, his said his busi-
so would be hit hard by the lega
1 because beer made up about
sent of his total sales.
as stated that the amount of ng stronger beer would not se—that it was simply a matter it was bought," said Francis a state and national Christian rance Union volunteer. "I dis Availability is the key here. Ifdy, you buy it."
r bill opponents warned the entatives that if grocery and nience stores got 5.0 beer, the ture would soon see a glut of nience store requests to sell any of liquor.
Pandora's box will be open," hardy Ferguson, president of s Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
ponents of the bill spoke on ay. No action was taken.
actions
candidates
2015. presidential candidate: Edward Diaffe junior and engineering service president candidate: Jeff Rushee junior and president of the junior
TE: presidential candidate; John Shoer,
Topeka junior and liberal arts and
senator candidate. Vice presidental
Tim Dawson, Topeka junior and Nume-
rian.
GANISHA: presidential candidate;
and Cox, Pal斐丽, III, junior. Vice presi-
candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
junior.
3.1.0.0.N.11: president candidate: candidates:MTokua, Tulsa, Kyla; senior and librarians and sciences manager; Vice presi-
dence: Marsil Ropeka, Topeka and off-campus senator.
Senate Elections Commission KANBAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
T
hey call it the pit.
hey can it the pit.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drunsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jacket. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punkband that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics
...
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March 10, 1993 • *K-you* • SPRING BREAK '93
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
eater alcohol content, and liquor
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff writer
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with
11
owners are worried the legisla-uld rob them of much of that
store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales or sales.
incedens as a sole proprietor
ail store that the big chains
il hundreds and thousands of
eel that they must take 50 perm
yea beer business to show a
said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
store owner.
chita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcohol beverage that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
when they take our one item it be devastating." Carl Mitchell It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
Web, owner of Webb's Fine and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was at the 12 bill opponents to
*r* the hearing, he said his business would be hit hard by the begin because beer made up about percent of his total sales.
in a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer." passion during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content able at more locations.
was stated that the amount of stronger beer would not ease—that it was simply a matter here it was bought," said Francis d. a state and national Christian persecution Union volunteer. "I dis- Availability is the key here. Ifandy, you buy it."
neer bill opponents warned the essentatives that if grocery and senience stores got 5.0 beer, the stature would soon see a glut of senience store requests to sell any s of liour.
and Pandora's box will be open," Richard Ferguson, president of as Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
opponents of the bill spoke on day. No action was taken.
actions
he candidates
JCUS: presidential candidate. Eardin, Olatjah junior and engineering service presidential candidate. Jeff Rusk, Olatjah junior and president of the JCUS.
WTE. president candidate: John Shoer. Topeka junior and liberal arts and vice senator. Vice president candidat
I丁Wimson. Topeka junior and Nume
GANSHIA, presidential candidate;
&Cox, Palin, III, junior. Vice-president:
Charles Frey, Brockport,
Junior.
C. T. I. O. N. I.: presidenti candidate:
m McIntosh, Tukia, Okla., senior and libr
art and sciences senator, Vice presi
candidate: Mariel Romero, Tomeka
and off-campus senator.
int Senate Elections Commission
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
1.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102, NO. 118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1992
(USPS 650-640)
Lawrence's musical underground
NEWS:864-4810
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
ney call it the pit.
hey can it the pit
a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shreded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
orget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. For forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepting in a cowboy hat. This is the Outhouse. This is the
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It is not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of *The Note*, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
none for. She covers the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
the recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fiel the fire and fights in the pit.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor
Break is conveniently late
ce owners are worried the legislauld rob them of much of that
Board of Regents change date to avoid time conflict
By Shan Schwartz Special to the Kansan
If March 20 seems like a late start for spring break, that's because it is.
By the fourth week in March last year, KU students already were back and hitting the books again. Spring break starts two weeks later this year. By the time it ends, only 27 class days are left.
And you'd better get used to it.
Thanks to a new Kansas Board of Regents scheduling policy, future spring breaks will be closer to the end of March than the middle. The reason? So spring break would not conflict with the monthly Regents meeting.
"We always targeted to get spring break during the second full week of March," said Martine Hammond-Paludan, director of academic affairs at the Board of Regents. "But over the last few years, there were conflicts because the monthly Board of Regents meeting fell during spring break. Both students
and administrators from the schools that attend the Regents meetings had to miss out on spring break to attend the meetings."
Hammond-Paludan said the Regents agreed last year to change the scheduling of spring break for all Regents institutions, including Emporia State, Fort Hays State, Kansas State and KU. All Regents schools have the same spring break.
By law, the Board of Regents meets monthly on the Thursday preceding the third Friday of the month. Based on that, Hammond-Paludan said, the Regents decided to fix spring break at a set week. That week will be the week after the monthly Regents meeting.
This means that, from now on, spring break will be scheduled for the third or fourth week of March.
"It was kind of a personal opinion thing." Hammond-Paladan said. "Most of the people decided it would be better to have spring break later rather than earlier."
Students' opinions, however, are mixed
"Most of the people decided it would be better to have spring break later rather than earlier."
Martine Hammond-Paludan
Board of Regents
Director of Academic Affairs
about having spring break so much later. Sheri Plenert, Marion senior, thinks students
Steen Freelier, Marathon senior, students need a break earlier in the semester.
"If they're going to make spring break later, we should have a three-day weekend thrown in there sometime earlier," Plenert said. "It's hard for students to go so long without a break. Along with the weather, students get sick and burned out."
Other students see advantages in moving spring break back a week or two.
"I suppose it might be better having spring
break later," said Colin Taylor, Arkansas City junior. "Maybe the weather will be better for people to do things."
The Board of Regents gives the University Senate Calendar Committee certain guidelines in scheduling the academic calendars, according to Lawrence Maxey, professor of music and dance and chairperson of the Calendar Committee.
The official university calendar must include 150 instructional days year, usually 75 a semester, and include the holidays of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Labor Day and Thanksgiving. Since the Board of Regents now specifies when spring break will take place, the calendar committee will schedule only the first and last days of classes, final periods and any other optional holidays.
Along with the other Kansas Regents schools, Colorado, Nebraska and Iowa also take spring break from March 21 to 28. Washburn, Missouri and Baker universities have break from March 14 to 21. Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, Iowa State and University of Missouri-Kansas City take their spring breaks March 7-14.
Haskell Indian Junior College doesn't have much of a break at all. Students at Haskell take only a two-day vacation, March 25 and 26.
Please Help Keep Our Planet Clean. Recycle Your University Daily Kansan.
Yo! Princeton Review!
We know you guys like to party a lot. But still, is anybody minding the store?
There was an important change in the test which students take to get into law school. The LSAT. Why haven't you changed your materials to reflect the change?
The question format that you call Triple True/False was not scored on the June 10, 1991; October 5, 1991; December 7, 1991; February 8, 1992 or June 15, 1992 LSAT.
Yet your materials still spend lots of time prepping your students to "crack" this question format.
That's wasted cracking, guys.
While we don't write the tests, we do analyze them so our students don't get sidetracked.
For information on Contemporary LSAT, MCAT, GMAT or GRE prep, call:
842-5442
KAPLAN The answer to the test question.
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store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales r sales.
12
incensed as a sole proprietor all store that the big chains 1 hundreds and thousands of el that they must take 50 perm beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka toer owner.
hita liquor store owner point
that liquor stores are permitted
to sell only alcoholic bever-
d that beer was only a small
other stores' total sales.
n they take our one item it be devastating. "Carl Mitchell it's like asking us to run a race, atting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine and Spirits, 800 W.23rd St., was of the 12 bill opponents to
SPRING BREAK '93 *K- you* • March 10, 1993
in a college town," Webb said. young crown. Young is beer." passion during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content able at more locations.
r the hearing, he said his business would be hit hard by the legn because beer made up about 60% of his total sales.
was stated that the amount of dnger stronger beer would not ase—that it was simply a matter here it was bought," said Francis d. a state and national Christian perance Union volunteer. "I disce. Availability is the key here. If andy, you buy it."
ne Pandora's box will be open," Richard Ferguson, president of sas Retail Liquor Dealers Associher bill opponents warned the essentatives that if grocery and enience stores got 5.0 beer, the塑境 would soon see a glut of enience store requests to sell anys of liquor.
opponents of the bill spoke on day. No action was taken.
actions
he candidates
DCUIS: presidential candidate: Edward J. Oatman, junior and engineering science Vice president candidate: Jeff Rueu. Oatlan junior and the president of the
NITE: presidential candidate; John Shoer, Topeka junior and liberal arts and senate secretary. Vice president; Tim Dawson, Topeka junior and Nune
INGANSAH; presidential candidate;
david Cox, Pauline, III. junior. Vice-
presidential candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
I. junior.
K. T. O. II, O. presidential candidate:
Onmon McIntosh, Tulsa, Okla.; senior and
labs and sciences senator; Vice presi-
dent candidate; Mariel Rosentak, Topeka
and off-campus senator.
dent Senate Elections Commission
KAKBAH
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
hey call it the pit.
they can be the pi
It's a dance floor like no
other in Lawrence — a place
where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump, and bodies collide in a frenzied of shredd drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40 blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. For basketball players in skaken boot two-stepping in a cowboy hat. This is the Outhouse This is the
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It is not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of *The Note*, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
noble for academics.
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground, with new bands in Lawrence. It showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
1985
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
Students want fun in the sun
By Ben Grove Kansan staff write
Skiing vacations colder climates lose popularity
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
By Sharon Henry Special to the Kansan
"Sun is definitely in and it's outselling cold climates," said Tricia Boken of Carlson Travel Network-Sunflower Travel Service, 704 Massachusetts St..
Hot is hot. Cold is not.
Diane Bennett of Uniglobe Classic Travel agreed.
Travel agents say the sunny vacation spots are Cancun, South Padre Island and
KU spring break travelers are heading to warmer climates, despite the costs, Lawrence travel agents say.
"We have not had one person inquire about a ski package," she said.
aboard cruise ships in the Caribbean.
se owners are worried the legislabluld rob them of much of that
Students' first choice seems to be Cancun.
"These three markets are by far the most distinct for us," said Gary Penny who manages Convention and Group Travel Planners, Cruise Captain and Travel Planners, and International Tours all at 7 W.11th St.
Andy Strasser of Ports Unlimited, Sixth and Kasdol streets, said he had found that students didn't even flinch when he told them the air fare and travel rates for Cancun.
"But they do flinch if we tell them we can't get them there," Strasser added.
"We're finding those who can't go to Cancun are going on to the second choice."
Trips to South Padre Island and Caribbean cruises are picking up the Cancun leftovers.
*Planning will take some work on the part of the traveler but students should be able to
"This late in the game we're running out of space," said Pat Kelly of Lawrence Travel Center. 1601 W. 23rd St.
Bennett said she considered chartering a jet to Cancum to accommodate additional students.
Cancun's popularity already has made it a sellout.
"Padre is attractive because there are more options in getting there, it's not as expensive as other places, and there are more choices in lodging," said Carol Khourey of Maupin-travel Service, 831 Massachusetts St.
Because of the flexibility in getting there, South Padre Island has become more attractive to those students who got a late start on making travel arrangements. Students can either drive or fly to the Texas vacation spot.
"We have not had one person inquire about a ski package."
Diane Bennett
Uniglobe Classic Travel
Strasser said.
work with a limited budget," Khourey said. Bennett said, "If four people would group together and drive to Padre Island, they could save the cost of airfare and split the gas cost."
Boken said packages to Mexico, which mostly were sold out, cost about $600 for four nights.
Kelly said airfare and hotel accommodations for seven nights cost about $700.
Caribbean cruises also are popular this year
"For the money, cruises are an excellent value," Kelly said.
Cruises offer a complete package including travel, meals and entertainment.
"Plus you get to see a couple of ports," Kelly said.
Cruises are popular choices for students wanting to get away from the more crowded spots like Cancun or South Padre Island.
"I think the Caribbean cruise is by far the best choice and the one that I would recommend to students," Boken said.
Please Help Keep Our Planet Clean. Recycle Your University Daily Kansan.
Grab Hold of The Spirit
- Sweatshirts
- T-Shirts
- Basketballs
- Jackets
- Bumper Stickers
- Basketball Jerseys
- Basketball Warm-ups
AUTHENTIC KU BASKETBALL JERSEYS
749-5194
store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales or sales.
incensed as a sole proprietor all store that big the chains 1 hundreds and thousands of el that they must take 50 pery beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka owner.
hita liquor store owner point that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverage that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine and Spirits, 800 W, 23rd St., was of the 12 bill opponents to
n they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Michel it's like asking us to run a race, cutting our of our legs off and 'us to be competitive."
r the hearing, he said his business would be hit hard by the legn because beer made up about cent of his total sales.
in a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer." passion during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content able at more locations.
was stated that the amount of ding stronger beer would not ase—that it was simply a matter here it was bought," said Francis I. a state and national Christian perance Union volunteer. "I disa. Availability is the key here. Ifandy, you buy it."
heir bill opponents warned the executives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the mature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any s of liquor.
ne Pandora's box will be open," Richard Ferguson, president of sas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
opponents of the bill spoke on day. No action was taken.
actions
DPCUS: presidential candidate; Edward
Klunt, Olivia junior and engineering-senior
presidential candidate; Jeff Rua.
Olivia junior and president of the junio
he candidates
NITE: presidential candidate; John Shoer, Torki junior and liberal arts and sciences minister; Vice president candidate; Tim Davis, Torki junior and Nune
NGHASHA: president-candidate
Cord Cox, President III, junior. Vice-president candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
Junior.
13
C.I.O.N. I.D.A.: presidential candidate;
McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahoma; senior and
labor arts and sciences senator; Vice presi-
dential manager; Marshol Romero, Tope-
nor or off-campus senator.
dent Senate Elections Commission KANEAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Keece Kansan staff writer
T
hev call it the pit.
hey can it be the p?
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a flenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-steping in a cowboy shirt. This is the Outhouse. This is the
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
sne says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
MADNESS
and swearing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor
re owners are worried the legisl- would rob them of much of that
DON'S AUTO CENTER
Wherever you're going. Whatever you're driving.
It pays to have your car in top running condition!
841-4833
920 E11th
Tight and trendy is out this spring
By Angelina Lopez Special to the Kansan
A hot-pink halter top along with a tight mini-skirt. A chest hair-showing tank top over black-and-white striped bike shorts. Is the tight and trendy look of past spring seasons going to be the look for this spring?
Not according to Lawrence stores.
Clothing is going to be relaxed and comfortable while the colors are going to be soft and warm, according to Lawrence clothing store managers. For women, the hip-hugging mini-skirts from days past are being replaced by long, flowing skirts. For men, the neon tank tops are being replaced by darker colored T-shirts.
"In women's clothing, there are going to be a lot of florals," said Midge Grinstead, manager and buyer for Natural Way, 820 Massachusetts St. "The look for women is very feminine with long, gauzy skirts and poet shirts."
The same relaxed look, though in different clothing, is obvious in men's spring fashions as well.
"The layered look is very big," said Greg Easter, manager for Easton's Ltd. 839摩萨淖斯 St." Men are wearing a knit shirt over a T-shirt, putting a button-down over that, and leaving the whole thing untucked. The look is very casual."
The colors popular for spring emphasize the comfortable spring look.
"There will be a lot of linen shades like cream," said Linda Campbell, owner and manager of Campbell's Clothing, 841 Massachusetts St. "The shades are natural and soft."
Pastels rather than earth tones are more popular this spring, said Grinstead, who emphasized colors like light aqua, lavender, rose and golden khaki.
Easter said that for men, all the colors were washed out and faded. One label called their colors "sun-drenched."
The use of soft, flowing fabrics is another way in which the relaxed style is emphasized. Chiffon is big, as well as rayon, chambray and light 100-percent cotton, according to several stores. The most popular material, however, definitely is silk.
Lisa Sato, second assistant manager for Maurice's, 708 Massachusetts St., said, "We have little girls coming in buying huge, silk shirts. I don't know if they're planning on growing into them or if they're wearing them already."
Other important fashion trends will be:
**Hat, Pipote hat, assn items will be.**
* Hats. Felt hats and decorative hats with flower arrangements on them are really popular, said Grinstead.
Vests. Both fitted, tailored and relaxed vests are very popular for spring, said Campbell. Grinsted said that vests made of thick cotton were popular.
**Beads.** Beads are everywhere, from necklaces, to scarves, to belts.
So, what's out for the spring season?
"Where fashion is concerned, anything goes," Grinstead said. "Make your own statement. Define yourself by what you're wearing."
SaveGas
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Garage
please tear out and mail to:
Kaw Valley Management, Inc. BO Box 263
P. O. Box 323
Lawrence, KS 66044
KVM
Office is at 901 Kentucky Suite 205
Phone: 841-6080
**SPRING BREAK** **93** *K- you* March 10, 1993
Don't take your break at the BORDER!
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e owners told the House State Affairs Committee as half of their sales.
used as a sole proprietor store that the big chains indreds and thousands of hat they must take 50 pere business to show a dPatricia Oppitz, a Topeka owner.
a liquor store owner point-liquor stores are permitted sell only alcoholic bever that beer was only a smaller stores' total sales.
they take our one item it devastating." Carl Mitchell like asking us to run a race, ing one of our legs off and to be competitive."
'ebb, owner of Web's Fine 1 Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was of the 12 bill opponents to
he hearing, he said his busi-
s would be hit hard by the leg
because beer made up about
n of his total sales.
i a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer." session during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content lea at more locations.
as stated that the amount of ng stronger beer would not se — that it was simply a matter it were bought," said Francis a state and national Christian grance Union volunteer. "I dis- Availability is the key here. Ifndy, you buy it."
r bill opponents warned the sentatives that if grocery and nience stores got 5.0 beer, theature would soon see a glut of nience store requests to sell any or liquor.
Pandora's box will be open," Richard Ferguson, president of S Retail Liquor Dealers Associconents of the bill spoke on day. No action was taken.
actions
candidates
CUS: presidental candidate: Edward
Olatje, olatje and engineering sen-
sional candidate: Jeff flus-
olatje junior and the president of
ITE: presidential candidate; Jane Shoer
Tookeen junior and liberal arts and
easen senator. Vice presidental
Tim Dawson. Tookeen junior and Nume-
rian.
GANSAH, presidential candidate;
and Cox, Palinii, ill. III; Junior, vice presi-
candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
junior.
T. I. O. N. II.: presidential candidate;
McIntosh, Tukla, Oklahoma; senior and
sciences senator; Vice presi-
candidate; Marshal Romero, Toppea
and off campus senator.
Int Senate Elections Commission
KANSAS
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece Kansan staffwriter
T
hey call it the pit.
hey call it the pft.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live, underground music.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of *The Note*, a lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
sne says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit. In January, the "Cow Killer" singer-in
107805
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor
Basic, bright swimwear hot for men and women Lawrence stores stock up on latest styles for spring our-girl" styling was becoming popular However, Grinstead says, fashionable or not, she still sells quite a few of the less revealing "I-want-to-swim-in-my-swimsuit tank-top suits."
re owners are worried the legisla- could rob them of much of that
By Therese Everett Special to the Kansan
The hottest, brightest colors are turning beaches this season as simple solids and florals make their way onto the racks. But beware if you are looking for bright, "plug-in" neon.
Bo Derek, Christie Brinkley and Kathy Ireland move over — Lawrence stores have received their shipment of the sexiest, most flattering swimwear around, and it's all coming to a pool near you.
Lisa Thies, acting manager of The Buckle,
805 Massachusetts St., will tell you, "Those are on the sale rack— half off."
This season, the trend in style and fit for women is a two-piece suit that covers a little more and shows off a little less. Push-up, padded and underwear tops are popular and seem to be a part of nearly every suit.
Midge Grinstead of Natural Way, 820 Mauschusetts St., said that in addition to underwire, the 50's look of wider straps and "glam
In the way of men's fashion, boxer-style swim trunks are what to expect. Like the women's suits, brights are popular, and wild designs always are in style. Thies sees a possible correlation between swim trunk designs and neck ties.
designs said he needs.
Joe Mulheme, Arlington Heights, Ill., sophomore, said, "I just look for something that doesn't cling like Saran wrap when it gets wet."
get wet.
Prices for these suits generally are generally no different than last season. Men can expect to pay nearly $40, and women a bit more, with prices ranging from $40 to $60—unless one takes advantage of the sleek, velour suit Natural Way offers at $84.
baby.
One can find just about any style and color suit in Lawrence this season. However, there is one style that still has not made an appearance in the local stores: the thong bikini. Perhaps Lawrence just isn't ready.
Overall, the suits for women this season will be eye-catching and demurely provocative. The trunks for men will be bold and busy.
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
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Stop the car!
Make your first Spring Break stop at Jayhawk Bookstore
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Sun
or Ski
The Etc. Shop
is the Place to Be
for SUNGLASSES!
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•The Etc. Shop •Vuarnet-France
•Mary McFadden •Marilyn Monroe
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The
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Sho
store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales er sales.
incensed as a sole proprietor all store that the big chains 1 hundreds and thousands of el that they must take 50 permy beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka tore owner.
hita liquor store owner point-hat liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverid that beer was only a small other stores' total sales.
n they take our one item it be devastating," Carl Mitchell's like asking us to run a race, putting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
Spirits, 800 W 23rd St., was
titled of the 12 bill opponents to
in a college town," Webb said. young crowd. Young is beer."
the hearing, he said his business would be hit hard by the legi because beer made up about 60 of his total sales.
young crowd. Young is beccas during the hearings also with the social issue of making with higher alcohol content de at more locations.
Pandora's box will be open,
Herdford Ferguson, president of a Retail Liquor Dealers Associ-
as stated that the amount of ng stronger beer would not be—that it was simply a matter it was bought," said Francis a state and national Christian rance Union volunteer. "I dis-Availability is the key here. If idy, you buy it."
r bill opponents warned the entatives that if grocery and mence stores got 5.0 beer, the ture would soon see a glut of mence store requests to sell any if liour.
ponents of the bill spoke on ay. No action was taken.
ctions
e candidates
JUS: presidential candidate: Edward O'Neill, oathrian and engineering service presidential candidate: Jeff Rusiaju, junior president of the junior
1. presidenti candidate: John Shoe
2. Tepoek junior and liberal arts and sen senator. Vice presidenti candidate Tim Dawson. Tepoek junior and Nume-
SANSAHII presidential candidate:
Cox, Patricia, III., Junior. Vice presi-
candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
Junior.
T. I. O. N. I.: president; candidate:
Mohtosh, Tukla, Osaka, senior and
libra and science senator, Vice presi-
candidate: Mariol Rosier, Topela,
and off campus senator.
Inst Senate Elections Commission
KANEAI
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
7
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
we call it the pit.
they can be the pit
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of the Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the dirt underground music
1987.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosebenff, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
one says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit. In lawsuits the City COURT will review.
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Spring break is no break for KU athletic teams
Special to the Kansan
Bv Stacv L. Kunstel
Junior Stephani Williams has never taken a spring break during her three years at KU. She doesn't mind.
"I really don't know what it is to have a spring break," said Williams, a member of the KU softball team. "I don’t really miss it though. I enjoy playing softball. The only thing I miss about not having a break is working and making some money."
While most students spend spring break sprawled on a beach or ripening down powdered slopes, many KU athletes will be practicing or playing in games or tournaments.
Mary athletes won't be stuck in Lawrence though. Williams and the softball team will travel to California for the week to play against Massachusetts, Depaul and in the Pony Invitational at California State University at Fullerton.
The women's tennis team will also be in Southern California for the week while the men's team will travel to Arizona. Other KU teams will be traveling during the break include the men's golf team at Baylor, the women's golf team at Columbia, S.C., and the NCAA swimming championship, which will be held in Indianapolis for men and in Minneapolis for women.
"It's a break from class, but I don't think I get to relax," Williams said. "The team generally gets up early and eat breakfast together and then we have games or practice hitting."
Although a free trip, especially to some place warm, might seem like a vacation, Williams says that it's not that much of a break.
Junior Ana Gonzalez will get to enjoy her first spring break this year. Gonzalez, a member of the tennis team, is sidelined with injuries and will miss the team's trip to San Diego.
"During spring break last year we went to Arizona and didn't have a day off except maybe one," Gonzalez said. "Everyday was spent either playing, or practicing or traveling."
SPRING BREAK '93 * K- you * March 10, 1993
some KU athletic teams will travel to warmer climates during the spring break, but they don't always have a chance to enjoy the change of scenery.
"The most sun we'll get is on the field." Williams said. "We also try to study and do homework during the break."
Let it Grow.
Recycle Your Kansan.
Gonzalez agreed, "We have to study during spring break."
Gonzalez also said that players can't lay out when they have matches because the sun makes them too tired.
Even though this will be the first spring break that Gonzalez can remember, she has no regrets.
I think it's fair that athletes don't get a real break like other students." Gonzalez said.
"Athletes get scholarships to play, so it's fair that you give back what you're getting. We get to go to some nice places and besides, I like to play."
U
Need A Biking Partner?
Use the Jaytalk Network.
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THE LOFT
742 Massachusetts
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that
I would rob them of much of that ket.
prior store owners told the House
eral and State Affairs Committee
as much as half of their sales
e beer sales.
am incensed as a sole proprietor
i retail store that big the chains
b sell hundreds and thousands of
ns feel that they must take 50 peri
of my beer business to show a
ft," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
or store owner.
Wichita liquor store owner point out that liquor stores are permitted ally to sell only alcoholic beverals and that beer was only a small of other stores' total sales.
When they take our one item it will be devastating." Carl Mitchell d. "It allows us to run a race, in cutting one of our legs off and king us to be competitive."
ohn Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
ine and Spirits, 800 W.23rd St, was
east of the 12 bill opponents to
eak.
"I'm in a college town," Webb said. 's a young crowd. Young is beer."
After the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about 1 percent of his total sales.
is a young crowd. Young is best. Discussion during the hearings also salt with the social issue of making eer with higher alcohol content available at more locations.
"It it was stated that the amount of rinkling stronger beer would not increase — that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francis Good, a state and national Christian 'emerence Union volunteer. "I disagree. Availability is the key here. If it's handy, you buy it."
other bill opponents warned the representatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the legislature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any types of liquor.
"The Pandora's box will be open," and Richard Ferguson, president of Kansas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
Proponents of the bill spoke on Tuesday. No action was taken.
ections
The candidates
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward Austin, Olathe student and engineering senator. Vice president candidate: Jeff Russell, Olathe junior and president of the junior class.
UNITE: presidential candidate: Shoel maker. Topeka junior and liberal arts and sciences senator. Vice presidential candidate: Tim Dawson, Topeka junior and Nuneemaker senator.
UNGANSAH: presidential candidate;
Bernard Cox, Patellas, III, junior. Vice-
presidential candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
N.Y., junior.
A.C.I.T.O.N.II: presidential candidate
Jason McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahoma and senior arts and sciences scientist, Vice presidential candidate; Martselo Romero, Topeka junior and off-campus senator.
Student Senate Elections Commission
KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
ev call it the pit.
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
Ity can't lift the pr
It's a dance floor like no
other in Lawrence — a place
where adrenaline is king,
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
NEWS:864-4810
lawyer
Forget fraternity and sorority member hopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the backside of a loud ground music
ness of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a motoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crushes into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reuilted, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
MERCURY FESTIVAL
Book ideas for Spring Break
The Associated Press
Here are the best-selling books as they appear in next week's issue of Publishers Weekly. Reprinted with permission.
HARDCOVER FICTION
"I. The Bridges of Madison County," Robert James Waller (Warner)
2. "Degree of Guilt," Richard North Patterson (Knopf)
3. "The Tallmsam of Shannara," Terry Brooks (DelRev)
4. "Along Came a Spider," James Patterson (Little, Brown)
5. "Einstein's Dream" Alan Lichtman (Pantheon)
6. "Griffin & Sabine" Nick Bantock (Chronicle Books)
7. "Dragon Tears" Dean Kootz (Putnam)
8. "Close Combat" W.E.B. Griffin (Putnam)
9. "The Children of Men" P.D. James (Knoon)
10. "November of the Heart" LaVryle Spencer (Putnam)
11. "Devil's Waltz" Johnathan Kellerman (Bantam)
12. "All the Pretty Horses," Cormac McCarthy (Knoop)
13. "Sabine's Notebook," Nick Bantock (Chronicle)
(Viking)
14. "Waiting to Exhale" Terry McMillan
15 "Mystery Ride" Robert Boswell (Knopf)
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
1. "The Way Things Ought to Be," Rush Limbaugh (Pocket Books)
2. "Hearing and the Mind," Bill Moyers (Doubleday)
3. "Women Who Run With the Wolves," Clarissa Pinkola Estes (Ballantine)
4. "Bankruptcy 1995," Harry E. Figgie (Little Brown)
5. "Official & Confidential: The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoover," Anthony Summera (Putnam)
6. "Harvey Penick's Little Red Book," Harvey Penick & Bud Shrake (Simon & Schuster)
8. "Excess Baggage," Judith Sills (Vikong)
9. "Marlene," Maria Riva (Knopf)
10. "Cooking with Regis & Kathie Lee," Regis Philbin & Kathie Lee Gifford (Hyperion)
11. "Making the Mummies Dance," Thomas Hoving (Sinon & Schuster)
12. "Around the Cragged Hill: A Personal Political Philosophy," George F. Keenan (Norton)
13. "Care of the Soul," Thomas Moore
14. "Dream Makers, Dream Breakers," Carl T. Rowan, (Little, Brown)
(Harner Collins)
15. "Nobody Nowhere," Donna Williams (Times Books)
MASS MARKET
PAPERBACKS
3. "Jurassic Park," Michael Crichton (Ballantine)
1. "The Pelican Brief," John Grisham (Dell)
2. "All Around the Town," Mary Higgins Clark (Pocket)
4. "Bygones," LaVyrle Spencer (Jove)
5. "Rising Sun," Michael Crichton (Ballantine)
6. "Star Wars 2: Dark Force Rising," Timothy Zahn (Bantam)
7. "The First Wives Club," Olivia Goldsmith (Pocket)
8. "The Elf Queen of Shannara," Terry Brooks (Del Rey)
books Berley
9. "The Firm," John Grisham (Dell)
11. "Silent Prey" John Sanford (Berkeley)
12. "Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,"
*Murphy* 1976
10. "A Time To Kill," John Grisham (Dell)
11 "Silent Prey" John Sanford (Berkley)
12 "Knows Wysthe, Caged. Bird. Sings."
mayor (borbonate)
13. "Untamed," Elizabeth Lowell (Avon)
14. "Star Trek. The Next Generation 25.
Grounded," David Bischoff (Pocket)
15. "Blindsight," Robin Cook (Berkley)
1. "Revolution from Within," Gloria Steinem (Little, Brown)
2. "Life's Little Instruction Book," H. Jackson Brown Jr. (Rutledge Hill)
3. 7 "Habits of Highly Effective People," Stephen R. Covey (S & S Fireside)
4 "The T-Factor Fat Gram Counter," Pope-Cordle or Katain (Norton)
5. "On the Pulse of the Morning," Maya Angelou (Random House)
6. "A Thousand Acres," Jane Smiley (Fawcett/Columbine)
7. "The Tightwad Gazette," Amy Dacyczyn (Villard)
8. "Earth in the Balance," Al Gore (Plume)
9. "Cowboys Are My Weakness," Pam Houston (Washington Square Press)
10 "Keeping the Love You Find," Harville Hendrix (Pocket Books)
heh
"Getting the Love You Want," Harvie Hairy
Harvie (Harpour Parcels)
12. "Bastard Out of Carolina." Dorothy Allison (Plume)
13. What to Expect When Your Expecting.
Arlene Eisenberg (Workman)
14. "Vox," Nicholas Baker (Vintage)
15. "Garfield Takes His Licks," Jim Davis (Ballantine)
(Courtesy of Publishers Weekly)
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March 10. 1993 * K-you * SPRING BREAK '93
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
. would rob them of much of that
ket.
17
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that.
prior store owners told the House
ral and State Affairs Committee
as much as half of their sales
e beer sales.
am incensed as a sole proprietor
a retail store that the big chains
o sell hundreds and thousands of
us feel that they must take 50 peri
of my beer business to show an
aft," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
or store owner.
Wichita liquor store owner point out that liquor stores are permitted tally to sell only alcoholic beverers and that beer was only a small airt of other stores' total sales.
When they take our one item it must be devastating," Carl Mitchell id. "It's like asking us to run a race, en cutting one of our legs off and king us to be competitive."
john Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
John and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St, was
e last of the 12 bill opponents to
peak.
"I'm in a college town," Webb said. It's a young crowd. Young is beer."
After the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about 1 percent of his total sales.
Discussion during the hearings also
ealt with the social issue of making
ger with higher alcohol content
sailable at more locations.
"It was stated that the amount of tinkering stronger beer would not increase — that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francis Food, a state and national Christian emperature Union volunteer. "I disagree. Availability is the key here. If $handsy, you buy it."
Other bill opponents warned the representatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the eigislature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any vues of liquor.
"The Pandora's box will be open," aid Richard Ferguson, president of Causas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
Proponents of the bill spoke on Tuesday. No action was taken.
ections
the candidates
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward Austin, olai junior and engineering sensor, Vice president candidate: Jeff Rios self, olai junior and president of the junior
class:
UNITE: presidential candidate; John Shoe maker; Topeka junior and liberal arts and science senators. Vice presidential candidate: Tim Dawson, Topeka junior and Nuneman senator.
UNGANSAH, presidential candidate:
Bernard Cox. Palatine, III. junior. Vice presi-
dential candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
N.Y., Junior.
A.C.T.O.L.N.I.T. presidential candidate:
Jason McIntosh, Tulsa, Okla. senior and
literary arts and sciences senator. Vice presi-
dential candidate: Mariel Romero, Topeka
junior and off-campus senator.
Student Senate Elections Commission 841
KANGAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
Lawrence's musical underground
NEWS:864-4810
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
T
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
hey call it the pit.
they can it the pit
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place there adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40 foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live underground music
less of name the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
“it's not the most cusky of accommodations,” says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical “Bulltits serves a purpose as a home for alternative music.”
bother. It pays the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in lawrence. It also showcases older bands. it catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-summer.
The recent Body Count and Pear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
CAROLINA
(1)
Scot Hill, Andover junior, catches a few rays at European Tan, Health & Hair Salon, 1601 W. 23rd St. To avoid sunburn or get ready for first day on the beach on spring break, many students are heading to tanning salons.
inJanuary, the "Cop Killer" singer him
Preparing for spring break starts early
Irene Lanier / KANSAN
Jennifer Freund
Special to the Kansan
Jennifer Huff, Wichita senior, is trying to drop a couple pounds before she heads for South Padre Island.
I'm trying to just exercise more as opposed to starving myself. I started out just hoping to fit into last summer's bikini for break, but now I'm finding that I'm enjoying working out." Huff said.
Students are working hard to shed those few extra pounds and bronze that pasty, white skin after a long Kansas winter. It's all in hopes of having the perfect spring break.
While there's still room at the gyms for last minute weight loss, tanning salons are booked solid.
Jan Bryan, manager of BodyShapes Fitness Club, 3320 Mesa Way, an aerobics and nautilus center for women, said that there was not as much of a rush to workout before spring break.
"Women, and especially college students,
are becoming more aware that it takes more to losing weight and looking good for spring break than intensive workouts and crash diets two weeks before break starts. Being in shape is an ongoing process, not just something that can be achieved immediately," Bryan said.
Bryan, whose gym also has a tanning bed, said there had been a huge increase in students using the tanning bed before spring break.
"We have a lot of members signing up for the tanning bed right before break so that they can get a little color before they go on vacation, " Bryan said. "We actually have to turn people away."
She said members still could book tanning beds,but she wouldn't allow non-members to use the facilities.
Any Veat, Leneax sophomore, is going to Fort Lauderdale during break. She said she didn't want to get sunburned, so she was spending time in a tanning salon.
However, health care officials stress that this is a misconception. They say it is not any safer to tan in a tanning bed than it is in the sun, and a tanning bed is more harmful to skin than the sun. So while it may look like a healthy glow, it really isn't.
"I've been going for about a week now," Veach said. "I just want to make sure that I don't spend my first day laying out and the rest of the week sitting in my hotel room with a third-degree burn. With these tanning beds, I can get sun more gradually."
The office of Lee Bittenbender, a Lawrence dermatologist, recommended that people not expose themselves to the sun or tanning beds for extended periods of time. If you do go to a tanning bed or lay out in the sun, it is recommended that you use a sunblock with a sun protection factor, or SPF, of at least a15. This will give you 90- to 94-percent protection. Anything else above 15 will give you only 2 percent more protection.
These precautions, however, do little to deter them interested in tanning.
Linda Meyer at European Tan, Health & Hair Salon, 1601 W. 23rd St. can attest to the increased use of tanning beds before spring break
I've noticed that three to four times more people tan prior to spring break, she said. "We get people of all ages, but mostly college students and they tend mostly to be female."
asley Keller, employee at The Total Look, Ninth and Mississippi streets, said she also had noticed an increase in people using the tanning beds.
"There's been an increase in appointments made for the tanning beds. It's mainly students getting ready for spring break. There's mainly an increase in evening appointments," Keller said.
Kelsy Avery, Chicago junior, said she had been using the beds in the afternoons to avoid the crowds at night.
"I have about a two-hour break between my afternoon classes so I just make appointments then," she said. "I'm going so that I look good on spring break, but it's also nice to have a tan in the middle of February."
Keller said that students tanned so they wouldn't get sunburned on vacation. Keller also said they did not want their clients to get burned on their beds either, so they took safety precautions.
"We have a safety sheet that we have people making appointments for the bed read and sign before they use the beds," Keller said.
The safety sheet includes questions about the client's skin color and asks them if they tend to burn easily. It recommends that a first-time user or fair-skinned person not use the bed for the full 30 minutes for their first visit. They also recommend that clients not tan in the nude.
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SPRING BREAK '93 = *K- you* • March 10, 1993
THINGS TO DO AT THE
SANDBAR DURING BREAK
PLAY. BACCAMMON CHESS
TRIVIA PURSUIT PINBALL
SHOOT SPINBALLS AT
BARTENDERPLAY STRIP
POKER ENJOY OUR ANTIQUE
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17 E 5TH 842-0111
beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that
THE SANDBAR 17 E5TH 842-0111
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
Beer bill concerns merchants
store owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales eeer sales.
in incensed as a sole proprietor
etail store that the big chains
ell hundreds and thousands of
feel that they must take 50 perf
my beer business to show a
," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka
store owner.
ichaïte liquor store owner point iichaïte liquor stores are permitted y to sell only alcoholic beverand that beer was only a small f other stores' total sales.
en they take our one item it be devastating. "Carl Mitchell 'It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and gus to be competitive."
n Webb, owner of Webb's Fine and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was ast of the 12 bill opponents to k.
er the hearing, he said his busi-
sauld would be hit hard by the legion
because beer made up about
percent of his total sales.
n in a college town," Webb said.
a young crowd. Young is beer."
"accasion during the hearings
t with the social issue of making
r with higher alcohol content
lable at more locations.
was stated that the amount of liking stronger beer would not ease — that it was simply a matter where it was bought," said Francis ad, a state and national Christian apperance Union volunteer. "I disse. Availability is the key here. If handy, you buy it."
their bill opponents warned the resentatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the salience would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any es of liquor.
The Pandora's box will be open,"
d Richard Ferguson, president of
nas Retail Liquor Dealers Association
Toponents of the bill spoke on esday. No action was taken.
ections
The candidates
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward Austin, Olathe junior and engineering senator. Vice president candidate: Jeff Russell, Olathe junior and president of the junior class.
UNITE president; Junior College instructor; Topeka junior and liberal arts and sciences senator. Worcester presidential candidate; Topeka junior and Numerator senator.
UNGANSBAN: presidential candidate:
Bernard Cox, Petalilla, III, junior. Vice
presidential candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
N.Y., junior.
A.C.T.I.O.N.II presidential candidate:
Jason McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahoma; senior and liberal arts and science senators; Vice presidential candidate: Marisol Romero, Topeka junior and off-campus senator.
Source:
Student Senate Elections Commission KANBAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102, NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
NEWS: 864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
call it the pit.
T
hey can it the pic
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king.
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unravelled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
This is the bad side of tow.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of The Note, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
MORE FROM THE BAND
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands, it catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
In January, the "Cop Killer" singer himself brought a taste of Los Angeles to the cornfields around the Outhouse. The
Jason Auld / KANSAN
Staff use break to catch up duties
Special to the Kansan
For students, March 20-27 will be a week to forget about work and school, but for the KU staff, it will be catch-up time.
While some KU offices enjoy a slower work week, officials say many departments use spring break to catch up on work that would be difficult when classes are in session.
For Facilities Operations, spring break is one of the busiest times of the school year. Bob Porter, associate director of plant maintenance, said that without classes in session, Facilities Operations can do work that would normally disturb teachers and students.
Facilities Operations will be working with an outside contractor during spring break to drill holes in the foundation of Wescoe Hall to take soil samples and work on foundation problems. Facilities Operations also will relocate several offices and, weather permitting, fill pitholes around campus.
"They think we can do six weeks' work in one week," Porter said. "Sometimes they get done, sometimes they don't."
Julie Cooper, associate director of the office.
For the Office of Financial Aid, spring break is a week to catch up on paper work.
Cooper said that there would not be many students walking into the office, but they usually received more phone calls during spring break.
"It's a pretty intense work time for us," said
"Although the office is quieter over spring break, I don't think we enjoy the break as much as most people do." she said.
The office will begin processing the thousands of financial aid applications for next school year.
AWILD TRIP
The Department of Student Housing will try to gain some ground while students are away during spring break. According to Marion Temple, assistant director of maintenance for student housing, the break will be a busy time. Maintenance will be working on smoke detector installation, dishwasher installation and in several dormitory boiler rooms.
"If I need to shut a building down to install a pump or something, I try and put it off until spring break," Temple said.
Liz Reese, student worker at the office,
said it would be business as usual because
they still received about the same amount of
applications as any other time.
Although many offices on campus value the time without students to catch up on work, the Office of Admissions doesn't seem to be affected by students' absence.
"The only benefit of having the students gone is that we don't get as many people popping their heads in asking what time it is," she said.
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KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
March 10, 1993 • K-You • SPRING BREAK '93
Liquor store owners told the House
n incensed as a sole proprietor retail store that the big chains
more owners told the House and State Affairs Committee much as half of their sales.
stall store that the big chains sell hundreds and thousands of feel that they must take 50 per of my beer business to show a said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka r store owner.
in webb, owner of Webb's Fine e and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was last of the 12 bill opponents to ak.
then they take our one item it did be devastating. "Carl Mitchell." "It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and us to be competitive."
ichita liquor store owner point it that liquor stores are permitted ly to sell only alcoholic bever- and that beer was only a small of other stores' total sales.
'm in a college town," Webb said.
"s a young crowd. Young is beer."
ter the hearing, he said his busis also would be hit hard by the legion because beer made up about percent of his total sales.
say young crowd. Young discussion during the hearings also dt with the social issue of making er with higher alcohol content ilable at more locations.
it was stated that the amount ofinking stronger beer would notbrease — that it was simply a matterwhere it was bought," said FrancisGood, a state and national Christianimperance Union volunteer. "I disree. Availability is the key here. Ifhandy, you buy it."
other bill opponents warned the presentatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the legislature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any nes of liquor.
The Pandaor's box will be open,
id Richard Ferguson, president of
ansas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
Proponents of the bill spoke on messey. No action was taken.
ections
The candidates
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward Austin, Olathe junior and engineering senator. Vice president candidate: Jef Russell, Olathe junior and president of the junior class.
UNITE presidential candidate. John Shoe
maker, Toupea junior and liberal arts and
science senator. Vice president candidates.
Toupea junior and Numerator senator.
UNGANSAHIA; presidential candidate;
Bernard Cox, Palatine, III, junior. Vice
presidential candidate; Charles Frey, Brockport,
N.Y.,Junior.
N.Y. Y.
A.C.T.I.O.N.I.: presidential candidate
Jason McInnis, Tulsa, Oklahoma; senior and
articls and sciences senator; Vice presi-
dential candidate; Mario Romero, Topeka
junior and off-campus senator.
Student Senate Elections Commission
KANSAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
T
hey call it the pit.
hey call it the pit.
It's a dance floor like no other in Lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shredded drumsticks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 60-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
Forget fraternity and sorority members bopping to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snake-skin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of life, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
less of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of *The Note*, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "但它 serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
...
In January, the "Cop Killer" singer him self brought a taste of Los Angeles to the cornfields around the Curtsee. The
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KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Beer bill concerns merchants
beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
Liquor store owners told the House federal and State Affairs Committeeiat as much as half of their sales gree beer sales.
By Ben Grove Kansan staff write
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
the beer sale.
"I am incensed as a sole proprietor if a retail store that the big chains she sell hundreds and thousands of ems feel that they must take 50 percent of my beer business to show a roff," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka quor store owner.
A Wichita liquor store owner pointed out that liquor stores are permitted to sell only alcoholic beverages and that beer was only a small part of other stores' total sales.
scking Webb, owner of Webb's Fine
Vine and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was
he last of the 12 bill opponents to
break.
art of other stores.
"When they take our one item it would be devastating." Carl Mitchell said. "It's like asking us to run a race, cutting one of our legs off and saying we are competitive."
After the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about 40 percent of his total sales.
"I'm in a college town." Webb said.
"It's a young crowd. Young is beer."
Proponents of the bill spoke on Tuesday. No action was taken.
"The Pandora's box will be open," said Richard Ferguson, president of Kansas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
"It was stated that the amount of drinking stronger beer would not increase—that it was simply a matter of where it was bought," said Francis Wood, a state and national Christian Temperance Union volunteer. "I disagree. Availability is the key here. If it's handy, you buy it."
Other bill opponents warned the representatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the Legislature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any types of liquor.
ections
It's a young crowd. Young is beer.
Discussion during the hearings also dealt with the social issue of making beer with higher alcohol content available at more locations.
The candidates
UNITE presidential candidate John Shoah-
maker. Teukoraji junior and liberal arts and
science sciences. Vice president candidate.
Tim Dawson, Teukoraji junior and Nunez
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward Austin, Oglate junior and engineer engineer. Vice presidential candidate: Jeff Russell, Oglate junior and president of the junior class.
UNIGANSAH; presidential candidate:
Bernard Cox, Pataline III, illi. Vice presi-
dental candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
N.Y., junior.
SPRING BREAK '93 * K-you * March 10, 1993
A.C.I.T.O.N.11: presidential candidate:
Jacinto McIntosh, Tulsa, Okla. and senior
literal arts and sciences senator. Vice pres-
idential candidate: Marisol Romero, Topeka
junior and off-campus senator.
Student Senate Elections Commission KAMBAN
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Western 10-7. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.118
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Lawrence's musical underground
The Outhouse provides the pulse of alternative music's local vein
NEWS:864-4810
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
T
Jason Auld / KANSAN
hey call it the pit.
It's a dance floor like no other in lawrence — a place where adrenaline is king,
where elbows pump, shoulders bump and bodies collide in a frenzy of shreded drummicks and unraveled steel guitar strings. Where beer- and sweat-soaked dancers stumble away bleeding or are dragged away unconscious.
Forget fraternity and sorority members begging to a happy-faced disc jockey. Forget basketball players in snakeskin boots two-stepping in a cowboy bar. This is the Outhouse. This is the local vein of live, underground music. This is the bad side of town.
The pit is under the flat roof of The Outhouse, a 40-by-40-foot blue cinder block shell of a building four miles east of Lawrence.
"I remember seeing one very thin girl out dancing," says Joe Adler. Lawrence graduate student "Then a few minutes later she was being carried off with her eyes closed. It looked like she was sleeping, I guess she caught one."
A steel girder, about eight feet above the pit, runs the length of the ceiling. Stage divers, patrons who launch themselves into the crowd, clutch at the girder as they ride the fingers and palms of those in the pit below them.
Some who ride the crowd wrap both hands and both legs around the girder and then dangle for a while. They then swing their combat boots to the cement floor — or into an inattentive head.
Others tight the pull of a wary crowd to their last finger tip grip on the girder and then are swept away over the heads of the audience for another lap around the interior of the building
Call the music pump or hardcore or alternative or cutting edge. But regardess of name, the music is what has given the secluded Outhouse a notoriety unmatched by other Lawrence venues.
"It's not the most cushy of accommodations," says Shelle Rosenfeld, assistant editor of *The Note*, a Lawrence-based music and entertainment periodical. "But it serves a purpose as a home for alternative music."
In January, the "Cop Killer" singer himself brought the taste of Los Angeles to the cornfields around the Outhouse. The syndicate-style back-door man in mirrored sunglasses sat at center stage through the entire performance — emotionless, staring into the crowd, a shotgun across his chest.
Throughout his set, Ice T extolled the cornfield Kansas haven.
QUALITY
O.C.BETY
Above, a crowd rider, passed hand to hand above the audience, grabs for the rafters of the Outhouse during a Fear concert. The concert, held in early February, had the combination of music, dance and injuries that make the venue unique in Lawrence. At left, three patrons at the same concert take a break in the entryway of the Outhouse.
Nancy Wicker, Topeka occupational therapist, remembers the concert, her first visit to The Outhouse. She said she thought Ice T relished Lawrence, despite his complaints about the parking-lot-turned-mudhole, the result of wet January weather on the lot's unpaved surface.
She says the Outhouse is a testing ground for new bands in Lawrence. It also showcases older bands. It catches some, like Nirvana, before their crusades into mainstream music. Others, like Fear, the early 1980s punk band that recently reunited, appear on reconstruction tours. The Outhouse catches still others, like Ice T's Body Count, in mid-swing.
"I wanted to take him home to my house and show him what it like. I would not live where he lives for all the
The recent Body Count and Fear concerts had both the music and the politics that fuel the fire and fights in the pit.
"He said: I want to know what it's like to walk outside at night and feel safe," Wicker says, recalling Ice T's words.
Story continued, Page 7.
FBI makes second arrest in bombing
Kuwaiti-born engineer linked to first suspect in Trade Center blast
The Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — A Palestinian-American chemical engineer was ordered without bail yesterday on a charge of helping to bomb the World Trade Center. He was the second suspect linked directly to the fatal blast.
Nidal A. Ayyad, 25, was arrested at his suburban Maplewood home by an FBI SWAT team. Authorities said the Kuwaiti-born naturalized U.S. citizen had ties to Mohammed Salameh, accused last week of renting the van used to carry the bomb that devastated the skyscraper complex Feb. 26, killing five people.
A federal investigator said Ayad, like Salameh, also had ties to El Sayid Nosair, who was acquitted of the 1900 assassination of militant Israeli Rabbi Meir Kahane but convicted of related charges.
National NEWS
James Esposito, the FBI chief for New Jersey, said Ayayd's chemical background was significant, but he would not say whether Ayayd was attentive.
believed to have made the bomb.
"By his educational background he has expertise that lends itself to this kind of crime," Esosito told reporters.
The FBI said that Ayayd and Salameh shared a bank account and that Ayayd's business card was found among Salameh's personal belongings when Salameh was arrested last Thursday. Ayayd is a research engineer for Allied-Signal Inc., which makes engineered materials and aerospace and automotive products.
Ayad and Salameh knew each other for more than a year, Esposito said. Ayad's father, Abdel-Rahman Joseph Ayad, confirmed that Salameh had visited his son at the house in Maplewood. He didn't know how often or how recently.
Discovered in the shed after the bombing were several hundred pounds of urea, nitric acid, sulfuric acid, other chemical compounds and equipment such as graduated beakers, flasks, and a mortar and pestle, the FBI said.
The storage shed was rented to someone who identified himself as Kanal Birahm, according to the complaint. Esposito said the FBI was not sure whether Kanal Birahm was a pseudonym. Several people, including Salameh, were authorized to have access to the shed, investigators said.
On the day before the bombing, an FBI complaint said, Salameh and an undetermined number of other people were seen making many trips to a Jersey City storage warehouse where
There were enough chemical compounds "to produce a primary high explosive," the complaint said.
Salameh also was seen making telephone calls from a pay phone nearby, and records show four calls were made from that phone to Aayad's line at Allied-Signal, the complaint said.
A federal investigator, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Ayyad visited Nosair in the New York City jail at Rikers Island after Nosair was arrested in the Kahane slaying. Nosair now is in the New York state prison in Attica.
explosives and bomb-making materials were later found. The complaint said they drove a yellow Ryder rental van, which was believed used in the bombing.
Cavanaugh ordered Ayad held without bail. At the defense request, Cavanaugh scheduled a hearing for Friday to determine whether Ayad is the person sought by the government.
Eleven days before the blast, Ayyad rented a red General Motors car and listed Salameh as an additional driver, the complaint said. When the van believed used in the bombing was rented, the FBI said, Salameh was accompanied by a second person in a red GM car.
If convicted, he could face life imprisonment and a $250,000 fine.
Ayad appeared yesterday before U.S. Magistrate Dennis Cavanaugh on a complaint charging him with "aiding and abetting the malicious damage and destruction" of the trade center.
Another man, Ibrahim Elgabrowny, has been charged with obstruction of justice in the bombing investigation for striking federal agents searching his apartment after Salameh's arrest.
In the New York City area, Salameh was active in pro-Nosair demonstrations during his 1991 trial and reportedly has visited him at Attica.
Both Nosair and Salameh used Elgabrowny's Brooklyn address, authorities have said, and Elgabrowny headed a support committee for Nosair.
Yesterday, Elgabrowny hired prominent attorney William Kunstler, who represented Nosair at his trial, and partner Ron Kuby.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
Kansas liquor store representatives yesterday asked state legislators not to take away a vital part of their livelihood — the sale of certain types of beer.
That is what would happen, they said, if the House passed a bill that would allow grocery and convenience stores to sell "strong beer." Such stores now only can sell beer with 3.2 percent alcohol or less. Only liquor stores can sell beer with greater alcohol content, and liquor store owners are worried the legislation would rob them of much of that market.
"I am incensed as a sole proprietor of a retail store that the big chains who sell hundreds and thousands of items feel that they must take 50 percent of my beer business to show a profit," said Patricia Oppitz, a Topeka liquor store owner.
Liquor store owners told the House Federal and State Affairs Committee that as much as half of their sales were beer sales.
Beer bill concerns merchants
A Wichita liquor store owner pointed out that liquor stores are permitted legally to sell only alcoholic beverages and that beer was only a small part of other stores' total sales.
"When they take our one item it would be devastating." Carl Mitchell said. "It's like asking us to run a race, then cutting one of our legs off and asking us to be competitive."
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., was the last of the 12 bill opponents to speak.
After the hearing, he said his business also would be hit hard by the legislation because beer made up about 40 percent of his total sales.
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff write
"Tm in a college town," Webb said. "It's a young crowd. Joung is beer."
Discussion during the hearings also dealt with the social issue of making beer with higher alcohol content available at more locations.
"It was stated that the amount of drinking stronger beer would not increase — that it was simply a matter of where it was bought," said Francis Wood, a state and national Christian Temperance Union volunteer. "I disagree. Availability is the key here. If it's handy, you buy it."
Other bill opponents warned the representatives that if grocery and convenience stores got 5.0 beer, the Legislature would soon see a glut of convenience store requests to sell any types of liquor.
"The Pandora's box will be open," said Richard Ferguson, president of Kansas Retail Liquor Dealers Association.
Proponents of the hill spoke on Tuesday. No action was taken.
INSIDE
Student-made plays
I wone act plays by KU students, "Coverage" and "Footprints in the Snow," continue tonight at Ige Theatre at Murphy Hall. "Coverage" deals with media exploitation of a child's drowning, and "Footprints in the Snow" tells the story of an actor who loses his identity.
See related story, Page 6.
Coalitions, independents file for elections
By Brett Rlggs
Kansan staff writer
Two Student Senate election coilitions and two independent candidates yesterday rushed to meet the 5 p.m. filing deadline for presidential and vice presidential candidacy for the Senate elections April 14-15.
The coaliitions Focus and UNITE, and independent candidates Bernard Cox, Palatine, Ill., junior, and his running mate Charles Frey, Brockport, N.Y., junior, joined the A.C.T.I.O.N.!! coalition to form a four-way race.
Edward Austin, Olathe junior, will be Focus presidential candidate. His vice presidential running mate will be Jeff Russell, Olathe junior.
Austin said that one of the main issues that Focus would address in the election was the
issue of a proposed citywide transportation system
"The system would serve the city and students." Austin said.
John Shoenmaker, Topeka junior, will be UNITE's presidential candidate. Tim Dawson, Topeka junior, will be his vice presidential mate.
Shoemaker said he wanted to see improved retention for minority students by having more minorities on the University faculty.
"It would not be quotas, but rather diversity through quality." Shoemaker said. "It would help the cultural atmosphere on campus."
Cox and Frey had to collect 600 student signatures to file for independent candidacy. They are calling their two-man coalition UNGANISHA, which means "unify" in the
Kiswahili language.
"We'll have to work harder because we don't have as many connections." Cox said.
Cox said that one of their main goals would be to make Senate services more cost-effective, allowing Senate to finance organizations in need of more money.
"Tuition reaches out to every student." McIntosh said. "We need to make education more accessible."
Jason McIntosh, Tulsa, Okla., senior, was the first candidate to file He will be the presidential candidate for the A.C.T.I.O.N.!! coalition. His running mate will be Marisol Romero, Topeka junior.
McIntosh said one of his main issues would be a prospective tuition payment plan process. His plan would allow students who could not pay tuition in full to pay on a monthly basis.
The candidates
FOCUS: presidential candidate: Edward Austin, Olathe junior and engineering scientist. Vice president candidate: J Russell, Olathe junior and president of the junior
UNITE presidential candidate. John Shoel-
maker. Teopakian junior and liberal arts
and sciences teacher. Vice presidental
conference chairman. Teopakian junior and Nume-
maker senator.
UNGANSHA: presidential candidate:
Bernard Cosat, Patinei, III, junior. Vice pri al
dental candidate: Charles Frey, Brockport,
N.Y., junior.
A.C.I.L.O.N.i.T; presidential candidate:
Jason McIntosh, Tulsa, Oklahomə; senior and
laboral arts and sciences scientist. Vice presi-
dential candidate: Mariel Romero, Topeka
junior and off-campus senator.
Source:
Student Senate Elections Commission KANBAI
2
Thursday, March 11, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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March 12
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Hillel House 6 pm
Call for reservations
March 13
Women's Lock in
Hillel House 8 pm
Goes until Brunch Sunday
Call for info
March 14
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Perspectives on Jewish
Survival 10 pm
Call for location and info.
March 17 and 18
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Due by March 19
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orides, reservations or info
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(Applications may available at either meeting)
Join the Selections!
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The University of Kansas Howard Hughes Undergraduate Research Fellowships
Program: Undergraduate summer research fellowships in Biochemistry, Cell Biology, General Genetics, Molecular Genetics, Physiology, and Microbiology. The program is funded through a grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
FOR WOMEN AND MINORITY MEN
Eligibility Requirements;
1. Women and minority men who are U.S.citizens or permanent residents
2. Undergraduates who have completed their freshman year with a minimum 3.0 grade point average
3. Demonstrable leadership ability, scholastic ability and an interest in pursuing a career in the biological sciences.
Stipend and Allowances: $2,000 stipend for an eight week program, tuition and fees for 2 credit hours of undergraduate research, room, board and travel stipend.
Submission Format: Obtain an application from your Biology Department (or rom the address below): send an application, an official transcript, and two letters of recommendation, to the Howard Hughes Program, 2045 Haworth, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045-2106.
Program Date: June 8-July 31, 1993
Application Deadline Date: April 1, 1993.
For Additional Information, write to:
Sylvia M. Suarez
Howard Hughes Program
2045 Haworth Hall
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66045-2106
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ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will have an informational table from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jearne Bennan at 864-3742.
The Japan-American Club will hold a conversation group from 9:30 to11:30 a.m. today in Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ben Tomkins at 865-0116.
The Oread Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends will hold a meeting for worship from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. For more information, contact Kate Fawcett at 864-6299.
Students, faculty, staff and spouses are welcome to attend a wellness workshop on date rape from noon to 1 p.m. today in 138 Robinson Center. For more information, call Stacey Elwell at 749-2875.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today, in 3042 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742.
The KU Undergraduate Anthropology Club will have Felix Moos, co-director of anthropology, speak about his recent trip to Asia at 5 p.m. today in 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, contact Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
KU Students Against Hunger will meet regarding War on Hunger Month at 5:30 p.m. today in Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kishor Allada at 865-5747.
Womyn's Concerns will meet at 6:30 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union.
Latin American Solidarity will hold a planning meeting at 6:30 tonight in Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Marcacker at 841-5660.
The UNITE coalition will have an election kickoff party with candi-
WEATHER
Omaha: 32'/16'
LAWRENCE: 35'/27'
Kansas City: 34'/25'
St. Louis: 39'/28'
Wichita: 42'/31'
Minneapolis: 27'/13'
Phoenix: 79'/52'
Salt Lake City: 49'/35'
Seattle: 62'/36'
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
20 percent chance
Mostly cloudy with chance of snow.
Very cold.
High: 34'.
High: 27'.
cloud
Cloudy
Source: Brad Travis, KU Weather Service; 864 3300
Source: Brad Travis, KU Weather Service dates and Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, speaking at 7 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union For more information, call John Shoemaker at 842-6114.
The FOCUS coalition will have an election kickoff party at 7 tonight in the parlors of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ed Austin at 865-0890.
**Trilahion and Swim Club will hold swimming practice at 7 tonight at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2734.**
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call the GLSOK office at 864-3091.
The Oread Society will meet at 7 tonight at Quinton's, 615 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Scott Hill at 843-9030.
KU Democrats will meet about
nominations for next year's executive board at 8 tonight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Matt.All at 864-7028.
Jayhawkert Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1108.
ICTHUS Christian Fellowship will meet at 8:30 tonight in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jarrett Meek at 749-5365.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7119.
Sigma Na and Delta Delta Delta will hold "Hit or Miss," a benefit for children's cancer research, from 4 to 7 tomorrow night at Benchwarmers, 1601 W. 23rd St. For more information, call Noreen Checcah at 865-5474.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 11, 1993
3
BRIEFS
Rachel G. Thompson / KANSAN
SenEx: events during finals OK
An article passed by University Senate Executive Committee would make it possible for University-sponsored events to be held during the final examination period.
The article would allow events during finals as long as they did not require student attendance.
The current reading of Article 1.3.7 of the University Senate Rules and Regulations prohibits any University-sponsored organization from scheduling events on Stop Day or during finals. The restrictions apply to athletic, scholastic and administrative organizations. Events can be scheduled after noon on Sundays during the exam period.
Both articles allow for exceptions with the permission of the University Events Committee. The proposal now goes to the University Council.
Senate passes billion-dollar budget
The Kansas Senate passed, 30-10, and sent to the House yesterday an appropriations bill containing the first billion-dollar budget for the state Board of Regents and the institutions it oversees.
The bill appropriates about $1 billion for the Board of Regents, six state universities, University of Kansas Medical Center and Kansas State University Veterinary Medical Center.
In explaining his no vote, Sen. Todd Tahtr, R-Goddard, said the Legislature should not be approving such expenditures, given what he said is the state's shaky economic condition.
"This state is facing a revenue shortfall." Tahirt said in remarks he read on the Senate floor.
"The layoffs in the Sedgwick County area are going to impact this state's revenue. Sedgwick County provides over 20 percent of this state's revenue."
The budget represents a $15 million increase over what the Regents received in general fund appropriations for the current fiscal year, but $7 million less than what Gov. Joan Finney recommended in January.
Compiled by Kansan staff writers Mark Klefer, Jess DeHaven and Associated Press reports.
Students learn right steps
Classes teach basics of ballroom dancing even the Achy Breaky
KANSAS
CAMPUS SNAPSHOT
Students in Square and Ballroom Dance try their first waltz in 210 Robinson Center. Front two couples (front to back): Brad Davis, Atchison senior, and Leslie Litlek, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Lori Hollar, Austin, Tex., senior; and Eric Swain, Marysville senior.
By Terrilyn McCormick
Kansan staff writer
After stumbling over his partner's feet, Gregory Glass, Nevada, Ill., sophomore, giggles and then returns to practicing the waltz box step.
He's no Fred Astare, but he is not dancing to get the girl. He already has her.
Glass is taking square and ballroom dancing class with his girlfriend, Shelly Madsen, Boulder, Co., senior, who is glad she has Glass to practice her footwork with.
"I've wanted to learn these dances for a while now, and finally I found a guy to take the class with," Madsen said.
This semester Glass and 149 other students in the three classes will swing through the Lindy, strut through the Fox Sten and to steal the Cha Cha Cha.
Angela Spielman is the instructor for the classes, which focus on the fundamental steps of square and ballroom dance.
Because of the recent popularity of country music and dance, Spielman also has started teaching some of the popular country line dances, including the Achy Breaky Heart line dance.
Spielman said she hoped to have the class meet at one of the country-western dance clubs in Lawrence for a class session.
The class is a change of pace for students who usually are focused on books and tests. Spielman said.
"There are some super bright people who are in this class," she said. "They come in here and have difficulties because they are not used to moving their bodies to music."
Persuading the men to lead the dances is one of Spielman's biggest challenges. Taking a woman and moving her across the dance floor is awkward for women who are not confident in their own dance ability, she said.
"It's not a pressure class," she said. "I basically just want everyone to have a good time, and I think that most of the students do."
was to learn the steps but that the class wasn't just about dancing.
"Lots of guys want to learn how to dance, but they don't feel comfortable," she said. "They're not sure where to move their feet, and that keeps them from moving someone else where they need to go."
Spielman said that the goal of the class
STUDENT SENATE
Committee to draw up new budget
By Brett Riggs
By Brett Riggs
Kansas staff writer
Student Senate last night upheld Student Body President Brad Garlinghoe's veto of the revenue code budget and voted to have the Senate finance committee draft a new budget including additional revenue from a $3 student activity fee increase.
Garlinghouse said he vetoed the budget March 4 because he thought the additional $138,000 of revenue from the proposed fee increase needed to be included. He said that David Amber, vice chancellor of student affairs, would not approve the budget until the revenue was included.
Ambler would veto it and send it right back. "Garlinghouse said."
Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer, said he was more concerned with properly revising the budget than he would be the extra time the process would take.
"We can go through each group with a new perspective because we have more money." Sigourney said. "If we were to give them groups would have gotten more money."
In other business, Senate passed four bills totaling $5,867, bringing its spending for the year to $89,982.
It approved a $2,185 bill to finance the Student Union Association's Free Outdoor Film Series.
Senate allocated $2,250 to finance Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, which is April 4-10.
Senate allocated $831 to finance Korean Night, which is scheduled for April 10. The event, sponsored by the Korean Student Union, will present information about the Korean people.
Senate allocated $601 to finance Arts on the Boulevard. The event, scheduled for April 14, will exhibit visual and performing art forms along Jayhawk Boulevard.
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Congratulations
Jennifer MacDonald
On being elected Mid American
Panhellenic Conference
Association Area Vice President!
WE ARE SO PROUD OF
YOU!! Love,
Panhellenic
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL!
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Campus Outlet
2246 Baker
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SUA MOVIES SUA MOVIES SUA
CALL 864-SHOW CALL 864-SHOW
• THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
Thurs., Mar. 11, at 9:30 PM and
Sat., Mar. 13, at 4:00 PM
ALPACINO SCARFACE
PRODUCED BY
MARTIN BREGMAN
WRITTEN BY
OLIVER STONE
DIRECTED BY
BRIAN DE PALMA
CAUTION
"Scarface" is an internet film both in its use of language and depiction of violence. We suggest mature audiences.
LAW OF DESIRE
Thurs., Mar. 11, at 7:00 PM
KEVIN COSTNER WHITNEY HOUSTON
"The RESERVOIR DOGS' PICKS UP WHERE SCORSESE'S 'MEAN STREETS' LEFT OFF!"
"ONE OF THE DECADE'S LANDMARK MOVIES! Rough, rude and ritously funny! A great film with brilliant performances!"
- JAMES KAUFMAN, PLATINO
"POWERFUL! Will have audiences riveted to their seats!"
- JAMES KAUFMAN, PLATINO
RESERVOIR DOGS
KEETEL RUTH PENN BUSCEMI TERRAY MOUSKIN
Fri., Mar. 12 7:00 & 9:30
Sat., Mar. 13 7:00 & 9:30
Sun., Mar. 14 2:00
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.50
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2246 Baker
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Are you
stressed
Dr. DeSalvo
will speak about
stress management.
Meeting at
8:30 pm
Thurs., Mar. 11
Watkins first floor
CALL 864-SHOW
• THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
Thurs., Mar. 11, at 9:30 PM and Sat., Mar. 13, at 4:00 PM
ALPACINO SCARFACE
PRODUCED BY MARTIN BREGMAN
WRITTEN BY OLIVEN STONE
DIRECTED BY BRUAN DE PALMA
CAUTION "Scarface" is an intense film both in the use of language and depiction of violence. We suggest mature audiences.
LAW OF DESIRE
Thurs., Mar. 11, at 7:00 PM
KEVIN COSTNER WHITNEY HOUSTON
Never let her
survive your sight
Never let
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Never fall on fire
THE BODYGUARD
Fri., Mar. 12 7:00 & 9:30
Sat., Mar. 13 7:00 & 9:30
Sun., Mar. 14 2:00
"RESERVOIR DOGS' PICKS UP WHERE SCORSESE'S 'MEAN STREETS' LEFT OFF!"
"ONE OF THE DECADE'S LANDMARK MOVIES!
Rough, rude and ritously funny! A great film with brilliant performances!"
Dave Williams, PLATINUM
"POWERFUL!
Will have audiences riveted to their seats!"
Jason Tremaine, HOBILEX
RESERVOIR DOGS
KENTEL ROUTH PENN BUSSCEMI THERAY MOODSEN
Fri., Mar. 12 and Sat., Mar. 13 at Midnight
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.50
Thurs., Mar. 11, at 9:30 PM and
Sat., Mar. 13, at 4:00 PM
ALPACINO SCARFACE
PRODUCED BY
MARTIN BREGMAN
WRITTEN BY
OLIVER STONE
DIRECTED BY
BRIAN DE PALMA
CAUTION
"Scarface" is an intense film both in its use of language and depiction of violence. We suggest mature audiences.
SUPERIOR UNION ACTIVITY
SUA
UNIVERSITY OF GAMELAND
CALL 864-SHOW
BIG SCREEN •
"RESERVOIR DOGS' PICKS UP WHERE SCORSESE'S 'MEAN STREETS' LEFT OFF!"
"ONE OF THE DECADE'S LANDMARK MOVIES! Rough, rude and riotously funny! A great film with brilliant performances!
- Russell Scott, DALAS MORNING NEWS
"POWERFUL!
Will have audiences riveted to their seats!
- Jason Henderson, BUCKTEN HILL"
RESERVOIR DOGS
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4
Thursday, March 11, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Amendment to liquor bill punishes minors unfairly
Last week, the Kansas House of Representatives passed a bill that would lower the blood-alcohol level at which drivers are considered legally intoxicated from .10 to .08 percent. This issue, in and of itself, has come under little criticism.
National studies lend strong statistical support to the notion that lower blood-alcohol levels make highways safer. Accordingly, many lawmakers consider the change a good one. However, an amendment to the bill calls for much stiffer penalties for underage drinkers and threatens to undermine the integrity of the original measure.
the amendment consists of special provisions for drivers under 21 with blood-alcohol levels in excess of .04. Those drivers who exceed the .04 level, but who test below .08, would not actually be charged with a DUI. Instead, they would lose their licenses for 30 days for the first offense and would receive a six-month suspension and a $25 fine for a second offense.
Creating this additional driving condition for underage drinkers smacks of discrimination. Laws are already in existence for the crime of underage drinking. Therefore, the crime of underage drinking should not be confused with the crime of drinking and driving. Laws pertaining to underage drinking seek to punish those under 21; laws pertaining to drunk driving should punish persons of all ages equally.
The obvious goal of this amendment is to deter underage drinking. Whether this goal is achieved is not the issue. The issue is one of age discrimination. Making distinctions in the consequences of drinking and driving that are based upon age is undeniably discrimination.
Decreasing underage drinking is certainly an admirable goal. Possible means of achieving the goal might lie in stiffening existing underage-drinking laws. Attempts at achieving this endeavor, however, should not be made on the strength of a measure concerning drunk driving.
This amendment, without question, is unjust and defines the essence of discrimination.
KYLE KICKHAEFER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Trekkie neeas to get informed
I am a feminist trekkie with a journalism degree, and I am writing in response to Lisa Cosmillo's column. "Trekkie dreams of deep space fantasy."
I know that Ms. Cosmilo is a staunch feminist. I was surprised to see her rendition of the "Star Trek" opening as "where no man (or woman) has gone before." Doesn't she know that "Star Trek: The Next Generation" fixed that earlier lapse in judgment and changed the phrase to "where no one has gone before?"
And regarding the shape changer's ability to become various objects, I would assume that he is under much of the same physical laws as the T-1000 in "Terminator 2." As Arnold Schwarzenegger's character said in the movie, these shape changers cannot form complex weapons, chemicals or moving parts. It would be impossible to change into an airplane, car or gun, and the possibilities are not "endless," as Cosmillo claims they are. Turning into a key or a piece of paper would be difficult, since they only can become objects of similar size. Also, even though the shape changer could turn into the shape of a textbook, it probably would not be able to recruit all
the text on each individual page and "know every answer on a test." I realize that Cosmillo was just fan-fied when he did keep her self-more informed.
Shawna Rosen
Shawna Rosen Research Assistant KECRI/Life Span Institute
Kansan slights women's track
With all the discussion we've had lately on gender equity in sports, I could not believe my eyes when I saw the headlines in the March 1 issue of the *University Daily Kansan* on the Big Eight Conference track meet. There, in letters as big as you could feasibly run, was a headline stating that the KU men's track team had taken seventh place in the Big Eight. Good job, men! Then I noticed under that, in considerably smaller letters, a subhead telling that the KU women's track team had taken fourth place in the conference. Hey, wait a minute! Isn't it weird? Place better than have seized it? I picked up headlines from me in my book, fourth place beats seventh place any day of the week! Way to go, women! Wake up, sports desk!
Angel Clowers Lawrence graduate student
Not likely to be the most popular cause of the 1990s.
AMA
DECLARES WAR
ON POSSIBLE LIMITS
ON DOCTORS' INCOMES
WELL, PEOPLE SAID THEY WANTED TO HEAR FROM US ON HEALTHCARE REFORM
UNIVERSAL PRESS SYND.
3 JANUARY 1993 THE BUFFALO NEWS
Anti-abortion feminist sets the record straight
"Never argue about facts," my father taught me. And although he's a middle-aged white male, I can't help but think this is good advice. But here I find myself compelled to defend the anti abortion position in the face of Lisa Cosmillo's blatant untruths perpetuated, ironically, in the name of breaching journalism protocol to defend the truth. However, this is not a personal attack. I understand the reluctance to believe the atrocities done to unborn babies and their mothers.
1. No, this is not Nazi Germany, and last time I checked — despite Clinton's wayward economic proposals
STAFF COLUMNIST
ANN
JURCY
— we are not yet considered part of the Third World. Nevertheless, we allow the grisly first, second and third-trimester abortion procedure that literally sucks out babies' brains for fetal experimentation. Diliation and Extraction (D&X) is not in Webster's Dictionary yet, Cosmillo, but it was unveiled at the National Abortion Federation Risk Management Seminar September 13-14, 1992, in Dallas. Dr Martin Haskell of Cincinnati originated this technique and to date has performed 700. My space is too limited for the finer details, but as Haskell describes D&X, the kicking legs are grabbed by forceps and the body is pulled out until only the head is left in the womb. Then, a auction catheter is inserted at the base of the skull to suck out the brains while the baby is still alive.
2. Insisting that rejecting the Freedom of Choice Act — allowing abortion in all nine months for any reason — would pave the way for women to get accidentally sterilized or die through illegal abortions totally ignored my point. Women are becoming sterile and dying from legal abortions. You might remember a noted feature on "60 Minutes." The attorney for a woman paralyzed and brain-damaged by abortion said, "In Maryland, you have to be licensed to open a junkyard, but you don't have to be licensed to open an abortion clinic." Or as Rachel McNair, president of Feminists for Life said, "Roe vs Wade only made it legal for butchers to advertise in the Yellow Pages."
3. It is short-sighted to assume that "something will not happen if you make it illegal." The same thing was pointed out to Martin Luther King.
But should we overturn the Civil Rights Act since it has not put a stop to racism? Should we legalize robbery because it still occurs even though it is illegal?
4. Cosmilo can deny that women casually use abortion as birth control, but I don't know how she can be sincere when, according to Planned Parenthood's own statistics, 40 percent of all abortions are at least the woman's second, if not third or fourth, abortions. Lumping together abortion procedures and birth control education as means to "protect women who choose to be sexually active but do not wish to have a child or die." depicts abortion as birth control.
5. If as anti-abortionists never think of women, Cosmillo asks if we know of women who have had abortions.
Yes I do — many of them are now ardent anti-abortionists. These women, such as Nancy Jo Mann, founder of Women Exploited by Abortion, and Olivia Gans, founder of Victims of Abortion, can explain why abortion is such a hard choice — a question that Cosmillo seems happy to put forth, but is afraid to answer. After all, if abortion is so safe and if only a "fetus," Latin for "young one," is evacuated, why the trauma? Why is it there "no harder decision?" Isn't abortion difficult because it is not only dangerous and painful, but because it takes a human life. These so-called fetuses have their own genetic codes, they respond to touch, they feel pain and they will fight to live.
6. Cosmido defends her pro-choice stance on the grounds that it is a woman's body. So should we allow prostitution and drug abuse? Furthermore there is another body involved, as Ana Rosa Rodriguez, whose arm was cut off during in a late-term abortion attempt last year, knows all too well. Cosmido also says that every
child should have love, food and safety. I agree, let's work on that. But with her reasoning, we should kill the hungry children in Somalia.
7. Cosmillo claims that we could have fewer unplanned pregnancies with sex education, as has been done Europe. Maybe she doesn't watch MTV or go to the movies, but I fail to see how our country is sexually repressed. Europe may be even more open about sex, but it has not resulted in fewer abortions. Holland is often cited has having the lowest abortion rate in Europe. It's a lie — they use the same trick Cosmillo tried, they call it something else. The Dutch use "overtime treatment," elsewhere called "bringing on the menses" or "menstrual regulation." When a girl misses a couple periods, the physician destroys her pregnancy by Dilation and Cutterage (D&C) or mini-suction without verifying it as a test. Approximately 60 percent of all these procedures are done on unmarried women. Abortion is never mentioned — who said they were pregnant? They only missed periods.
8. And finally, regarding my alleged missing the point of an entire generation of feminists, since Cosmillo does not explain how I do this, are we just to take her word for it? I would suggest that interested readers contact Feminists for Life at (816) 753-2130. It is a national organization headquartered in Kansas City, Mo., and was founded by a group of women kicked out of the National Organization for Women for espousing an anti-abortion/pro-woman position. Unfortunately women can be just as hegemonic as men. FFL would be more than happy to explain why Susan B. Anthony called abortion "child murder."
And FFL can refer you to agencies that will help you before, during or after pregnancy, or if you suffer from post-abortion syndrome. You can also call the Birthright Hotline at 1-800-848-5683, or in Lawrence at 843-4821. Cosmillo suggests you cannot be pro-life and pro-woman. FFL thinks differently. Give FFL a call because Cosmilo is absolutely right about one thing abortion is "traumatic and painful."
There are other choices.
Ann Jurczyk is a Kansas City, Kan., graduate student majoring in liberal arts.
SHELLY
SOLON
STAFF COLUMNIST
Opponents should know why people oppose rape
Usually when people make judgments that are completely wrong about my opinions and actions, I can laugh it off. But there are times when I'm hurt.
Because of a column I wrote about rape myths and the movie, "Body of Evidence," some of my friends and associates have teased me about being the "rape columnist" and made fun of the attention I gave to this issue.
A woman who is concerned about rape or violence against women or children should be aware as paramed, fantasial and whiny. People predictably label me this way.
Unfortunately, people make these assumptions without considering the facts. People about rape and the myth that perpetuate the idea that women enjoy rape.
Someone very close to me was raped by an acquaintance of hers about eight months ago. It took her seven months to tell anyone. She thought about killing herself before she was found dead. Even when she discovered she had caught two sexually transmitted diseases, she chose not to tell anyone.
As she goes through therapy, I see her improving and dealing with her emotions. Her family and friends understand her feelings and support her. Everyone feels sympathy for her.
That poor young woman.
But my concern does not stop there.
I recognize the scope of the problem.
But then I'm a whiny woman who goes around preaching a political agenda.
Do I have to survive rape before anyone values my opinion? Is this when I cease being a paranoid, radical manater and someone a woman with legitimacy?
I understand that by calling me fanatical, others can make it seem like rape is not a problem — the people who talk about it and see it as a problem are the problem. But I can't push it away from me — I hear about it. The incident I describe is only one of many I know.
It's just that this time it's so close to me I cannot push it out of my mind.
I'm tired of feeling guilty and ashamed to speak up. I am made to look like a fool, but I still cannot see a goby in that cloud.
Last week I tried to explain why I was interested in issues of violence against women in one of my classes. I planned on making an elaborate statement about how fear increasingly envelopes my pyche — not the fear of being raped, but the fear of being afraid for my safety, as my sister did for the rest of my life. But all I got out were tears and choked-up statements about how I cannot deal with my anger as a friend and relative of survivors.
I would love to tell you how young, angry and confused this woman is to prove that rape is real and its impact is real. I would love to tell you how strong, talented and smart she is to prove that women are survivors, not victims of rape.
And I would love to tell you how much I admire her. I would love to tell who she is to give a face to the problem. But if I did someone might, by some chance, realize who she is
No matter how difficult my experience may seem to me, I, in no way, carry the stigma that she would.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER Editor
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Shelly Solon is a Wheeling, Ill., senior majoring in journalism.
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Editors
Asat Managing ... Justin Knapp
News ... Monique Guilain
David Mitchell
Editorial ... Stephen Martino
Campus ... KC Traff
Sports ... David Mitchell
Photos ... Mark Rowlands
Features ... Lynne McAdoo
Graphics ... Dan Schauer
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSATERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr . Bred Broo
Regional Sales mgr . Wade Baxter
National sales mgr . Jennifer Perrier
Co-op sales mgr . Aahsley Hessel
Production mgr . Ashley Langford
Marketing director . Angela Cleverman
Creative director . Holly Parry
Corporate manager . Dave Habke
Art Director
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest Columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
photographs
They can reserve the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newswork, 111 Staffer-Pint Hall
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 11, 1993
5
Media accused of bias
By Jav Koester
Special to the Kansan
The media coverage of Korean Americans in the aftermath of the 1992 Rodney King verdict amounted to "video media racism," said Elaine Kim, professor of Asian-American Studies at the University of California-Berkley, in a speech last night.
The speech in Dyche Hall, "A Korean American Perspective of the L.A. Riots," was part of the Asian-American Festival sponsored by the Asian-American Student Union. About 40 people attended the speech.
Kim said the media only had provided images of Korean Americans attempting to protect their stores with guns and of screaming, hysterical women bemoaning the loss of their stores. The images portrayed Korean Americans as violent and selfish, she said.
"The media showed all Korean Americans as being alike and that all they cared about was themselves," Kim said. "The media didn't provide any history or context for the images they were showing. I knew there was a lot more to the problem than the images that they were showing."
The media only look at race issues as a problem between African Americans and whites, Kim said. That focus causes many to be ignorant of Korean-American problems and concerns, she said.
THE WORLD
Asian American Festival
"Most people in the United States don't seem to know that more than half of the material losses caused by the riot were sustained by Korean Americans," she said.
Kim said she was angry that the media only had talked to a few Korean representatives like herself because they were educated and could speak English.
"The media conducted a short-lived and feverish search for spokespeople like me who were removed three or four times from the riots," she said. "They just looked for people they were comfortable with."
The speech helped show that the riots affected everybody, said John Hansen, Dodge City senior.
"When you think of the Rodney King incident, you would think that it would only affect African Americans and whites," Hansen said. "This helped to show that issues like these
Renee Knoeber / KAN$AN
Elaine Kim, professor of Asian-
American Studies at the University
of California-Berkeley, reads hate
letters she received after writing a
story about the Los Angeles riots.
affect everybody. The purpose of the Asian-American Festival was to create some awareness of Asian-American issues, and this was a good speech to conclude the week."
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
Kuoen Tsao, a member of Asian American Student Union executive board, said Kim's perspective had helped show a media bias against Korean Americans.
"She showed the problems that distortion of the news can create," Tsao said.
Daily Re-affirmation
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5
Show to link radio stations
Craig Brown, Leawood senior and
Kansan staff writer
By James J. Reece
A sports talk show produced by KJHK, the University's student-run radio station, will be the premiere event of the Big 8 College Radio Network, which will link six college radio stations in the Big Eight Conference.
The two-hour radio show, "Big 8 Hoopla," starts at 7 tonight and will preview the Big Eight Conference Tournament.
"It is tournament eve and seems to be a natural time for this idea," Mensendiek said.
He said choosing tonight for the broadcast was easy.
Tim Mensendiek, general manager of KJHK, said the broadcast was made possible by satellite time donat-
The snow will give callers from the campuses a chance to ask questions about the tournament, said Jason Lamb, Great Bend junior and one of the hosts of the show.
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"We've got it timed down to the second," Lamb said of the preparation that went into the show.
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Lamb said the broadcast would link KJHK with five other Big Eight campus radio stations. They are. KSBAT in Kansas State University, KRNU at the University of Nebraska, KCOU at the University of Missouri, KSPI-FM at Oklahoma State University and WWLS-AM at the University of Oklahoma.
"It's really the first step in establishing a nationwide network in college radio stations."Lamb said.
KJHK sports director, is the other host of the show.
tabel sessions.
The show will be broadcast from the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Kansas City, Mo., and features guests from each Big Eight school who will field questions from callers.
Mensendiek said the satellite linked the origin of the broadcast in Kansas City. Mo., to the KJHK station. The broadcast then will be linked to each Big Eight radio station by telephone lines.
ed by Learfield Communications, Jefferson City, Mo.
He said no plans were definite, but weekly talk shows and forums between schools were possibilities.
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"This program will become a test," he said. "If it goes well, we will be looking to expand."
Mensendiek said he hoped the broadcast would lead to more radio links between Big Eight schools.
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6
Thursday. March 11. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Key
The Key To A Safe Break Is In Your Hands!
Safe Break '93
Remember these pointers to open your way to a Safe Break:
Seat Belts: Always buckle up. Seat belts save lifes!
Sunscreen: Use it whether sunny or cloudy, beach or mountains.
Safer Sex: Abstinence is the safest sex, but if you choose to have sex, use a latex condom and spermicide with nonoxynol-9.
Substances: If you use alcohol - don't drive. If you choose to use drugs, consider the serious consequences.
Sunday
> Safe Break Banners will be displayed this week at KU ceremonies and fraternities. Sponsored by G
Ride the Seat Belt Convincer and watch a demo of the Rollover Machine
Monday
> Listen to 8 Men Out, an a cappella singing group
11:45.12:00
Kick-Off, Wescoe Beach, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
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> Sex, Travel, and Spring Break, McCollum Hall, 7-8 p.m.
Refreshments and travel information.
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> Take the BACCHUS Safe Break Pledge: Sign the pledge to come back safe and you've got a chance to win prizes!
> Free Non-Alcoholic Beverages plus buttons, condoms,
sunscreen, health-related literature, and more!
Rollover Machine.
>> Listen to 8 Men Out, an a cappella singing group.
Special Monday Event "TIGER BY THE TALE" 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom.
An exciting, theatrical performance of humorous, dramatic, and entertaining skits, songs, and dance. This peer education theatre troupe wants you to get the message about your good health!
Sponsored by: Watkins Health Center, GAMMA, PARTY, FACTS, KU Police Department, Association of University Residence Halls, Center for Sexual Health, Kansas Highway Patrol, and Safe Break Planning Committee.
Series features student plays
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
Diane Hampson | KANE
After entering the campus spotlight last semester, two one-act plays by KU students opened last night as part of KU's William Inge Memorial Theatre Series.
Both plays were written in 1991 in a beginning playwriting class taught by Paul Lim, assistant professor of English.
English Alternative Theatre presented both plays last year in staged readings.
Sean Holland, Kismet senior, and Christina Chang, Hong Kong senior, play Ray and Nancy in the play "Coverage," written by Prairie Village senior Jeff Hopkins.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
The plays are "Coverage," by Jeff Hopkins, Prairie Village senior, and "Footprints in the Snow," by Michael Brandt, who graduated last year. "Coverage," followed by "Footprints in the Snow," will be presented at 8tonight through Sunday in the Inge Theatre at Murphy Hall.
Lance Gharavi, Merriam graduate student and director of "Coverage," said his production was much differ- than the alternative theater's version.
In "Coverage," the main character, Porter, a former network news correspondent, is tormented by the memory of his son's drowning and the subsequent media exploitation of the death. The torment becomes worse when his former wife, Nancy, and coworker, Ray, try to persuade him to return to the network.
"I have, in my direction of the play, radically altered the production," Gharavi said of his multi-media production that used prerecorded and live, closed-circuit video footage.
"You might say I've deconstructed it."
Gharavi said one difference between his production and the staged reading was that he was producing the entire play as though it took place in Porter's mind.
"It very much resembles a dream," he said. "Or a more appropriate term would be a nightmare."
The second of the two plays, "Footprints in the Snow," directed by Robert Weinstein, West Bloomfield, Robert Weinstein, West Bloomfield,
Mich, senior, is less serious, Lim said. Lim said its characters included Dorothy and Toto from the "Wizard of Oz," a bull and an amorous cicada.
The play is about a college actor who loses his identity playing Hamlet in a university production while trying to forget his girlfriend's suicide.
"As asd it is sounds, it's a comedy."
Lim said. "It's a very funny play."
Weinstein said that the play also had a television game show host and the inventors of the jack-in-the-box.
These characters are in his head and they sort of help him through his problems," he said. "It's not real strange. It's different. It's enjoyable." Tickets at Murphy Hall box office are $3 for students, $5 for senior citizens and $6 for the public.
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KULIFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 11, 1993
7
CARE
KINGC
SKINHEA
A ticket taker observes the Outhouse's patrons from the entryway of the venue.
[Photograph of a person holding a bottle.]
Jason Auld / KANSAN
A patron heads for the remains of an outbuilding behind the Outhouse. Although beer is prohibited inside the building, it is present outside. But some finds its way inside.
Lawrence's musical underground
Continued from Page 1.
money in the world."
Wicker spent much of the concert in the front row, the forward rim of the pit. And she did not escape unscathed. She was kicked in the head about four times and repeatedly was used as a ladder for stage divers. She also learned a primary rule of concerts at the Outhouse:
"If you want a good place to see, you have to put up with some flailing around," she says. "It was everything I could do to hold onto that one spot."
About a month later, the Skatekens, who warmed up for Fear, kept the pit churning for 30 minutes. The Austin, Texas, group featured a guitarist with his face painted red, a singer in a dog collar with a chrome leash hanging from his neck, and a bass player in a yellow chiffon dress and a Dolly Parton wig he later doffed for the Sinead O'Connor look.
As they cleared their instruments from the knee-high stage to make way for Fear, the pit emptied.
Ed Gibson, Lawrence senior, came out looking the worst. Blood saturated his left sideburn and trickled down his nose from a half-inch gash behind his left eyebrow.
it until I looked down, and there was blood on me. I thought it was someone else's blood. I touched my nose, and there was nothing there. I touched my head, and it was me."
"I turned around and ran into someone's elbow," Gibson said. "he was malevolent or anything. I didn't even notice
But he soon forget the wound and re-entered the pit as Fear took the stage.
Part of the allure of the Outhouse, and hole-in-the-hill. Like it in its leather. In its silver. In its
He says Outhouse concerts are the property's biggest income producers. The venue has regularly been known as the Outhouse since KJHK, the campus radio station, invented the name about seven years ago for alternative music concerts held at the building. But while the name of the blue cinder block shell has stayed the same, its renters have varied over the years.
Out to the Outhouse
The Outhouse is located four miles east from Massachussets
Street on 15th Street.
4 miles
1625 East
1810 East
Mass. Street
15th Street
Haskell Drive
1750 East
* The Outhouse building is not drawn to scale
North
Source: Kansan staff research
willingness to cling to the underbelly of underground,
untested and uninhibited music — to wave the flag
of anarchy. But the Outhouse seems an unlikely setting for
such musical mayhem.
"Usually, when somebody steps down, somebody else steps in." Mellenbruk says.
He says the latest renter to step in is Jeff Fortier, who for nearly four years has promoted concerts in the building.
Cornfields surround the building on three sides. Deposits of cobs litter three edges of the property. But a stroll through withered stalks turns up more than the occasional ear of corn. A guitar pick here, a drum stick there and a scattered set of worn, bent, punctured plastic drum heads, all show signs of an underground music industry in the neighborhood.
nearly four years has promoted concerts in the building. Fortier discovered hardcore music in the streets of New York City and has tried to bring part of the scene to Lawrence.
"I was in the underground scene when I was 15," he says. "It was cool. It was an alternative lifestyle. I chose that kind of culture over my friends". It's just a point of how you want to live your life — how you want to set your standards."
Schaake attended Kaw Valley School, a one-room, brick school house that once stood on what is now the Outhouse's parking lot.
one road turns to gravel at the farm where Larry Schaake has lived his entire life. During the day he works his cattle, often on a four-wheeled all-terrain vehicle. On clear nights, he can tell when a concert is in progress one-third of a mile away at the Outhouse.
"When the music is pretty loud it vibrates the windows of our house," he says. His primary objections to the Outhouse are the noise, traffic and litter it has brought to his neighborhood.
The investigation of the American Indian's death made the pages of the Wall Street Journal and led to the questioning of more than 50 people who had attended the concert that night.
The Outhouse site still shows signs of the school. Behind it, to the east and west, stand the school's two crumbling privies, no longer in service.
industry in the neighborhood. The drive to the Outhouse, four miles east from 15th and Massachusetts streets, divides fertile Kaw River Valley crop land.
"Have you ever heard of the term 'she's built like a brick shit-house?' " Donald Mellenbruch asks. "Well, that's what they are."
Fortier made weekend trips to New York City from his home in Waterbury, Conn., which he left at 17. He plans never to return.
Near one farm, a utility pole with a board nailed horizontally to it marks where, after a night at the Outhouse, Christopher Bread died more than two years ago in a hit-and-run accident.
Mellenbruch, an east-side Lawrence landowner, is the Outhouse's landlord. The Harley-riding entrepreneur has owned the establishment for nine years and rents the building out for private parties and concerts.
"Not unless somebody puts a gun to my head and makes me," Fortier says. "Even then I'd seriously consider taking a kick at them."
Fortier first went to the Outhouse while he was in the Army, and when he left the military about a year later, he started booking bands at the venue by calling numbers on record labels so that he could see the New York hardcore bands he liked. The latest was a Sick Of It All concert Feb. 24.
Now bands like
Fear call him. But he thinks many people do not appreciate his efforts to keep underground music alive in Lawrence.
"People think it's just one big money-making scam," Fortier says. He says that the money does not always add up to a profit but that he does not mind as long as he can still be a part of his favorite music.
"Music is great," he says. "That's what it's all about. It's all about sex, drugs and rock and roll."
But Fortier claims he never allows beer inside the squat cinder block structure. And he breaks up fights as soon as he sees them, including three that broke out the night of the Body Count concert despite the 40 people working security.
But Fortier passes off the violence as one of the things that accompanies the venue and the music.
It's a hall, you rent it, he says. "I can try to control it, but it doesn't mean I'm going to. It is just a part of the culture."
Mellenbruch rents the blue cinder block building with the stipulation that no alcohol passes within its walls. But at least one Black Label beer box decorated an arm inside the building the night of the Fear concert; and crushed beer cans usually dot the pit floor.
bett can't say anything.
"If they got it inside, it's probably a private party or someone ain't doing their job." Mellenbruch says. "If I'm there, I'd sure do something about it."
But Mellenbruch is not always there.
"I mean it's not my place, if they lease it for the night,
right?" he asks.
Mellenbruch says violence at the venue in years past was mostly due to skinheads, but most have moved away or have been banned from the building. He says others, including Fortier, have grown hair.
"Me and my wife used to treat them like they were 10 years old, because that's how they acted," says Mellenbruch. "But we turn our backs and they're thumping somebody on the head."
Some of them skinheads were Jeff's best friends. One of them was his roommate. Jeff just said: "If you guys are going to be troublemakers then get out."
But for Fortier, nearly four years in the business has made such incidents simply the by-products of another show at the Outhouse.
SUBVERT THE
DOMINANT
PARADIGM
"This is punk rock," Fortier says. "Punk rock is not like normal music. People who listen to punk rock are not a part of society."
Above, patrons sometimes express their ideas on their clothes, as on this jacket. At right, violence flares in the pit during a concert.
POPULAR FUNK FESTIVAL 1987
8
Thursday, March 11, 1993
KU LIFE
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Nightlife
Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill 1601 W. 23rd
St.
Soul Shaker, tonight
Love Squad with August Red,
Tomorrow
L.A. Ramblers, Saturday
Live Comedy, Wednesday
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Bagdad Jones, tonight
The Fuzz Box opening for That
Statue Moved, tomorrow
Blue Museum opening for Big
Hats, Saturday
Mother Earth and acoustic open
mike, Monday
Dash Rip Rock, Tuesday
The Hidden opening for Too Much
Joy, 18 and over show.
Bad Lands, Saturday
The Crossing
12th and Oread streets Jeb Bolin, tonight Arkansas White Trash, tomorrow Which Doctors? Saturday Unsane from New York City playing with Dracomagnet, Wednesday
Dos Hombres
815 New Hampshire St.
Spike Blake, tonight
Gusto's
925 Iowa St.
Hey Ruth, tomorrow
Euphoria Stringband, Old-time country and stingband music,
7:30 p.m., Saturday, $6
Harmony Hall
Hockenburv Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Monkey Meet, tonight
Cosmic Freeway, tomorrow and
Saturday
Acoustic open mike, Sunday
Lonesome Houndg, Wednesday
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Turquoise Sol, tonight
Common Ground, tomorrow,
Saturday
Chubby Carrier and the Bayou
Swamp band, Wednesday
Jazzhaus
Javhawk Cafe
1340 Ohio St.
Silver Stone, tomorrow
Johnny's Tavern
401 N. 2nd St.
Mo Blues Band, tomorrow, Saturday
The Stringers, Wednesday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar and
623 Vermont St.
Mud Cats, Saturday
Fast Johnny's, Wednesday
Movies Tomorrow through Sunday
Movies
Cinema Twin Theatres 31 and Iowa streets
A River Runs Through It (PG13), 5, 7:45 p.m. and 2:15 p.m. also on Saturday, Sunday Scent of a Woman (R), 5, 8 p.m. and 2 p.m. also on Saturday, Sunday
Dickinson Theatres
2339 Iowa St.
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Saturday, 4:50, 7:15, 9:35 p.m.,
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Shadow of the Wolf (PG13),
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9:15 p.m., Sunday, 2:10, 5:10,
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Groundhog Day (PG), tomorrow,
Saturday, 4:45, 7:20, 9:45 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30, 5, 7:10, 9:10 p.m.
Fire in the Sky (P613), tomorrow,
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Sunday, 2:05, 5:20, 7:20, 9:05
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Sunday, 2:20, 5:05, 7:15, 9:20
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Hillcrest Theatres
A Far off Place (PG), showing with
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Aladdin (G), 5, 7 p.m., and 2:15 m.p. also on Saturday, Sunday Best of the Best 2 (R), 9:30 p.m. only
Liberty Hall
Homeward Bound (G), 5, 7, 9 p.m., and 2:15 p.m. also on Saturday, Sunday
The Crying Game (R), 4:30, 7:30,
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Johnny Suede (R), 4:45, 7:15,
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Student Union Activities
Law of Desire (R), 7 p.m., today
Scarface (R), 9:30 p.m., today
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Color Me Blood Red (NR), 7 p.m.
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Shoot And Cry (R), 7 p.m.
Shoot And Cry (R), 7 p.m.,
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 11, 1993
9
Jayhawks fight back from early deficit
Kansas earns home victory against Griffons
By Brady Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
It didn't take Missouri Western long to get on the scoreboard in yesterday's baseball game with Kansas at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
One pitch.
Missouri Western second baseman Donnie Crist, aided by a brisk northern wind blowing toward the outfield, lofted Kansas junior David Meyer's first pitch of the game over the right field fence for a 1-0 Griffons lead.
However, Meyer was able to scatter six hits and four runs through five innings, and the Jahayws defeated Missouri Western 10-7.
Sophomore Mike Greene and freshman Janie Splittorff provided middle relief. Sophomore Dan Rude relieved the final three innings for the save.
ine victory improved Kansas' record to 8-3 and even Meyer's record at 1-1. Meyer said that because of the wind, it was important to keep the ball down in the strike zone. He said the pitch Crist hit for a home run was up in the zone.
"He didn't hit a great pitch," Meyer said. "He hit the ball hard and it carried."
Kansas retaliated in its half of the first inning when senior second baseman Jeff Berlinger walked and later
scored on an error to tie the score.
Later in the inning senior catcher Jeff Niemier drove in junior center fielder Darryl Monroe on a double.
The layhawks scored three runs in the second inning on a two-run double by Berbinger and a sacrifice fly by sonhombre left fielder Josl Igou.
The Griffons scored once in the fourth, but Kansas sophomore designated hitter Jack Wilmot crushed a two-run home run in the fifth inning to increase the Jayhawks' lead to 7-2.
Wilmot, making his fourth career start, said he knew he had to produce when given the opportunity.
"It adds confidence to get a hit," he said, "but a dinger definitely adds a lot of confidence."
in his previous start Sunday against Grand View, Wilmot singled and drove in a run.
"He has told me he wants to get the chance to show what he can do," said Kansas coach Dave Bingham. "We've given him the opportunity, and he has done well."
Missouri Valley closed to within one run in the sixth innning. The Griffons scored twice off Greene and twice more on a single and sacrifice fly after Splitterff relieved Greene.
But Kansas drove in three runs in the sixth on a double by senior John Wuycheck and a two-run single by junior right fielder Jael Bennichoff.
Rude, who started the game at shortstop, took the mound in the seventh inning, striking out three and allowing one run through the last three innings.
Kansas plays host to Missouri Valley at 3 p.m. today.
Kansas 10, Missouri Western 7
KANSAS (8-3)
| | ab | r | h | rbl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2b Bertlinger | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| cf Monroe | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| pr/cr Stickelman | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| f igou | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| c Niemeier | 5 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
| 1b King | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| ph/1b Wuycheck | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
ph/ss Hardesty | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
rf Benninghoff | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
rf Tarquino | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
3b/ss/1b Soult | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
ch Wilmot | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
ph Mahon | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
ss/p Rude | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Missouri Western (2-1)
ab r h rb1
2b Crist 5 2 2 1
3b Alvarez 5 0 2 0
ss Schmidt 5 1 1 0
c Oater 5 1 1 0
d Wiley 3 2 0 0
rf Prindle 3 1 0 1
1b Bracero 3 0 1 0
cf Anderson 4 3 2 1
lf Jones 3 0 0 1
js Fates 3 0 9 7
Kansas
IH P H R ER BB SO
Meyer 5 6 4 4 2 5
Greene 0 0 2 2 3 0
Splitterff 1 1 0 0 0 2
Rude 3 2 1 0 0 3
Missouri W. IH P H R ER BB SO
Calloway 4.1 6 7 7 5 1
Riggs 1.2 3 3 3 1 0
Niemeyer 1.1 0 0 0 1 1
Droge 0.2 0 0 0 1 0
E Alvarez, Ostier, Wimhel LOB Kansas 8,
Missouen West 7 2B Anderson(2)
Berlinger, Niemeyer, Woychech HR crist,
Wimstob BER birstinger(9), Stokleman, Cristian
Jayhawks 22
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Two dives cost junior Big Eight title
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas junior pitcher David Meyer delivers the ball to the plate against Missouri Western. Meyer pitched five innings and earned the victory as the Jayhawks beat the Griffons 10-7.
By Matt Doyle Kansas sportswrite
If not for two dives, Kansas diver Tim Davidson might have claimed both the one- and three-meter diving championships at last week's Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships in Oklahoma City.
FISHER
The junior scored low on the eight round of dives in each of the 11-dive competitions. With the low-scoring dives, Davidson finished third in the one-meter competition and second in the three-meter competition.
He hopes to correct those mistakes in time for the NCAA Zone diving meet today through Saturday in Austin, Texas. The top nine finishers at the Zone meet will qualify for the NCAA Championships March 25-27
you really can't afford to miss a dive," Davidson said. "I finished second (in three-meter), but I knew I had a shot to finish at the top."
Kansas diving coach Don Fearon said that Davidson miscalculated how high he was off the water on his eighth dive, a reverse dive, in the three-meter event. The miscalculation forced Davidson to complete the dwarf farther out than normal, which earned him a low score of 36 points.
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
"If it had been a normal average dive, I would have scored 54 to 56 points on it," Davidson said.
Nebraska's Kevin McMahon won the three-meter diving championship with a score of 546.80, 17.7 points better than Davidson.
The miss in the one-meter event dropped Davidson to a third place finish. 18.65 points behind McMahon.
Kansas diver Tim Davidson practices at Robinson Natatorium. Davidson will compete at the NCAA Zone meet today through Saturday.
"Tim scored fours on the low board dive, and he's capable of scoring at least sixes on it," Fearon said. "If Tim would have hit those two dives for two points higher from each judge, he probably would have won each
I am a little more solid on three-meter than one-meter now," he said. "All I have to do is make those adjustments on the reverse optional dives and I should be solid, and hopefully join the rest of the team members at NCAA's."
Davidson said he hopes that the confidence from the Big Eight meet carries over to the Zone meet, a meet in which he struggled at last year.
event."
Last year, he had a poor performance on the three-meter board that cost him a trip to the championships.
Frederick aids basketball seeding
Kansas athletic director to help decide selections for men's NCAA tournament
By David Dorsey
Kansas sportwriter
After teams are selected for the upcoming NCAA Tournament, their seedings are decided and the tournament bracket is revealed on Sunday, Bob Frederick, athletic director, said he would have helped fulfill one of his greatest responsibilities.
PETER MILLER
rrotestionally, it's the biggest role I've had since I've been in athletics," Frederick said.
Bob Frederick
Rockefeller, athletic director at Kansas since 1987, is one of nine officials who comprise the NCAA De
cials who comprise the NCA DAVL. I men i'm basketball committee. He is in the final year of his first term and has been reappointed for another three-year term that ends with the Final Four in 1996.
The committee will meet tonight and throughout the weekend to select 64 of the 298 Division I teams for the NCAA Tournament, which begins next Thursday. Thirty of the 64 teams receive automatic bids by winning conference tournaments or championships. That leaves 34 of the selections up to the committee.
Selecting those teams will be the hardest part of their mission, Frederick said, while placing the teams in the brackets will be the easiest.
brackets, we have a lot of principles that we follow," he said. "Seeding the teams at the top and at the bottom is easy. It's hard with teams that are in the middle, and that's where we get the most complaints.
get the most companies.
"We try to keep people close to home without upsetting the balance of the brackets. One of our objectives is for all four brackets to be equal."
four brackets to be equal.
Frederick said that his role as Kansas athletic director did not mix with his role on the Committee. He said that he would not lobby for Big Eight Conference teams or for Kansas but would answer questions from the other committee members about Big Eight teams. Likewise, other committee members will share their knowledge of teams they had closely followed throughout the season.
they had closely followed through "The procedure we go through is so fair." Frederick said. "Everybody is committed to getting the best teams in the tournament."
Frederick said that part of his responsibility included keeping up with the college basketball scene throughout the regular season.
"I read USA Today every day and look at all the scores," he said. "In December and January, I follow the conference standings each week. Towards the end of the season, I try to watch as many games as I can."
NCAA men's tournament committee
Bob Frederick is on a committee of athletic directors in the NCAA to train in the NCAA tournament this year.
NCAA
Tom Butters, Duke (chair)
Tom Hrylland, Davidson
Charles Harris, Arkansas State
Syracuse
Gary Cunningham, Fresno State
Bob Proctor, Nashville
LeLoss Doods, Texas
Ralph McFillen, Metro Conference Commissioner
C.M. Newhouse, Kentucky
Try to watch that match with the members. The members are assigned to oversee different regions during the tournament. Redick is assigned to Chicago in the first and second round but will be reassigned if Kansas plays in that sub-region. Committee members can only watch their university's team play in the Final Four.
Last season, six Big Eight Conference teams made it to the tournament, and Frederick received comments from Iowa State coach Johnny Orr and Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs about the breakthrough.
Tubes about the breakout sign.
"I told them, 'there's six teams in the NCAA tournament because of what you guys did,'" Frederick said. "It surely wasn't because of me."
Conference tournaments and championship games are played during the same weekend that the committee meets, adding another factor to the selection process. The Big Eight Tournament championship game is Sunday afternoon. The bracket is announced Sunday evening.
The committee keeps track of the ongoing games and considers the results in the final bracket.
"There's still a lot of basketball to be played," Frederick said. "And that's going to affect a lot of teams that are 'on the bubble.'"
As for where the Jayhawks are seeded and placed in the tournament, Kansas coach Roy Williams said that it did not really matter.
not really mean that.
If we win the Big Eight Tournament, a case could be made for us to be a No.1 seed. Williams said. "If we lose Friday, we could turn into a No.3 or 4 seed. I'd just like to be playing as long as we can. I wouldn't mind going to where it's warm, but I could really care less."
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Thursday, March 11, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Key plays lead Kansas to tournament crown
By Jay Williams
Kansas sportwriter
It wasn't the shoes.
The Kansas women's basketball team did don black basketball shoes for the Big Eight Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, but it was much more than the simple change in color that brought the tournament crown and an automatic NCAA Tournament invitation to the Javahays.
"The team had been playing so well, I thought I should go ahead and make them happy." Washington said.
The team, seeded No. 4 in the tournament, made Washington happy last weekend in Salina, winning three games against tough opponents. Kansas defeated Missouri 63-56 then. No. 6 in the nation Colorado 81-78 in double overtime and No. 20 Nebraska 64-60 in the championship game.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the shoes were a reward to her team prior to the start of the tournament. The team, she said, had been playing better basketball in the final weeks of the season. And the players had been asking for black shoes all season long.
Sophomore forward Angela Aycock was named tournament Most Valuable Player and reserve sophomore forward Alana Slatter was named to the all-tournament team after averaging 14 points on 53 percent shooting.
"Alana Slatter is one of the finest athletes in the conference," Washington said after the Nebraska game. "Hopefully, this will give her some confidence."
But it was more than a two-person show in Salina.
"Everybody is getting into the action and doing what they do best." Ayceo
Every time Kansas needed a big
Women's Basketball KU
play, somebody came up with one for the Jayhawks:
Ahead by three with 30 seconds remaining against Missouri, junior guard Michelle Leathers hit four free throws in a go-ahead play, giving kapusas a seven-point victory.
■ On Kansas' final possession in the second overtime against Colorado, the Jayhaws missed two shots, but controlled the ball after each miss, keeping Colorado, trailing by three points, away from a chance to tie.
With Kansas ahead by two points with less than a minute remaining against Nebraska, junior center Lisa Tate blocked Nakefa Brown's shot attempt. Tate was fouled and made two free throws to seal the victory. Tate broke her own conference single-season record for blocks last weekend. She now has 86 for the season, four more than the old record.
"Those intangibles coming together make you a difficult team to beat," Washington said.
Also against the Cornhuskers, sophomore forward Caryn Shinn helped hold conference player of the year Karen Jennings scoreless for more than 18 minutes while the Jayhawks jumped out to a nine-point halftime lead.
Those intangibles helped the Jayhawks, along with Washington, earn their sixth tournament title, the most of any coach or team in tournament history.
Washington said the team had been playing and practicing its best basketball of the season in the weeks leading
Angela Aycock, tournament MVP, and Alana Slatter, that team member, increased their scoring averages to help the Jayhawks win the Conference tournament.
Improvement key to winning
g
BIG-8
CHAMPS
tournament season avg. avg.
player
Angela Aycock 19.7 16.4
Alana Slater 14.0 9.4
Shannon Kitton 11.0 7.7
Charlie Leathers 6.3 6.8
Charlie Sampson 8.3 1.1
Lisa Tate 3.0 8.7
Caryn Shinn 3.0 8.9
Mervison 2.9 1.1
Amelia Holmes 1.3 2.8
Eric Muncy 1.3 1.9
up to the tournament. Kansas had won seven of its last eight games. At the tournament, the team reached another level with their play, especially at the defensive end.
Nebraska coach Angela Beck praised the Jayhaws' performance in the title game.
"The intensity in their man defense I had never seen before." Beck said.
"We didn't have a taste, as far as winning the big games," Aycock said. "At the tournament, we really wanted those games bad."
Aycock said the Jayhawks had matured during the season. Kansas struggled early in the year.
Senior guard Shannon Kite set a tournament record for three-point field goal percentage, making 8 of 12 three-pointers in the three games. Kite said the team's confidence was high after the unset of Colorado.
"After the Colorado game, losing to Nebraska never crossed our minds," she said.
Tennis player makes debut in college poll
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior Carlos Fleming achieved his goal of becoming the top-ranked African-American collegiate tennis player in the nation when he made his debut in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's polls at No. 59 this week.
By Blake Spurney
He said it was a goal he set for himself before he came to Kansas five years ago.
"My family was extremely proud," he said. "It's a definite milestone."
Fleming, 8-3, has his sights on an even bigger goal, which is to finish the year as an All-American. The ranking is in line with the said, but he will not哎咐 this run.
"I know I train harder and am better in the country," he said.
Fleming and sophomore Manny Ortiz also appeared in the doubles rankings for the first time at No. 27.
The pair has compiled an 8-2 record, but is coming off two consecutive defeats, one to Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville and the other to Drake
Ortiz said he was a little disappointed that he and Fleming were not
"We feel we could play with anybody in the country." Ortiz said.
Three of their victories came against doubles combinations ranked higher than them.
Earlier this season, Fleming and Ortiz defeated doubles pairs from No. 6 Nebraska, No. 7 Colorado and No. 12 Arkansas.
Ortiz said the loss to SIU-Edwardsville, a NCAA Division II team, definitely ionized their standings.
"When you lose to a Division II team, it hurts," he said.
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Mem Exm Co. 749-502
Cooks aide 7:30-11:30 p.m., weekdays. Ability to
learn computer skills. Enroll in Children's Learning Center, 331 Main, e.o. e. o.
- staffchildren's campus/northeast top salary, rm/bd/launchy, travel allowance. Must have shaved hair and clean teeth.* basketball, bicycling, crafts, dance, drums, fencing, field hockey, golf guitar, gymnastics, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, rocketry, colorblinding, sailboard, weights, wood. Support staff-kitchen steward* works, bakers, cooks, bedside maintenance, students.* Windsax, 5 Glen Lake, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10434 (914) 381-5888. Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 841-267-3212.
Cruise line entry level on board/handles positions
Cruiser, Summer or year round, great pay
Middle class, year-round pay
30 hr position with small design firm. Must be mature, responsible, with good communication skills. Will train Good advancement potential.
ALABASK SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries.
Earn $490 + week in wages or $4,400 +/mo on
fishing boats. Free transportation! Room &
breakfast! Job offers available.
call aml 306-545-415 ext. A792.
11
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 11, 1993
___
11
O
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, camping, golf, sports, computer camping, crafts, drama, cooking, kitchen, office, maintenance, Salary $101 or more SEEER Seager 1785 Maple, NIF. IL 60031 704-442-244
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people who love to drive and need to learn. Inc needs drivers for SAFERIE. Must be 21 yrs old and have a good driving record. We will train you in the proper techniques on w/ wk, very flexible (x8, *r* Call Michael R84-0954.
NABIT BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Help wasted: 1am M-54 $ 0.00 per hour to
assist stroke patient. Call 5 am 843-9530
Evening wait person(s) wanted. Chinese restaurant. Experience required. Minimal knowledge required. Hardworking. Apply Peking Restaurant, 749-0033. Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school full-time during summer. Tractor repair. Travel required. Experience preferred. Send resume to Wakasu University.
INTERNA TIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make $2,000
earnings per month in English abroad. Japan and Taiwan. Many provide room and board + other benefits. No previous experience required. For program call 1-866-623-146 or JST755.
电话 1-866-623-146 or JST755.
KU student needed as live-in building manager at First United Methodist Church. Compensation includes housing and monthly stipend. Employer must be licensed with accreditation, more info, contact church office at 841-7500.
Laboratory Clean Up Position
*Located in the hospital*
*week four hourly day* (Flexible hours) and five days weekly day.
investor contract
*Located in Kawartha City, Kanada to work at work from 6.00 a.m. to 8.00 p.m. and 4 days a week. Sun days are mandatory $2.50 per hour.
[Cal] [availn] 914318 [upl] [for more info]
SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN MICHIGAN
THE LAND OF LIVING
A COLORADO WILDLIFE LOCALITY
-Counselors
-Office
-Kitchen
-Maintenance
Lake of the Woods for Girls
Greenwoods-For Boys
INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS
TODAY
9 : 00 a m - 2 : 30 p m
110 Burge Union
No appointment needed
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" & "The Men of Kansas City" calendars & call cards
Models wanted for the "Girl of Kansas City" and "Men of Kansas City" calendars. Please Call Tony
Models wanted for Redken International hair show
are 3/10, 3/21, 9/19. If interested be call
a/b/c 3/10, 3/21, 9/19. If interested be call
Nainty positions available nationwide including
night care, 37 day round great pay.
freelaundry. 421-664-8777.
Need babystaff in our home for two boys & 4 7-
caregivers only Mon-Fri 0-12 p.m. 5 p.m.
481-6966
New Hiring at Clinton Marina. Positions for Marina store clerks available. Please apply at Clinton Marina in Clinton State Park March 11-12 from 1-5pm and March 13-9pm: 749-3222
NEEDED 100 people to lose weight NOW
WILL POWER WELL Brand new, just patented
100% natural 100% guaranteed, Dr. re-
commanded. 8301276-8384
Part time Secretaryal position. Must have Macintosh Microsoft Word processing experience and 8 hours or more of Time, no longer than 4:00 p.m. 8:00 to 10:00 Tues., noon to 5:00 Wed. plus 3:00 Thurs. for the remainder. Treasurer, 3320 Clinton Parkway, LA. Lawrence, TS
SUMMER JOB!S! Camp Birchwood, a Minnesota camp counselor and instructors to work as camp instructors and students in English, Western and Western wintersurfing, canoeing, and Western skiing. August 8th. For an application call 1-405-432-3700.
Summer Positions Available
Tennis joe summer student a camp-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Men call Jenner Wheeler at 481-6000 Men call or write: Camp Wheeler Office at 481-6000 N. Y. 1052 (914) 381-5883
Pred. F. Ott's A Grill on Country Club Plaza seeks personal, quality minded people to work with and develop skills, full and part time positions available. Experience helpful, but not mandatory. Apply in person after 2 p.m. at Fried P. Ott's 470 471 C. Nichols Parkway at Fried P. Ott's Plaza. For more information call (813) 753-2878.
Waterfront Job-WS-SUM children in the camp-sports-needmen and women who can teach children water safety (slalom/rick/barefoot), sail, inboard motors, beautiful pool and lake good salary, resort amenities, Camp Winnda, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10543 (911) 381-588, Women call Jennifer Wheeler 841
Weekend air talent for KLWN and KLZR. Prior experience required, take job and resume to P D O . W
Spring Break Party Cash!
New Donors earn $25 for 1st 2 plasma donations in 1 week Return donors earn up to $135 per month!
749-5750
Line up your summer job number. We are current! You can find a job in Mac OSX only drug free, non-smoking, individual. Apply. Cell 913-525-6386. Nakebe Combining Inc. Models needed $175-$380 & TV/FVFILM Models needed $175-$380 & TV/FVFILM
816 W 24th
225 Professional Services
C Desk Computer Publishing Resumes. Cover Letters.
J Resumes, Term Papers, Newsletters.
Call 643-803-9818
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial aid, scholarships & grants NW 6946 SK 6946
NW 6946 SK 6946
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcoholoffenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Stroie Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Promo Photos and Headshots. B&W Darkroom.
Fast Service. Firstlight Photography. #411-4234
Recycle the Kansan
Your RESUME beautifully typeset for $29.
An attractive resume can make all the difference in the job you want
Leave message for Kelly @ 843.7866
SWDr.seeks M?F "Let's Talk About Sex"
Sexually confused? Let me straighten you out. Very discreet, honest and supportive. Into safe sex. Call me, Dr Janell Carroll at (816)576-7681, KCMO Radio 810, weeknights, 9-11 p.m.
235 Typing Services
$1/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check
*uush jobs*, Call Paul 749-4648
1-dor Woman Word Processing. Former editor
of *Woman Word* pages into accurate pages of letters
www.womanword.com 852-295-0036
AFFORDABLE TYPING & EDITING. Honors
English Grad. will type and edit any paper 24hrs, a
d tutoring avail. near campus. Lowest rates in
town. 832-1296.
Experting tip by experienced secretary IBM Corp.
Expert telling of the secrets at East
Lawrence Call Ms. Matiia . 641-1219
High Print. High Resolution.
High Print. $9.00 price. Call 1-829-8327
Word Perfect Word Processing Orchard-Corral
Print. $14.00 price. Call 1-829-8327
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribution, life story, comment, rush,
available Masters' degrees, job
available Masters' degrees
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers.
graph paper to print, copy, print out.
Call 841 at 841 1977 Whittenburg.
X
Merchandise
305 For Sale
-drawer chest oak finish, $85 Call Bard, $42-1605
fier t70. m
7-day round trip airline ticket to exciting South
Miami. Ticket price for $150. Leave March 28.
160 Must be 18 years old.
likes. Bianci cross him $40; bianci road $60m
and $12m of dura tide caps $150, wreche $180.
The price is per person.
For Sale New 92 Specialized Hard Rock Sport
many extra, great price 842-9083
Honda Elite 85 1990 Model. Low mileage, good campus access. Ask for an offer or best offer.
Ibm Compatible 586 SX K71 MB hard drive 3. 5 & 3. 55 floppy drives, mouse, keyboard, VGA monitor, 24 hour Panasonic Pantech 2400 baud modem, excellent rd. $1300 O B. Call 855-389
Impressive men 10k gold gunk band with
$232 value. $130 to $265 lead.
Professional 35mm Pentax Camera without flash just $14 Call 860-230 leave answer
Snowboards! Only once used 183 Kemper Chase
and a like new 158 Kemper Fetish for unbla-
table price. Burry up before too late. Call 664-2424 2
Specialized Rockhopper Sport, lock and light $50,
BJL Speakers 1009; Call 842-7089
slowboot 10/8/24 all msg Call Length 842-5568
boots 10/8/24 all msg Call Length 842-5568
88 Subaru DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB/M/PM Cass,
AC Great Winter car $380. Call 862-4544 Leave
Used Book Sale, March 12-14. Metcalf Marketing Umed lower level Bargain; American Association lower level Bargain; American Association
Wedding Dress, size 10, Alfred Angelo as seen in
Bridal Magge *length* should velvet lounge 50
**Maxda RX-7 X SE, burgundy/grey, 5 speed**
**Maxda RX-7 X SE, PCI, cruit power roof. Call**
**Maxda 874 or 174**
340 Auto Sales
370 Want to Buy
360 Miscellaneous
STUDENTS why pay retail for travel! Wholesale travel research center offers opportunity to save $$$! Guaranteed savings. no gimmicks. Great for last minute Spring Breakers. Larry at Caller 817-540-6923.
Wanted: To buy, "82-86 VW Rabbit Convertible or Carribolet in good condition. Call Adrian at 413-795-0000."
Business Opportunity Also Available
400s Real Estate
1 BBR Bur, apt available now. New paint + mini blinds 1 yr lease 843-6217
405 For Rent
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apes
be ahead of the rest. 2 RB unarm, apes, in the ne
buildings at Hilda Hills Apes. 1000 Emery Rd Gree
location near news. NO PETS. 841-390 or 300
For rent: April 1 - August 1 \ month free, no lease
2 bpm: 348 ($0.18) or 78-7525
Quail Creek
A
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
2111 Kasold 843-4300
FREE CASE OF BEER when you sublease for the summer. Send a request to Call Eric at 832-01-46.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
SUMMER SPECIALS
•1,2 and 3 bedroom units
•3 month leases
•avail end of May
APARTMENTS
HEY)KU MEd Studios, Rainbow Tower Apartments is now leasing St. 1 & 2 bedroom rooms in the Water Park and Lake House. Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage. **388 Rainbow** Bldg. BkC V KC 66 across **Across**
843-4754 (call for appt.)
FIRSTMGT.INC.
*NOW LEASING*
room for rent 2d bm lea晨, no pets 842-4403
LEASE NOW FOR FALLY Room 3 = BR duplex in bus line. Basement, garage, FC, PA, WD
available 843-7563 after 800, moNegotiable 843-7563 after 800, Owner/Agent
- Bradford Square
- Chamberlin Court
- Carson Place
- Stadium View
- Oread Apartments
- 1425 Kentucky
call 749-1556 M-F2-5pm or
841-8468 M-F9-12pm for an appl
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Each apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Genius air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carpool available
- 1 bedroom $40, $75
- 2 bedroom $46, $40
- 3 bedroom $52, $55
- 4 bedroom $84
office
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
Hours:
Mon. Wed. & Fri.: 12:00-2:00p.m
Tues. & Thurs.: 6:00-8:00p.m
Please call Kelly for appt.
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 15 9% yr.
old, luxury apts. close to campus. All 3B1,
microphone & door. all kitchen app. 2
furniture. Wet insulation. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1166.
4200
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and
meadowbrook
Nice, quiet. 3 BR dplay in southwest location. All AC appliances. 10' x 10' closet. Hooks, hocks. No pet. References: $40/mo.
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing.
Mon-Prill call for appt. 845-6446.
The Perfect Apartment!
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
FARMING
NOW
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 1-5
4 bbm. Aqi- summer sublausers ordered, Orchard
furnished, 2 bbm, bus, pool, laundry (Call
832-119 B
Bedroom TownHolme
• Garages: 2% Baths
1900 NASIMH 3 A 4 BR 2 Bath. Lg. rooms.
1900 NASIMH 3 A 4 BR 2 Bath. operated laundry
storage. variable size 16 in.
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with Fireplaces
- SWIMMING POOL and TENNIS COURTS
- Luxurious 2,3, &4
24TH & EDDINGHAM
EDDINGHAM PLACE
*Luxurious 2,3, &4 Bedroom TownHomes
Avail Now! Spacious I br. Close to campus. Low park. $330.
Pad, P454 ORX 786-3571
Paddles ORX 786-3571
- Some with Fireplaces
(Next to Benchwarmers)
841-8400 or
841-1287
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
One bedroom. April-FEB free Colony Woods, $350
2nd room. Microwave, jucczi 842-434 after
6:00 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
SWAN
Pepper Tree Apartments: Sublease June 1-July 31
iRB Bath: 843-0660-600
Spacious 2 room apartment with tub, spa,
Spaison 3 room apt. Summer suburb in
Toronto. Live in swimming pool, laundry facilities.
Live in Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call
*2 Pools
--b. Mail "11 594 Starburst Print, Lawrence, AK, 60093"
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Viola account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
- Volleyball Court
On KU Bus Route with
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
We are now accept-
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Sublease BRF Bath. Furnished apt, close to campus, avail May 15-May 14 Call 791-4384
Sublease 5 mo. lease, large 1 bedroom 2 blocks to KU 841-5797 or 861-1524
--b. Mail "11 594 Starburst Print, Lawrence, AK, 60093"
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Viola account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED
Studios, 1,2,2+3,4 & 4 burn
apts...designed with you in
mind!
Goto
HanoverPlace-841-1212
Campus Place-841-1429 1445 Louisiana
Rasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Orchard Corners-749-4220 15th & Kasold
IPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE BEACH
2 parties on the beach. 2/1B, 2/2F, 472-1148
2 parties on the beach. 2/1B, 2/2F, 472-1148
1905 Mass.
Lafayette, LA 740.4226
- 2 BR from $95
- Jouez in each nip
- No. of bnb tours
- No. of guests
- Pd cable TV Plates
- Pd cable TV Phones
- On- lease management
Outside 82nd St B4 - 81-185
5 15pm - Mon-Fri 10 25 or
Call for appointments
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House. Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0848. Stop by 140 Tomeset County
Super-huge + b+dm house near campus for summer sublease with option for fall. Wood floors, 2 kitchens, 3 porches, a/c/ & baths. $800/per month for summer. Call 842-4826
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
MASTERCRAFT
Naismith Place
---
Regents Court-749-0445
1925 Mac
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th&Arkansas
842-4455
VILLAGE
SQUARE
Summer submeter studio apt1 at Trairland Available May 1. On bus route $900/mo
Available May 2. On bus route $900/mo
Equal Housing Opportunity
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
9th & Avalon 842-3040
SUMMER SUILLE ASE. Spacious 2 bedroom i
on bus route, close to campus and downtown.
Den signaled quiet bldg. A great deal at $395 mo. Call
832-2348
Boardwalk
accommodations
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open6 days a week for your convenience
430 Roommate Wanted
- Byphone: 864-4358
Male or Female roommate needed ASAP. 179-865
No deposit required. On Bus Route 865-360
How to schedule an ad:
M/R roommate to share 3BR Available
from campus in 182s /mo & 19s/ will Call
Nristen 822-645-5211
Female roommate wanted for 1 bedm & 2 bermondown. Shirt size March. Close to campuse.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1995-94 Naimim contract for sale. 7% of a double room available. Mate persons only *648 4222 4223*
I roommate needs to share a 2B, 1A, 2b; yr
I roommate in scenic area. Must be a non-mason, clean
and responsible, on bus route. Start Aug. 1, $ 1.
175, 50 Ma + ½ u! Please call
me.
Needroom June & July. Spacios townhouse
needroom $150/mo. utilities
Nonumber: 79-1914
I to share open imap; 3 BR townhouse in sum-
mer start in June, Joni, 86-550-261, leave message
now in June, Joni, 86-550-261, leave message
- $ per person. 19' tall printer FPR
Stop by store between 8 a.m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged
hardware card at HAMBURG.
Roofmate Wanted NOW! $200/mo. water, gas,
and cable paid. Cail Brian at 842-5323
Calculating Rates:
Ads phone will be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**remain:** 119 *Staffer Flint*
Bv Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
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1.76 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
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105 personal 140 text & brand 305 for sale
110 business personal 265 help wanted 484 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional services 380 miscellaneous
130 entertainment 225 yyle services
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The University of California Daly Kassan, 119 Saultier Stiff Hall, Larkin, KS 68045
The University of California Daly Kassan, 119 Saultier Stiff Hall, Larkin, KS 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
1980 Eveware, Inc. (Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate)
EMPIRE STATE BUILDING
MICE ON
12
Thursday, March 11, 1993
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FREE SUITS
BUY ONE OF OUR REGULAR PRICE SUITS AND RECEIVE ONE SUIT OF EQUAL OR LESS VALUE ABSOLUTELY FREE!!
EASTON'S
E
LIMITED
839 MASS. 843-5755
SAVE MONEY
AT THE
Hardware
CAFE
LAWRENCE
SAVE MONEY
AT THE
Hardware
CAFE
LAWRENCE
The Classics
Classic II 4/40
$84000
Classic II 4/80
$91500
Color Classic 4/80
$129000
Add any printer to make a complete package!
Color Classic 4/80 with StyleWriter II Printer
$1589
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-5697
ClassicII 4/40
$840⁰⁰
ClassicII 4/80
$915⁰⁰
Macbook
Color
Classic 4/80
$1290⁰⁰
Classic II 4/40
$84000
Classic II 4/80
$91500
Color Classic 4/80
$129000
Add any printer to make a complete package!
Color Classic 4/80 with StyleWriter II Printer
$1589
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-5697
VISA
MasterCard
Discover
Color Classic 4/80 with StyleWriter II Printer
$1589
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-5697 VISA MasterCard
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Magazine promotion to finance sports clubs
By Mark Button
One of the nation's top sports magazines has come to Kansas to help the club sports program raise money.
Kansan sportswriter
Sports Illustrated has chosen Kansas as one of four universities it will visit for its "March Madness on Campus." Sports Illustrated also will visit the campuses of North Carolina, Kentucky and Florida.
National Media Group, a public relations and sports marketing branch of Sports Illustrated, came up with the idea for the promotion. Marc Samson, a representative of National Media Group, said Kansas' basketball tradition helped in the decision to come to Lawrence.
Samson also said that this was the first on-campus promotion for Sports Illustrated.
"We wanted to pick the top basketball programs," Samson said. "We also wanted to work with schools that wanted or needed money."
venue for KU athletic clubs," he said.
Other goals, Samson said, were to get campus exposure for Sports Illustrated and to help the magazine's subscription sales.
"Our primary goal is to generate revenue for KU athletic clubs," he said.
Six of Kansas' 32 club sports will be soliciting subscriptions to the magazine, which has featured many Kansas athletes on its cover, including three appearances by former two-time All-American basketball player Danny Manning.
"We appreciate support given to us by anyone," she said. "Sports illustrated is giving us a chance to generate some money."
Gina Cameli, president of the Ultimate frisbee club, said she thought the promotion was a great idea.
Students and faculty who subscribe
to Sports Illustrated through the promotion will receive a 55 percent discount off of the newsstand price. The cost of the 30-week subscription is $39.96 or four installments of $9.99.
For each subscription sold by a club sport member, that club will receive $10. Ultimate, which has approximately 60 members, has set its goal at making one sell by each member. Cameli said the club would use the $600 for travel costs or for entry fees to summer tournaments.
Venita Mitchell, director of sport clubs with Recreation Services, said that the promotion was a good opportunity for the clubs to help themselves earn money. She said that many of the clubs used fundraisers to help with costs that exceeded the money they received from Recreation Services, but that this was the first one done through the school.
"You always take a risk with a fund raiser," she said. "Especially the first time."
However, the clubs are optimistic about the opportunity.
Lori Zito, president of the women's soccer club, said the club had been looking for chances to raise money.
"The University does give us money to enter tournals," Zito said. "But traveling expenses add up. It's always safer to have more money."
The promotion features "Sports Illustrated Super Shots," which is a photo exhibit highlighting great moments in college basketball history and a sample of the free-gift video, "Michael Jordan's Air Time."
"March Madness on Campus" can be found in the front lobby of Robinson Center. Accompanying the display is a contest to send one student and a guest on an all-expense paid trip to the 1994 NCAA Final Four in Charlotte, N.C.
Athlete's The Foot.
914 Massachusetts
841-6966
Beauty WAREHOUSE SORGIE- IMAGE Salon & Supplies
Beauty WAREHOUSE Salon & Supplies SORCHIE IMAGE 520 W.23rd*841-5885 KMS JOICO NEXUS Brocade FOCUS 21 NEDKEN TURMANSTON PAUL MITCHELL
S
Focus 2
EXPERTI
frames PAUL MITCHELL
Sutton voted Big Eight coach of the year
The Associated Press
After starting 1-3, the Cowboys came behind center center Bryan Reeves. They finished 19-7, with an 8-6 conference record that put them in a three-way tie for second and gained the No. 2 seed in this weekend's Big Eight tournament.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Eddie Sutton of Oklahoma State, continuing what has become a tradition for him, has been named Associated Press Big Eight Conference Coach of the Year.
Sutton, one of the late Henry Iba's prize pupils as an Oklahoma State player, may have done one of his finest coaching jobs this year, molding a lightly regarded collection of athletes into a cohesive unit of winners.
Sutton, who coached at Arkansas in the Southwest Conference and Kentucky in the Southeastern Conference, has been named coach of the year in every league he's worked.
Sutton's milestone 500th victory came against Kansas State in a game that kept the Cowboys in contention for the Big Eight title in the final weeks of the season.
His career record is 501-187.
Sutton received 10 votes from a panel of media representatives. Kansas State's Dana Altman was named on four ballots. Danny Nee of Nebraska and Roy Williams of Kansas each got one vote.
"This has been a very satisfying season for me," he said. "Every coach wants to see his team improve as the season progresses, and every coach wants his team to play as best they can to maximize their abilities."
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1. To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stuffer Flint-Hall. 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the *Jaytak Network section* of the *Kansan* (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. You will remain on the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the *Kansan*, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don’t interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You’ll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team defeated Missouri Valley 12-3 for its sixth consecutive victory. Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL. 102, NO. 119
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1993
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
Groups challenge candidates' diversity
Minorities want more diversity
By Jess DeHaven Kansan staff writer
Of the five candidates, one is an African-American man, three are white women, and one is a white man.
Members of several campus organizations say they are concerned about minority representation among the candidates interviewing for director of affirmative action at KU.
James Baucom, Topeka senior and president of Black Student Union,
was upset about the racial composition of the candidates.
"Institutional racism at this university is so fine tuned that they are able to get away with that," he said.
Baucom said he was concerned BSU was not represented on the selection committee, as other minority affairs campus groups were.
The interview process should include visits to minority-affairs groups by candidates, he said.
"I don't think the candidates even visit the Office of Minority Affairs," Baucom said. "We say things like that are important, but they never take the time to come by and talk to us."
Harold Washington, assistant pro-
ressor of social welfare and head of the Black Faculty and Staff Council, said that although he did not know much about the candidates, he thought the minority representation could have been more varied.
"I would assume that minority candidates would be well represented in the group," he said. "Anything else would be questionable."
"It seems to me that there really hasn't been much effort to recruit minorities," he said. "We need to seriously question the commitment of each candidate to minority issues."
"As much diversity as possible in that composition is highly desirable because that office will be dealing with concerns on campus that are diverse," he said. "It's conceivable that there could have been a different blend. It could have been more diverse."
Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson junior and president of Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said he also had doubts about the selection process.
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs said that he had not had time to study the candidates for the position but that he did plan to review each of them.
"Of course I'm concerned about diversity, be it ethnic, gender or geographical," Thompson said. "It's real."
by the equity of the process that I'm concerned about."
Jackie McClain, who heads the search committee, said earlier this week that she was not concerned that only one of the candidates was an ethnic minority, because it was not necessary for the director to be a minority to be effective in the position.
"We want someone to create an environment that encourages diversity," she said.
Women, people who have certain religious preferences and war veterans were considered minorities by affirmative action, McClain said. Each of the candidates falls under one of these categories.
The director of affirmative action is responsible for making sure the University's hiring procedures and employment statistics comply with federal equal opportunity and affirmative action laws. The office also handles grievance procedures.
The interviewing process began on Feb. 24 and will continue until March 18. The committee will vote on which candidate or candidates it will endorse when the interviewing process is complete.
That recommendation will be reviewed by the Office of Affirmative Action before Executive Vice Chancellor Ed Meyen makes the final selection.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
DAMOS PAGAN NUNGE
Dances with drums
Nikole Hendricks, Overland Park junior, and Kim Reyes, Fairway sophomore, members of the Campus Pagan Alliance, dance in front of Wescow Hall. The alliance was passing outliers to students yesterday. The alliance's first meeting will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in Partors A, B and C of the Kansas Union.
Council votes to ban smoking in campus buildings
By Ben Grove
Kansanstaffwriter
Students and faculty who head for the stairwells and lobbies for a smoke may have to keep going and head out the door.
University Council voted yesterday to ban smoking in campus buildings. The ban would not include residence halls and privately owned campus buildings.
The proposal will go to Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, who will make a final decision. If approved, the ban would go into effect before next fall, he said.
Before yesterday's vote, a KU graduate student in political science told council members she had developed an allergy to smoke. Tara Calhoun said she had to make mad dashes through the lobby and stairwells of Blake Hall, where she had all her classes.
Meyen said discussion of tightening smoking restrictions in campus buildings had come up because complaints about second-hand smoke had increased.
"I spend a great deal of my time trying to hold my breath in going through these areas," Calhoun said.
"This developed in part because there is growing evidence of second-hand smoke and the effects it has, and that has caused more students to be more concerned about their health," Meyen said.
The total smoking ban was proposed two weeks ago by a smoker, council member Lynn Nelson, professor of history.
"I disliked the whole host of petty rules for smokers, such as you can only smoke in designated areas, and you look around and there are no such areas," Nelson said. "I remarked that these were a lot of little measures working toward a larger goal of eliminating smoking altogether in campus buildings. We recommended that smoking be banned, period. Though I am a smoker, I do not want to put anyone at risk that doesn't want to be at risk."
Smoking is now restricted to designated areas in campus buildings.
As tournament nears, ticket prices rise
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
Ticket brokers rolled in the money yesterday as ticket-hungry fans paid big bucks for a seat at the Big Eight Conference Tournament in Kansas City, Mo.
"They pour in from all over the country," he said.
Pat McCarthy, ticket manager for the Big Eight Conference in Kansas City, Mo., said the only way to purchase a ticket for this weekend's sold-out tournament at Kemper Arena was from a scaler.
"Other than through a scalper, it's impossible." McCarthy said. "We certainly don't condone that because you'd be paying three to four
times the face value."
Ticket scalping is illegal in Kansas City, Mo.
"The average caller really doesn't care about the price." Gray said. Most of the buyers were professional business people ranging in age from 27 to 60, he said. Gray said people had called from as far away as California wanting tickets.
Prices at Premier Tickets, an independent ticket brokerage in East St. Louis, Ill., ranged from $150 to $650 for the whole tournament, said Steve Gray, owner. Face value of the tickets ranged from $110 to $190.
"Students don't have that kind of money to spend on that," he said. "It's obviously quite a bit of money to pay for four days of basketball."
Golden Tickets, a business in Plano,
Texas, was sold out yesterday of lower-level seating and was offering
tournament tickets in upper-level
seating for $250 and individual game
tickets for $95.
Ram Silverman, owner, said most of the demand from callers this time of year was for the Big Eight, the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Southeastern Conference tournaments.
That means ticket holders of the tournament will not be the only ones benefiting.
Many students were scared off by the high prices, Silverman said.
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., said business at the bar would increase with every round of the tournament, depending on how KU played.
But the Big Eight Tournament would not bring in as many fans as the NCAA Tournament, partly because of the time of day the games were played.
"It's not nearly the kind of go-out-and-hit-the-bars kind of thing partly because they're afternoon games," Wallace said.
Road to the Big Eight championship
BIG8
CONFERENCE
The Big Eight tournament is held each year at Kemper Arena in downtown Kansas City, Mo. Kansas plays Colorado in the first round of the tournament today. See page 7 for complete details.
Kemper Arena
Lawrence
Kan.
Mo.
I-70 Kansai River I-635 Kemper Arena I-435 I-35 Kan. Mo.
<- to Lawrence K10 I-435
Andrew Hodges / KANSAN
INSIDE
Alison Doyne
Final Confirmation
Janet Reno
The Senate unanimously confirmed Janet Reno yesterday as the nation's first female attorney general.
See story, Page 5.
Debate teams qualify for national competition
Debate team KU duo receives at-large invitation
By Terrilyn McCormick
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The KU men's basketball team is not the only team at KU to be ranked in the top 10 in the nation.
Debate partners Tim Howard and Josh Zive also hold this honor and will compete in the National Debate Tournament March 26-30 at the University of Northern Iowa.
Howard, Derby senior, and Zive, Reno, Nev., junior, received an at-large invitation to the tournament.
An at-large invitation automatically qualifies the pair for the tournament without going through district tournaments. Only
rns is something Josh and I have been working for since we were freshman," Howard said. "It is a real big honor."
16 teams in the nation received this invitation, Howard said.
Scott Harris, assistant professor of communications and KU debate coach, said he was not surprised that Howard and Zive received the at-large invitation.
"At the beginning of the year I said that they definitely had the talent to go to the finals," he said. "But they have exceeded my expectations."
KU also has two other teams competing in the national tournament. Chris Baron, Lawrence junior, and Kirk Redmond, Wichita sophomore, qualified for the tournament at the district tournament, and Angie Letts, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore, and Ryan Boyd, Independence sophomore, received an invitation to the tournament because of their performance record
Only four other schools in the nation qualified three teams for the tournament. Howard said.
Harris said all the teams had potential to make it to the final rounds of the national tournament.
"All three of these teams have shown themselves capable of beating any team in the nation," he said.
The three teams will debate the topic, "Resolved that the United States should substantially change its development assistance policies toward South Asia."
The KU debate team is also sending the team of Jon Pevehone, Coffeyville junior, and Andrew McGlone, Emporia sophomore, to the Cross Examination Debate Association Tournament March 25-29 at Towson State University in Baltimore. Teams do not have to qualify to participate.
Some KU debate squad facts:
The case for KU debate
This is the 24th consecutive season that a debate squad team has qualified for the National Debate Tournament.
It is the 20th season that two debate squad teams have qualified for the National Debate Tournament.
In the 1982-93 season the debate squad competed at 14 tournaments. At every tournament, the squad had at least one team qualify for the elimination round. They placed second four times and placed third once.
The 1083 season was the last time the KU debate squad won the National Debate Tournament.
The last time a KU oebate team received an at-large invitation for the tournament, which is given out to the top 16 teams in the nation, was in 1980.
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Oread residents voice concerns about parking
By Will Lewis Kansan staff writer
Parking permit proposal opposed by area's students
About 35 residents in the Oread neighborhood area voiced their concerns Wednesday night to the Oread Neighborhood Association about a proposal that would restrict parking in the area to residents.
The draft proposal was written to prohibit those who did not live in the neighborhood from parking on its streets between 2 a.m. and 10 a.m. People who live in the neighborhood would pay for a $20 parking permit. Most of the area enclosed by Ninth, 14th, Mississippi and Tennessee streets would fall under the draft proposal.
Before the discussion began at the Lawrence Public Library, Linda Hixon, an association board member, assured those who attended the meeting that the draft proposal was in its preliminary stage.
"No matter how hard we work on it, it's still not going to be set in stone," she said. "The next step is to send it to City Commission."
Scholarship hall residents who attended the meeting said that they were concerned that they would not be able to find a parking place near their halls when the University lots were full.
David Benjamin, Lawrence graduate student, said the $20 fee would penalize students living in the area. Many students living in the area already are strapped for money and should not have to dig farther into their pockets for a place to park, he said.
Brian Ullmann, Fairway sophomore representing the All Scholarship Hall Council, said that students in scholarship halls frequently parked on Ohio Street.
"We're concerned because that would not be available to us," Ullmann said. "We'd like to feel that we're part of your community."
Lori Dougherty, Great Bend junior also representing the council, said cutting off access to the streets would make it difficult for scholarship hall students to find a nearby space.
"I guess I feel personally threatened because I don't want to park 10 blocks away at night," she said.
Marci Francisco, an association board member, suggested that the University's parking department include the neighborhood permit in the scholarship hall permit at no additional expense to students.
But Jeff Ritz, Oread neighborhood resident, said the parking permit system was essential and should not include the scholarship halls.
"I can't get out of my own driveway because people park there," he said. "We need the stickers."
Jennifer Brown, coordinator of the association, said that the neighborhood was built at a time when few people owned cars and that now there were more cars than spaces.
"Somehow we have to adjust to that new societal development," she said. "That's the struggle."
Although much was discussed at the meeting, Kyle Thompson, president of the association, said the issue remained unresolved and that future meetings would be necessary.
"I think we're obviously going to have more discussion on this as a board before anything is done on it," he said. "I think we will change the proposal to a large extent."
Hixon said she would look for volunteers to survey the area to find out the occupancy of the parking spaces and the number of spaces available.
"I would hope we get this to City Commission by late spring or early summer," she said.
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WEATHER
Omaha: 28°/5°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 50°/28°
Chicago: 32°/12°
Houston: 45°/19°
Miami: 76°/71°
Minneapolis: 15°/5°
Phoenix: 51°/18°
Salt Lake City: 46°/24°
Seattle: 63°/39°
LAWRENCE: 33°/14°
Kansas City: 31°/11°
St. Louis: 30°/12°
Wichita: 38°/14°
Tula: 36°/19°
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Forty percent chance for snow flurries.
High: 33°
Low: 14°
Partly cloudy.
High: 35°
Low: 17°
Partly cloudy.
High: 40°
Low: 20°
Source: Brad Travis, KU Weather Service; 864 3300
Andrew Hoages / KANSAN
■ Kansas Association of Public Employees will hold a campus organizational meeting at noon today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ed Stamm at 864-4385.
Kansas will hold its Spring Dance at 9 tonight at the Front Room in the Burge Union.
- Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas University. For more information, call Jennifer Roth at 802-8131.
Gay and Lesbian Services of
Sigma Nu and Delta Delta Delta will hold "Hit or Miss," a philanthropic event benefiting Children's Cancer Research, from 4 to 7 p.m. today at Benchwarner's. The cost is $2 at the door.
**Triathlon and Swim Club** will hold run practice at 10 a.m. Sunday outside Anschutz Sports Pavilion, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
**Triathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 2 p.m. Sunday at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean陆仁灼 at 865-
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will hold its business meeting Monday. For more information, call GLOSK offices.
ON THE RECORD
A student's four pairs of jeans, three shirts and other clothing
A student's mountain bike, valued at $530, was taken Sunday or Monday from a residence in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
A student's car stereo, four speakers, two amplifiers, radar detector and 20 compact discs, valued together at $2,210, were taken Monday or Tuesday from a vehicle in the 2900 block of W. 15th Street, Lawrence police reported.
A printer, valued at $300, was taken Friday or Saturday from the Kansas Union Bookstore. KU police reported.
A student's car was spray painted Tuesday or Wednesday in the 1200 block of Tennessee Street causing $100 in damage, Lawrence police reported.
You should know:
Japanese recycle 50% of their trash while Americans recycle only 10%.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairford-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Possmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Bethany College, Lindsborg, KS is
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CAMPUS/AREA
Friday, March 12, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Student searching for two ring lost Saturday night at Johnny's
Jessica Willis wants her rings back.
"I'll give anything anyone wants," the Omaha, Neb., freshman, said.
Willis wants the two rings back because they have sentimental value — and because they are worth $3,900.
She set them next to the sink and never saw them again.
She lost the rings — one with a cluster of five diamonds and the other with a topaz stone — when she went out Saturday night to Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St. About 1:30 a.m. Willis went to the rest room and took the rings off because, she said, they often soak on her shirt.
Willis is a member of Gamma Phi Beta. She said that she had called other greek houses trying to find the rings. She also had called Johnny's, and she will be posting fliers this weekend at the bar in hopes of tracking the rings down.
Willis said that her friends had warned her against wearing the rings but that she usually had someone hold them when she took them off.
The diamond ring was a high school graduation gift last May. Willis said that it was an inheritance from her grandfather.
Wills filmed a police report on Tuesday after talking with her mother. She said the ring's sentimental value meant a lot to the family and that her parents would help pay any reward money.
"I don't want to accuse anyone of stealing them because I left them there," she said. "I'm not going to press charges. I just want my rings back."
Twister tournament to help raise money for Lawrence charities
Students can play Twister and help out local charities at the same time at "Twist and Shout," a Twister tournament from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
Kappa Delta sorority will sponsor the event to raise money for the National Committee for the Prevention of Child Abuse.
Eighty percent of the money raised will go to local agencies working for the prevention of child abuse, and 20 percent will go to the national committee, said Kate Johnson, vice president of public relations for the Kappa Delta sorority.
"Students should participate because it does go to local chapter and does help children in the area." Johnson said.
The entrance fee is $40 for a team of four non-greek students and $80 for a team of four greek students. Johnson said.
Last year, Kappa Delta raised $1,700 dollars for the child abuse prevention committee.
Fraternity dedicates annual ball to former Kansas football player
Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity will hold its 73rd annual ball tomorrow to reunite alumni in the fraternity and nominate Miss Kappa Alpha Psi.
Kevin Logan, president of the fraternity, said the ball was dedicated to William N. "Butch" Jeltz, who died January 1991.
Jelitz, who played football for the University of Kansas in the 1970s, was the father of Joyce Jelitz, a Memphis, Tenn., freshman and member of the Kappa court, which comprises three freshman students, one of whom will be crowned Miss Kappa Alpha Psi.
The fraternity will also recognize all activities it has been active in this year, including a date rae seminar at Lewis Hall and participation in the Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
A man is bending over to remove a piece of mud from the ground.
Tonkovich questions authorship of letter
In preparation for the annual American Society of Civil Engineers regional concrete canoe competition, Dan Deaver, Prairie Village senior, helps shape concrete into a wire form.
By Brady Prauser
Two law professors who helped draft and dis tribute a 1901 letter encouraging School of Law students to come forward if they had experienced sexual harassment testified yesterday in the dismissal hearings for law professor Emil Tonkovich.
Concrete canoe
Kansan staff writer
Sidney Shapiro and Kim Dayton were cross-examined by Tonkovich about the events surrounding an Oct. 31, 1991, letter to law students encouraging them to report any sexual harassment they had experienced from law faculty.
The letter was signed by Shapiro, Dayton and four other law professors.
Shapiro testified that he drafted the letter after a meeting with Chancellor Gene Budg, then executive vice chancellor Del Shankel. KU general counsel Victoria Thomas and unspecified colleagues in the law school.
Tonkovic asked Shapiro whether it was his idea to draft the letter and whether he had encouragement from University administrators.
Shapiro said that he thought the letter was his idea but that those present at the meeting "discussed how best to encourage those students to come forward."
"Did Dr. Shankel ask you to write this letter?" Tonkovich asked Shapiro.
"It was either him or someone else at the meeting." Shaniro said. "I think it was him."
In his opening statement, Tonkovich contended that it was a "secret" letter and that the professors who signed it had "political and personal motivations" against him.
Hapiro said Dayton told him that she gave the letter to an unnamed student who distributed it
to other students.
Most of Dayton's testimony centered on an allegation by former law student Barb Dresser, who alleged Tonkovich behaved inappropriately when he took her back to her apartment after she became intoxicated at a party.
Dayton said that Dresser gave her a short, written statement about the incident in December 1991. However, Dayton said she got rid of Dresser's statement because "once the statement had served its purpose there was no reason to keep it."
Dayton said that Dresser's earlier testimony against Tonkovich was consistent with the statement she received from Dresser.
The proceedings became heated when Tonkovich asked Dayton what she did with the written statement.
"None of your business." Dayton said.
"I think it is my business," Tonkovich said, his voice rising. "It's my career on the line, and I think I am entitled to it."
Because of the absence of the written statement, Tonkovich moved to strike Dresser's testimony regarding the consistency of Dresser's testimony with Dresser's statement.
Rud Turbull, chairperson of the faculty committee on tenure and related procedures, granted the motion. However, he said that if Dresser testifies later and can produce an exact copy of the statement she gave Dayton, the motion would be denied.
Kidney infections avoidable
Budig moved to dismiss Tonkovich in August 1992, saying Tonkovich violated the faculty code of conduct. Tonkovich asked for a public hearing before the faculty committee on tenure and related problems to determine whether he had violated the faculty code.
Warning signs merit immediate attention
Kansan staff write
By Vicki Bode
More than 90,000 Americans die from kidney and urinary infections each year because many people ignore kidney infection warning signs, according to the National Kidney Foundation of Kansas and Western Missouri.
During National Kidney Month in March, the foundation wants to educate people about kidney disease, said Beverly Krohn, foundation board member and registered nurse.
"If people experience the warning signs of kidney infection they need to go to a doctor immediately," Krohn said. "They can't wait for it to go away."
"It's very possible that a student in their 20s can make bad decisions that will affect them when they are older," Yockey said.
The foundation will sponsor a health fair in Springfield, Mo. in April On March 30, it will sponsor a professional education seminar in Kansas City, Mo.
He said that he knew of two to five KU students who had kidney disease. One of those students is on a dialysis machine, an artificial kidney.
many students are inflicted with kidney infections. Tockey said.
He said that sexually active women often develop bladder infections and that they do not get treated for them. Untreated bladder infections lead to kidney infections.
"To avoid bladder infections women should urinate within 30 minutes after intercourse," Yockey said. "Three or four students each semester must be admitted to a hospital."
Kidney stones are common among students, Yockey said. Watkins's staff treats an average of three students a week for kidney stones, which often are caused from dehydration.
The color of urine can be a warning sign of infection, he said.
Pain in the middle of the back is also a warning sign.
"Urine should be more clear than yellow." Yockey said
Kidney disease
Some kidney diseases are heredi
Five hundred people in Kansas and western Missouri are waiting for a kidney transplant. More than 1,000 are waiting nationwide.
Diabetes is a leading cause of kidney
Early warning signs of kidney disease:
- burning or difficulty during urination.
- the need to urinate more often, especially at night.
- blood in the urine.
- swelling of hands or feet,
or around eyes.
- pain in back or below the ribs.
- high blood pressure.
K
Andrew Hodges / KANSAN
Source: National Kidney Foundation of Kansas and western Missouri
disease. Students with diabetes should watch their diet and keep their diabetes under control, he said.
"People need to be aware of their family history," Yockey said. "People who have family histories of kidney disease should be checked by a doctor frequently."
KU police to put new cars on road
By Mark Kiefer Kansan staff writer
KU police soon will be taking to the streets in new patrol cars, thanks to the arrival of five Chevrolet Caprices on Wednesday. The new cars will replace cars the department has had for five years.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that patrol cars drive about 36,000 miles each year. He said that when the department purchased new cars, the old patrol cars were converted into unmarked cars and stayed in the department.
Generally, the department buys new cars every two years, but because of budget considerations, last year it was unable to purchase new cars.
Mullens said that the department was cutting back on the number of patrol cars and unmarked police cars to save money. KU police will soon have four of each.
The cost of the new cars, after trading in the old unmarked cars, was about $55,000.
Police cars need to be capable of idling for several hours at a time. Mullens said. The cars also do a lot of stop-and-go driving, which causes extra wear on the engine.
The switch to Chevrolet cars is also new for the department. Mullens said that police have mainly used Ford cars since 1975.
The new cars need to be equipped with radios and decals before they are ready for patrol use. Mullens said that all the new cars should be on the streets within two weeks.
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Friday, March 12. 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Death penalty threatens lives of innocent people
Last week, after four and a half years on death row, Walter McMillian was freed from an Alabama prison after it was proved that the three key witnesses for the prosecution had lied.
Luckily for McMillian, the new evidence in his case had been found before it was too late. But he could have been executed.
The execution of an innocent man is the worst form of injustice. Even Chief Justice William Rehnquist said that the execution of an innocent man would be unconstitutional. But that did not stop him in January from denying a new trial to another man who now could die wrongly by lethal injection. The reason. new evidence turned up after Texas' 30-day deadline for appeals.
According to a study conducted by Tufts University, 350 people this century have been convicted of murder and later found innocent;23 were found innocent after they were executed.
Are we ever really sure someone is guilty enough to merit the death penalty? Or, as in war, do we deem those wrongly put to death as "acceptable losses" in our administration of justice?
As a "civilized" Western society, it is difficult to rationalize the existence of the death penalty. Studies have shown it is not a deterrent. While our jails are filled beyond capacity, those awaiting execution are too few to have any effect on prison overcrowding. Even worse, it is a grisly rationale.
Proponents of the death penalty fear violent criminals returning to the streets after being released for good behavior. A possible solution to this may be a "truth in sentencing" bill such as the one proposed by Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld. Convicted criminals would serve no less than their stated minimum sentences. Prison conduct would have no effect on the minimum time sentenced.
It is generally known that our justice system is far from perfect, but it is the best that we have. Eradication of the death penalty is the next logical step toward its improvement.
VAL HUBER FOR THE EDIFICIAL BOARD
V&H HUBER FOR THE EDIFICIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Congress needs to act responsibly on budget
It was inevitable that Social Security in some way would take a major hit in any determined program aimed at reducing the nation's budget deficit and halting the spiraling $4 trillion national debt.
At an estimated $302.2 billion in 1993, it is the single largest spending program in the federal budget.
Social Security is vulnerable because its enormous size makes it hard to ignore.
The trumpeting call of organizations representing the 30 million people, mostly voters, now receiving monthly Social Security checks and a politically sensitive Congress quickly shot down a proposal to freeze the annual cost of living adjustment for a year.
Instead, President Bill Clinton's deficit reduction plan would increase the portion of the benefit now being taxed to 85 percent from 50 percent for individuals with an income more than $25,000 and couples more than $32,000.
There's no question that the deficit must be reduced consistently to return aubin of fiscal sanity to the nation's finances.
The interest on the national debt now consumes $292 billion a year.
The increase now consumes $292 billion a year.
Clinton promises that $2 of every $3 produced by his tax and budget cut program will go to reduce the deficit.
But consider that the 1900 budget agreement, and its huge tax hike, was to reduce the tax 191-95 deficit by $500 billion.
Instead, the deficit increased by more than $700 billion, a $1.2 trillion miscalculation.
The reason is simple: Government spending has gone up $1.59 for ever $1 in tax increases in the past three decades, according to the Heritage Foundation.
Congress must enact at least as much in spending cuts as in Clinton's program but must do it as responsibly as possible.
This must be done because the second shoe will fall when Congress looks for more taxes to levy to pay for the revised health system that Hillary Rodham Clinton's task force is expected to come up with before the year is out.
Leader-Telegram Eau-Claire, Wis.
I SEE AMERICANS HAVE FINALLY GOTTEN OUT OF THEIR GAS-GUZZLING CARS...
GAS-GUZZLING TRUCKS
UNIVERSAL PRESS SYND.
7/1993 THE BUFFALO ANIMUS
I'M OFF TO PICK UP ANOTHER LOAD OF GAS
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Columnist forces beliefs on others
It is amazing that after all of the struggles for women to maintain control over their own bodies, we have to watch Ann Jurcyk waste ink and time attempting to dictate women's choices to them once again.
By stating that doctors are supposedly making a killing on abortion while hiding the medical risks, you make it sound as if pro-choice advocates are waiting in the streets to pull women in when it is anti-abortion groups like Operation Rescue that have been out there pushing their beliefs upon society. You throw around abortion statistics as if pro-choice women (deemed "feminazion") enjoy having abortions . . . as if women want all of the medical risks that you warn them about.
By ignoring the 225,000 pro-life advocates in Washington, Clinton is representing the people. By continuing research on RU 486 (previously halted by the Bush administration) women will be given the right to the complete choice and privacy taken away by those who share your beliefs.
These medical risks wouldn't even exist if groups sharing your beliefs, such as the religious right, had not lobbied for a ban on RU 486. If this drug was legalized, women could have safe, non-surgical abortions, and the doctors supposedly capitalizing on surgical abortions wouldn't have to watch your followers picket and blockade their clinics.
You have the right to believe whatever you want, but you don't have the right to force those beliefs on everyone else around you through laws and restrictions that destroy women's right to choose. Make note of the word choice, Ann, which includes two sides, not just your one-sided barrage of endless statistics and babble about "feminazis" (Speaking of statistics, is it coincidental that you happened to leave out the hideous statistics associated with illegal, back-alley abortions?)*
The bottom line is that no one is going to make you have an abortion, so quit attempting to control everyone else's lives. Your choice is your business, but making such a decision for all other women only associates the word "nazi" with you.
Steven Gooding
Wichita freshman
Activists violate rights of others
I went to hear Faye Wattleton speak last Friday night because I was interested in hearing what she had to say. Unfortunately, I was seated two rows behind a group of five anti-choice advocates. From the beginning of the lecture, these five people were disruptive, interruptive and unquestionably rude. While I believe strongly in the right of all people to hold opinions and express themselves at the expense of the majority, the behavior of the group of five infringed upon my right to concentrate on what Wattleton had to say. This is not an issue of freedom of speech but rather one of common courtesy.
Michelle Glivertz Niotaze junior
Women do disagree on certain issues
Lisa Cosmillo leaps to several entertaining but erroneous conclusions in her latest exposition of radical feminism. Her reasoning is simple yet flawed Women have traditionally suffered discrimination. This shared experience, she says, should allow women to set aside their differences on 'controversial' issues such as abortion and focus their collective energy on such worthy causes as health-care reform and family leave.
This theory implies that women are not unique individuals capable of holding diverse opinions on a wide array of subjects, but a collection of brains bimbs in need of constant protection and stern guidance. Cosmillo's view both distorts reality and insults the female gender. In fact, women should not (and generally do not) allow their anatomy to determine their politics. Some female small business owners, for example, oppose family leave on the grounds that it increases operating costs and eliminates jobs. Some female physicians have voiced concern that a universal health care system might increase accessibility at the expense of quality.
- Jennifer Murphy
Levenwouw junior
- Jennifer Bell
Everly sophomore
Cosmilu is right about one thing. Women have allowed men to make decisions for them for entirely too long. Ironically, however, Cosmilu appears poised to offer herself as a kinder, gentler substitute. No thanks. The only thing more frightening than the idea of enlisting in Rush Limbaugh's legion of "Dittoheads" is the prospect of being drafted into a battalion of radical feminists under Cosmillo's command.
Columnist snubs personal beliefs
Leavenworth sophomore
I'm not meaning to make a habit of this, but after reading LaSca Cosmillo's article, "Women need to stick together to 'catch male-dominated world.' I felt like writing in again. It seems that Cosmillo thinks women should put their personal beliefs and moral upbringings on the back burner, so all women can successfully combat the evils of this male-dominated world. Cosmillo writes, "We are allowing issues to tear us apart and turn us against each other." Heaven forbid people base their opinions and actions on real-life issues. Cosmillo has also decided it is blatantly obvious that all women are united in their fundamental belief in the importance of women. I believe women are important too. I also believe men are important, as are the elderly, handicapped, and ill. I believe in people, born and unborn, and the importance of life. On an issue like abortion, where individual morality and fundamental beliefs are so involved, it is close-minded and ignorant to ask people to neglect their beliefs. Cosmillo acknowledges, with grammar school insight, that all women are not the same. So, should all women conform to the opinions and ideals of self-proclaimed leaders? Should any person, for that matter, ever ignore their beliefs and blindly follow any leader? The answer is no.
Later in her column, Cosmillo says that men have no need to change things like child care, health care and family. Thanks, Lisa. I'm glad you've decided what's important to me and every other man in the nation. I'm sure you've got me pegged by now. Yes, I am the enemy. I'm the type of fascist you must declare war on and combat. Be sure to ignore my intentions. Be sure to neglect my reasoning. Just categorize me like you have the rest of the nation, and keep writing your overgeneralized columns. By the way, Lisa. I'm glad you still love your sister. That's very big of you.
Columnist's antics put credibility in jeopardy
Ed Connealy Leawood sophomore
We were seated several seats apart during the Faye Wattleton presentation. Knowing Jurcyk's special concern for issues concerning women, I was not surprised to see her present. She approached me with a handful of brochures, placed in my hands face down, and asked me to take one and pass the rest down the row, claiming that it was simply biographical information about our presenter. I had no reason to distrust Ann. I took one, passed the rest, turned my brochure over and to my surprise there was no biographical information on any of Faye Wattleton. The brochure was titled "Exposed: Planned Parenthood, The Abortion and Eugenic Connections." The brochure was adorned with a picture of a protester holding a sign reading, "Planned Parenthood KILLS BABIES," Jurcyk was aware of my trusting nature and of my respect for her. She intentionally deceived me. The initial shock soon wore off as Jurcyk and her gang of four immediately began to make fools of themselves in the front row.
Faye Wattleton took the stage, Juryc slowly took off her coat and began reaching for something. Was it a gun? No, It was a collection of anti-abortion posters that she handed to her clan. They held the posters up, Faye Wattleton's eyes passed through them, and the group was quickly reprimanded. Ann and her gang put the posters away, and threw newspapers over their faces, as if to be oblivious to the public forum.
KANSAN STAFF
I am sure that by now the *Kansan's* audience is quite familiar with the anti-human rhetoric of columnist Ann Jaricyk. I recently witnessed her extremely uncivilized and irrational approach to the abortion issue Friday evening in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Allow me to explain
Unfortunately, this was just the beginning of the groups immature antics for the duration of the presentation. I will be merciful and spare the details of the absurdities that Jurcky led. More important is the issue of the militancy, vengeance, ignorance and spitefulness surrounding the issue of abortion, which Jurcky has led us to believe she stands against. Obviously, Jurcky has not only deceived me but has deserved us all inference enough to professionally approach this issue in a mature and intellectual manner. After Friday's temper tantrum, I have lost respect for jurcky's methods (this statement is based upon her behavior, not her personal perspective.)
Business Staff
While the topic is warm, I must state that the dilemma that faces the nation is not whether to abort or not to abort. It is not a moral dilemma. It is not a biblical dilemma — it is an ethical dilemma. It is the ancient dilemma of individual liberty versus enforced social order.
I maintain that active anti-abortionists hold two misconceptions in common. The first misconceptions is that they believe life itself is more important than the quality of life. The second misconception is that human beings must be dictated or regulated to ensure social balance and order, whether it be by legislation or religion. Is individual liberty and individual realization not the ultimate goal of humanity?
Joel Bales is a Pratt Junior majoring in liberal arts.
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GUEST COLUMNIST
**Lettera** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The writer reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newcomer, 111 Staffer Fint Hall.
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Mystery Strip
EVERYBODY EATS...
EVERYBODY SLEEPS...
EATING AND SLEEPING.
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WELL, THAT'S ALL FOR TODAY...
I'M GONNA GRAB SOME LUNCH
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Friday.March 12,1993
NATION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Reno receives nod from Senate
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—The Senate unanimously joined Janet Reno yesterday as the nation's first female attorney general. She completes the Clinton Cabinet, and she will bring fresh leadership to a Justice Department still led by a Bush holdover.
Applause broke out in the normally decorous Senate chamber when the 98-0 vote was announced.
A host of problems, ranging from a terrorist bombing in New York to questions about the FBI director in her own department, await the 54-
year-old South Florida prosecutor. She is expected to be sworn in next week.
Reno's cake walk through the constitutional advise and-consent process closed the book a Clinton Cabinet selection process that got under way after his election. Clinton's difficulties filling the job
Dianne
Janet Reno
of attorney general — the failed nomination of Zoe Baird and the withdrawal of federal judge Kimba Wood from consideration — have delayed any major policy reviews at the Justice Department.
The Senate confirmed Reno just a day after the Judiciary Committee approved her nomination. Normally, there must be a three-day waiting period before the full Senate can act, but that was waived.
The agency has continued to be run by Bush administration appointee Stuart Gerson since Clinton's Jan. 20 inauguration.
Reno, who will be the first Democrat to head the Justice Department in 12 years, is expected to make many policy changes.
But the standoff between federal agents and an armed religious cult in Texas and the FBI's investigation of the World Trade Center bombing will force her to focus her immediate attention on day-to-day enforcement of the nation's criminal laws.
Reno also will review an internal Justice Department report that raised questions about whether FBI Director William Sessions should remain in office.
King waffles on stand; both sides claim victory
LOS ANGELES — A federal judge yesterday rejected an angry defense request to strike all of Rodney King's references to racial epithets from the trial of four police officers and to tell jurors to forget about them.
The Associated Press
King testified this week that at some point during his beating he heard a chant from the policemen using the words 'killer' and "nigger". But on further questioning he said he wasn't sure that the racial epithet was used.
U. S. District Judge John Davies said the defense should have objected when King was still on the stand. He indicated the government had no obligation to inform the defense of "a sight change" in testimony the defense already knew about.
Officers Theodore Briseno, Laurence Powell and Tintothy Wind and Sgt. Stacey Koon, who are white, are charged with violating King's civil rights during the beating, in which the African American motorist was clubbed and kicked.
In testimony Tuesday and Wednesday, King admitted to having lied in the past and to memory lapses but continued to insist he didn't deserve the beating, even though he had been
speeding and drunk.
"I forget a lot of things that happened that night," he said.
Defense attorneys said outside court that King's testimony helped their case, even though
Rodney King
proved to be a sympathetic witness
“It’s better for us,” said Ira Salzman, who represents Know. “Now he’s not this mythic looming presence in the skv. He’s just a guy.”
King left court without comment. He never testified in the officers' state trial, which ended in acquittals and touched off riots last spring that killed more than 50 people.
Much of the cross-examination focused on King's assertion Tuesday that officers had taunted him with the word "nigger" as they clubbed him. Asked repeatedly Wednesday whether he was sure that officers used the slur, King said again and again: "I'm not sure."
"Iheard either 'nigger or 'killer," he said.
NATION BRIEFS
Suspect has chemical engineering background
The Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — The second person arrested on charges of helping to carry out the World Trade Center bombing was identified as a Palestinian-American chemical engineer believed to have the know-how to mix explosives.
Nidal Aayad, 25, was arrested Wednesday by the FBI at his home in Maplewood. Like Mohanmud Salameh, he was charged with aiding and abetting in the Feb. 26 bombing that killed at least five people and injured about 1,000.
Investigators believe the bombing was financed with $8,000 wired from a European country to joint U.S. bank account held by the two, a source with knowledge of the investigation said yesterday. Authorities would not specify what role Avvad was alleged to have played in the bombing.
"By his educational background he has expertise that lends itself to this kind of crime," FBI agent James Esposito said.
Gene responsible for brain cancer discovered
The Associated Press
The genetic error causes neurofibromatosis type 2 — or NF2 — a disease that is passed through families. However, researchers believe that defects in the same gene also frequently cause brain tumors that occur sporadically rather than being inherited.
BOSTON — Scientists have tracked down a defective gene that may cause nearly a third of all human brain tumors, opening the way for new strategies to stop these cancers.
About 15,600 U.S. citizens are diagnosed with brain tumors each year, and 11,500 die from them. Doctors from Massachusetts General Hospital, who discovered the gene, said yesterday that it may be implicated in nearly one-third of these cases.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Abortion clinic doctor killed
Investigators find no evidence of conspiracy
The Associated Press
PENSACOLA, Fla. — Investigators found no evidence yesterday of a conspiracy in the shooting death of a doctor outside his abortion clinic. The anti-abortion demonstrator who reportedly confessed was ordered held without bond.
In the wake of what's believed to be the nation's first killing stemming from an abortion demonstration, clinics around the country tightened security, and women's groups urged Congress to approve legislation making the blocking of clinics a federal crime.
At conservative Pensacola's two abortion clinics, police increased security.
"The whole community feels violated by the killing," Mayor Jerry May-garden said.
Michael Frederick Griffin, once described by his wife as suffering
"great fits of violence," was ordered held without bond. Wednesday, he shot David Gunn, calmly surrendered and confessed, authorities said.
A candlelight vigil in Gunn's memory was planned for last night.
"At this time we have no evidence to indicate a conspiracy exists," police Sgt. Jerry Potts said. "The case is not closed, but I can't say we anticipate additional arrests."
In Washington, several national groups urged an FBI investigation of anti-abortion violence.
The shooting, abortion rights advocates said, is indicative of growing extremism in the anti-abortion movement.
"The government needs to ensure that vigilantes, terrorists and religious extremists do not take away our basic right to choose," said Kate Michelman, president of the National Abortion Rights Action League.
Randall Terry, a leader of the antiabortion group Operation Rescue, called the killing an "inappropriate, repulsive act," but he also called Gunn a murderer of babies.
at Gum from a .38-caliber revolver at point-blank range.
Gunn, 47, was getting out of his car at the back door of the Pensacola Women's Medical Services as anti-abortion demonstrators picketed the clinic.
Although the slaying is believed to be unique in the long struggle over abortion, it wasn't the first time Pensacola has been the site of anti-abortion violence.
On Christmas Day in 1984, abortion foes bombed two doctors' offices and twice bombed a clinic here. Four people were convicted. In March 1986, six protesters were arrested after they stormed into the same clinic, damaging equipment and injuring two women. One of the arrested protesters was John Burt, a leader of Wednesday's protest at Gunn's clinic.
"He was such a caring, compassionate physician," said K.B. Kohl, director of Beacon Women's Center in Montgomery, Ala., where Gunn worked. "These women really do feel like he gave his life for them."
Congress challenges Yeltsin's power
President Bill Clinton contacted the Pensacola home of Gunn's brother to offer his condolences, Kohls said.
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Russia's Communist-dominated Congress voted yesterday to strip President Boris Yeltsin of more of his powers and canceled a national referendum he had sought to cement his authority.
The resolution, which will be up for final approval today by the Congress of People's Deputies, dealt another blow to Yeltsin's eroding authority by weakening his ability to carry out market reforms and by making him more vulnerable to impeachment.
Although the Congress could change its mind, support for the measure was overwhelming, and Yeltsin's chance of prevailing was slim.
Climaxing a series of votes on the second day of its emergency session, the Congress resoundingly voided an agreement reached with Yeltsin in December to hold a referendum on April 11. That referendum would have
addressed the power struggle by asking the people who should govern, the parliament or the president.
Deputies in the 1,033-member Congress ignored a call for compromise by Yeltsin, who earlier in the day issued a stern challenge to Russia's highest parliamentary body.
"The Congress must make a choice between agreement or confrontation," he said. "It's either one or the other."
His principal rival for power, parliamentary speaker Ruslan Khasulatov, shot back minutes later in an emotional speech that dismissed Yeltsin's proposals as "petty ideas." He said that the only document the Congress would recognize was the Communist-era constitution.
The political showdown has been building for months. Both the executive and legislative branches have been grappling for power in the vacuum left by the collapse of the ruling Communist Party in 1991.
The lawmakers did grant some concessions to Yeltsin in his efforts to gain control over the Central Bank. Reformers blame the bank for pushing the inflation rate to 2,000 percent last year by handing out credits to insolvent state enterprises.
A committee that included Yeltsin and Khasbulatov approved making the heads of the Central Bank, the State Property Fund and several other agencies members of the government. However, the agency heads will remain under the supervision of the Supreme Soviet, the smaller standing legislature.
It was not clear what steps Yeltsin might take in the power struggle. Hard-liners fear he may try to impose some kind of presidential rule that would enable him to bypass Congress.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 12.1993
7
'Hawks hope to defend tournament title
Daron J. Bennett/ KANSAN
23
Colorado sophomore guard Donnie Boyce tries to dribble past Kansas senior guard Rey Walters. Boyce and Walters will face off today when Kansas plays Colorado in the first round of the Big Eight Tournament.
Buffaloes to pose first challenge
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
During the 16-year history of the Big Eight Conference men's basketball tournament, no team has ever defended its title successfully.
"Coach made us well aware of that," said Kansas senior center Eric Pauley.
This season, Kansas is 2-0 at Kemer,
where it won the Golden Harvest
Classic in December.
The dayhawks, already crowned the regular-season conference champions, will try to win a second consecutive tournament title this weekend at Kemper Arena in Kansas City. Mo. The team is ranked seventh in the nation and virtually assured one of the top eight seeds in the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas, 24-5 overall and 11-3 in the conference, is the top seed in the tournament and will play No. 8 Colorado, 10-16 and 2-12, for the third time this season. Kansas won the first two meetings. The game is at 2:20 p.m. today.
Today's game features two guards who received first team all-conference honors, Kansas senior Rex Walters and Colorado sophomore Donnie Boyce.
Walters, the Jayhawks leading scorer with 14.2 points a game, is coming off a career-high 27-point performance Sunday against Oklahoma State.
Boyce is the Buffaloes leading scorer for the second consecutive season. He averages 19 points a game, second in the conference to Oklahoma State.
sophomore center Bryant Reeves.
"Donnie Boyce is one of the top players in the league and one of the young stars in college basketball." Williams said. "He's created some problems for us. But so has Poncho Hodges and so has Tedallen. We're not just concerned about Donnie, but we do have to put a large emphasis on him."
Hodges, a senior center, and Allen, a sophomore forward, are the top two shot blockers in the conference. Hodges has blocked 56 shots this season, and Allen has rejected 51.
Kansas defeated Colorado 82-51 on Jan. 23 in Boulder, Colo., and 72-68 Feb. 27 in Allen Field House. Williams said that playing a team for the third time during a season had its advantages and disadvantages.
surprised if we don't respond."
"It's harder when you're playing somebody for the third time because you know each other so well," Williams said. "But I'd much rather have beaten them the first two times we've played. It's a challenge for us to beat somebody three times, and I'd be
If the Jahawks do respond, they will advance to the semifinal game tomorrow at 1:10 p.m. against the winner of the Nebraska-Kansas State game. The championship game is scheduled for noon Sunday.
Pauley said that the Big Eight Tournament again would be intense and competitive.
"You've got a lot of schools that might not make the NCAA Tournament," he said. "If they win the tournament, they get an automatic berth. A lot of teams are going to be giving it their all to and get that berth, and I think that brings out the best in everyone."
Williams said that his team had improved during the last several games.
"We're feeling better about what we're doing, and we're more enthused," he said. "I do think we're going back on the upswing, and I hope we can keep it going for a long time."
BIG8 CONFERENCE
The Kansas men's basketball team begins play today in the 17th annual Big Eight Conference Tournament. Overall, the Jayhawks are 25-12 in conference tournament competition They have won four tournament titles and are the defending champions.
4 Nebraska
12:10 p.m. today
5 Kansas St.
1:10 p.m. Saturday
Championship game
12:00 p.m. Sunday
TV: ESPN, Raycom
2 Oklahoma St.
6:10 p.m. today
7 Missouri
3:20 p.m. Saturday
1 KANSAS
2:20 p.m. today
3 Iowa St.
8:20 p.m. today
6 Oklahoma
8 Colorado
Big Eight Tournament
Kansas 12, Missouri Valley 3
"I thought my motion was pretty good, "Corn said. "That's probably the first time I've thrown nice and easy
Kansas Jayhawks
record: 24-5, 11-3 head coach: Roy Williams
KU
Probable Starters
■ Rex Walters
G Sr. 6-4 14.2 pp
■ Odison Jordan
G Sr. 5-1 11.7 pp
■ Richard Scott
F Jr. 6-7 10.8 pp
■ Darin Hancock
F Jr. 6-7 7.7 pp
■ Eric Pauley
C Er. 6-10 11.9 pp
Colorado Buffaloes
JJ
game
1
Corn, 1-0, said that he was able to get his curve ball over the plate consistently. He also had a good record in this pitching mechanics earlier in practice paid off yesterday.
Kansas batted 16 times in the inning getting seven hits and scoring eight
Men's basketball
game 1
2:20 p.m.
today
Kemper Arena
Radio: KLZR-FM 105.9
TV: Raycom
Things only got worse for the Vikings.
Kansas continues its home stand this weekend, playing host to Iowa for a three-game series. The Jayhawks play the Hawkeyes at 2 p.m. Saturday, and in a double header Sunday beginning at 1 p.m.
record: 10-16, 2-12
head coach: Joe Harrington
instead of trying too much. I was relaxed today."
Eleven-run inning propels Jayhawks
Freshman Scott Titrington relieved Corn, pitching the sixth and seventh innings. He allowed five hits and two earned runs. Sophomore Mike Greene closed the final two innings, allowing one hit and striking out two.
Baseball KU
Kansan sportswriter
| | ab | r | h | rb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| ss Crise | 5 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| cf Pettt | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| cf Hairwara | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| cf Hairzwara | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 1b J. Reyes | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 3b Baper | 4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| c Bentzier | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| dr Davis | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
dh Notes | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
br Vezel | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| **37** | **3** | **10** | **0** | **2** |
By Brady Prauser
During most of Missouri Valley's baseball game with Kansas yesterday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium, the Vikings were able to contain the Kansas offense.
But an 11-run Kansas scoring spree in the bottom of the fifth inning did not help the Missouri Valley cause any, as Kansas crushed to a 12-3 victory, its sixth straight.
Probable Starters:
Johnny Terrell
G Sr. 6-1.45 pp
Donnie Boyce
G So. 6-15 1.91 pp
Randy Robinson
F Sr. 6-17 5.25 pp
Ted Allen
F So. 6-10 7.7 pp
Poncho Hodges
C Sr. 6-19 12 pp
Junior right-hander Chris Cornscattered four hits over five innings, giving up one earned run and striking out five for his first victory. Kansas, 6-0 at home, improved its record to 9-3.
The second baseman finished with a single, double and three RBI, raising his batting average average to 431.
hike, improvise.
With the score tied at one in Kansas' half of the fifth inning and two men on base, senior second baseman Jeff Berblinger lined a shot down the left field line.
Bingham also said he was pleased with Kansas' defense and pitching.
"I think Chris Corn did a good job," he said. "He lent us in the game."
DUR MISSUU Valley left fielder Mike Groh slipped on the pitcher's mound outside the left field foul line and went down with what appeared to be an ankle injury while pursuing the ball. All three Jayhawk runners circled the bases, giving Berbinger an inside-the-park home run and Kansas a 4-1 lead.
more runs to build a 12-1 lead by the time the offensive bombardment ended.
"Berbinger just did so much for us today." Bingham said.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham heralded the performance of the inning's catalyst.
Source: Kansas Sports Information
KANSAIS (4-3)
ab r h rbl
2b Bertinghoff 0 1 0
2b Turney 0 0 0
c Monroe 3 1 0
c Firmee 1 0 0
c Niemeyer 3 1 0
r Tarquino 3 1 0
r Benninghoff 4 1 1
r Wachyck Way 4 1 1
r Soleil 4 1 1
ss Rude 1 0 0
d Wilmot 4 2 1
Kansas
Corn
5.0 4 1 R ER BB SO
Tittitng
2.0 5 2 2 0
Greene
2.0 1 0 R ER BB SO
Missouri
IP H R ER BB RO
Hawks
4.1 5 8 3 2
Reyes
3.2 3 4 2
E Crise, Nacaway D Missoula V, 2 Kansai I
LDB Missoula V, Kansas 5 BB Bentlinger I,
38 Bentninghoff RW, Hrews I (1), Bentlinger I,
4(B) Sturnio II (2), Morroe I, 6(C), Crise I
Men's golf team struggles in early season outings
Andrew Hodges / KANSAN
Bv Matt Dovle
Kansan sportswriter
upon returning from a disappointing sixth-place finish at the University of Central Florida Invitational, Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall got a bit of advice from Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams.
"He told me to put this one behind us, and get ready for the next one." Randall said.
Randall has an experienced group of returning players, but the men's golf team has struggled at the start of the spring season.
The Jayhawks finished 11th at the University of South Florida Invitational at the end of last month, and finished in a tie for sixth place at the Central Florida tournament earlier this week after leading the tournament with nine holes left to play.
Randall is not one to make excuses, but he said the lack of preparation on the golf course in the last month had hurt his team.
"Golf is based on confidence, and confidence is based on repetition," he said. "We haven't had the repetitions to gain the confidence because of the weather."
"It's just something we have to deal with," he said. "This has been the worst weather we've had since 1987. For six straight years we were lucky with the weather."
However, one team that Kansass saw at both tournaments in Florida had to deal with similar weather conditions in preparation for the tournaments and fared much better than the Jayhawks.
The snow and cold weather that hit Lawrence in the first two months of the year had put the team at least three weeks behind schedule, Randall said.
Kent University, in northeastern Ohio, finished third at the South Florida invitational, and tied Kansas for sixth at the Central Florida invitational. Kent, however, had the advantage of participating in a tournament before the Jayhawks did.
they are a good team that didn't play too well at Orlando until the final round," said Kansas golfer Matt Gogol. "It showed what kind of team they are to come back in that last round and play well."
Kent was in 12th place after two rounds, but shot 294 in the final round to improve to a sixth-place tie with Kansas.
Despite the disappointment from the Central Florida tournament, Randall sees an opportunity to learn from this tournament.
"This tournament won't matter a month from now if we continue to improve as a team and work on our mistakes," he said.
BRIEF
Royals walk to first victory in preseason
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Kevin McReynolds walked with the bases loaded in the ninth inning, forcing home the winning run as the Kansas City Royals rallied to defeat the Cleveland Indians 6-5 yesterday.
The Royals, who scored only two runs in the previous three games, stroked 10 hits, including three singles by Jose Land
Kansas City won for the first time in exhibition play this spring, snapping a six-game losing streak.
Weather causes softball cancellation
Kansanstaffreport
Kansas, 5-2, opened its season last weekend at the Texas A&M Invitational, where it took the title.
The Kansas softball team's scheduled home opener against Wichita State tomorrow has been canceled because of inclement weather.
The Jayhawks' next scheduled game is on March 21 against Massachusetts in Fullerton, Calif.
Two of top 10 tennis players to meet in Texas tournament
By Blake Spurney
Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas Texas match will feature a battle between two of the top 10 players in the nation. Kansas 'No. 1 singles player, sophomore Rebecca Jensen, No. 8 in the nation, will face No. 3 Susan Gilchrist of Texas.
The No. 19 Kansas women's tennis team will travel to Texas this weekend for a Lone Star shootout against Texas A&M on Saturday and No. 3 Texas on Sunday.
Texas on Sakaua Kansas coach Chuck Merzbacher said that Texas A&M was a middle-of-the-pack Southwest Conference team, but that Texas was phenomenal.
No. 10 Susanne heads a team that is loaded with talent. Three other players are ranked in the top 30, including No. 10 Kelly Pace, No. 17 Jill Craybas and No. 26 Jackie Moe.
In doubles, Gilchrist and partner Vickie Payter are ranked No. 2, followed by Moe and Pace at No. 5.
No. 19 in the polls. Koves, 14-3 in singles, is ranked No. 62.
Merzbacher said it was a good opportunity for the Jayhawks to close in on a NCAA Championship bid should they defeat the Longhorns.
"It's one of those things where there's nothing to lose and everything to gain," he said. "When you play the best, you see what you need to work on."
Kansas' double tbdies for Jensen and sophomore Nora Koves stands at
Merzbacher said that if the Jay-hawks are going to fulfill their goal of making the NCAA's Kansas needs to play well in its next six matches. After Texas, three of the 'Hawks next four opponents are ranked.
Both Texas and Kansas have played Georgia this season, but with different results. The Longhorns defeated Georgia 5-2, and the Jayhawks lost to Georgia 4-5.
Texas & A.M. 5-3, is not devoid of talent either
Its No.1 singles player is No.42 Janine Burton-Durham, and Merzhacher said that the rest of the Agges' team was solid from top to bottom.
AKSAS
Daron J. Bennett/ KANSAN
John Thompson, Lenaxa sophomore, puts a layer of wood finish on one of the KU Crew's eight-man boats. The men's and women's teams were working on their yesterday for a training trip during spring break to Natchitches, La., where they will practice because the Kansas River is four feet above flood stage and too rough for rowing.
Polishing up
Two track athletes qualify for NCAA meet
By Blake Spurmey
Kansan sportswriter
Two Kansas track athletes qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships that will be held today and tomorrow at the Hoosierdome in Indianapolis.
Senior All-American high jumper MaryBeth Labosky jumped 61-1%, and juniormiller Michael Coxan a 4:01.39 mile to qualify. Each will compete against 15 other athletes in their respective events.
Kansas assistant track coach Steve Guymon said that both athletes had a chance to make All-America status and a chance to this weekend.
Labosky particularly has an excellent chance to win, Guymon said, because she has had experience competing at the national level. Last year, Labosky placed sixth at the NCAA Outdoors meet.
She has cleared the nation's fifth-highest mark this season. In winning the high jump at the Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships, she beat the No. 1 jumper in the nation, Kansas State's Gwen Wendland.
Kansas State is a realistic goal." Labosky said. "I just have to go out and be aggressive and try to take one height at a time."
1
Cox said his primary goal was to make it past today's preliminaries. Of the 15 runners, only one has broken the four-minute barrier in the mile this season. Cox has posted the eighth-best time this season.
"I'm not going to rule it out," he said about winning
8
Friday, March 12, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jayhawks waiting for NCAA pairings
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
Before the Big Eight Conference women's basketball tournament, the Jayhawks status for the NCAA Tournament was questionable. After their tournament performance last weekend, the Jayhawks might have played their way to a first-round home game.
The first- and second-round games in the 48-team tournament are played at the home court of the higher seed. The 16 highest-seeded teams are guaranteed first-round byes and second-round home games, meaning the 32 highest-seeded teams are guaranteed at least one home game.
Kansas won the conference tournament and impressed voters in the Associated Press press to move up to No. 26 in the nation, even before the Jayhawks upended No. 20 Nebraska in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic NCAA Tournament bid.
Kansas will find out what the NCAA Tournament selection committee thinks when the pairings are announced at 11:30 a.m. Sunday. ESPN, cable channel 18, will carry the announcement live.
Karsas, on the strength of its seven-game winning streak, including victories against Nebraska. No. 6 Colorado and No. 25 Oklahoma State, could get its first tournament game Wednesday at home.
"The way we are playing right now, I think we deserve one," said senior
guard Shannon Kite.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that the home game was a possibility.
"They give the first 16 teams first- round byes," she said. "I don't think we are that far behind them."
Kansas won its only home NCAA Tournament game, an 81-75 victory against Middle Tennessee State, in 1988. The Jayhawks are 1-3 in NCAA Tournament road games.
Washington said she did not want to see a repeat of last year for her Jayhawks, Kansas, the regular-season conference champion, was sent on the road to Southwest Missouri State, which went on to the Final Four.
"It was a disservice to play well and be ranked as high at 13th in the nation at one point and have to play the No. 1 team on the road," she said.
Heading into the conference tournament, three Big Eight teams appeared to have locks on tournament bids: Colorado, Nebraska and Oklahoma State.
Oklahoma State may be one team left out of the tournament. The Cowgirls are still No. 25 in the nation, but have lost four of their past five games.
Renee Knoeber/ KANSAN
Colorado coach Ucal Bary said their team, 25-3 overall, could have let a first round by slip with two other losses to Oklahoma and Kansas.
Lady
Dayhawks
"I hope the committee realizes that the Big Eight is tough," she said. "All of our three losses were to conference teams."
Sophomore forward Alana Slatter shoots over teammate Lisa Tate, Junior center. Kansas has won a berth in the NCAA Tournament. If the Jawhawks are not able to get a first-round bye, their first tournament game will be on March 17.
West Coast Saloon
March Madness at
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NEOSTYLE:
FASHION EXHIBITION
831 Vermont Lawrence, Ks 60644
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841-2866
843-5665
---
The University of
Kansas Theatre for
Young People
Presents the F
Brothe
Folk Tale
Hansel
and Gretel
Adapted by Max Bush
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
2:30 & 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 20, 1993
large box of cards
tickets by phone using VISA or
MasterCard call 913/864-3982
Tickets on sale in the Murphy
SUA Office, Kansas Union, all
6
tickets available through the
scary noises, this production is recommended for
Because of dark lighting, and
children ages five and older.
Tickets on sale in the Murphy
recommended for
seats reserved for $3
?
March a Theatre in our
Schools Month
Thanks, Phi Delts, for a great year of Rock Chalk & Community Service. We never could have won MOST CHARITABLE without you!
Thanks for "DEALIN'U'S IN." Love, the Gamma Phi's
Classified Directory
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1. Employment
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The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of people, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation on advertisements.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised on this newspaper are subject to change.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise commercially based on race, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, imitation of dis-
I
105 Personals
100s Announcements
Valerie-
more can I say that THANK YOU, my little
SUA STUDIETE?
110 Bus. Personals
Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban and Vuurtnet-Prince
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
98% Mass. 841-611
need a lift.
The Etc. Shop. Supplies a liftsupp of handmade pendants, ceramics, and semi-precious stones
Assorted Bear fetishes
$ 59.99
Etc. Shop
$ 59.99
864-551U
Regular Clinical Hours
Mon-Fri-Br 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m.-11:30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hour) Marriage
Mon-Sun 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m
Sun 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m
Watkins Health Center
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Lose up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $30. 100% Guarantee.
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
hotels or Hotelcard Party/Activity package off
beach start at $1 Per Person/Per Night,
Sunchease and Saida units starting at $2 Per
Person/Per Night Taxes Not included
---
Morning Star Pet Care
Pet Care
15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
FOR DOGS & CATS Current KUID Required
Current K.U.I.D. Required FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
Current K.U.I.D. Required
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
VISA 842-9979
300s
Merchandise
VISA 842-9979 MasterCard
1 Mile East of Johnny's
400s
Quad Festa
120 Announcements
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-245-3. Headquarters
If anyone saw an accident last tues (Mar 2) at 23rd and Naismith. Please call 865-5940.
Observation Classes - Lawrence Jayhawk Kennel
班次 9 weeks 8.5 Dogs all 3 months 9 weeks
培训 12 weeks 12 Weeks National
Guard Armory, Orientation Ipg. Call Barclair
842-864, or Lee Boady 180-790 For more Info
QUESTIONS? Call Bissauel, Gay, and Lesbian Peer Counseling Free, confidential referrals through Headquarters (814-2345) or KU Info (864-3590). Calls returned.
400S Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is叫你 941-2545 or visit 1419 Maus. Headquarters Counsel
vour
YOURE NOT ALONE! Bixiex, Gay, and Lennie support Group on Tuesday at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters (614-2345) or KU Info (864-3506) for confidential location.
Daily Kansan
help save a tree
Recycle
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
130 Entertainment
March Madness AT BENCHWARMERS
Spring Break quad occupancy Daytona Beach,
$199.90 per person including bus, room, limited
pace 2/15/93 Pete 749-1392
Next week stop by and watch tournament action on the big screen
Love Squad with August Red
Friday March 12
AT BENCHWARMERS
2 FOR 1 WELL DRINKS
Jayhawk
CAFE
Presents
SILVERSTONE
FRIDAY, Mar.12
Tuesday, March 16
KARAOKE
Wednesday, March 17
ST. PATRICK'S DAY
ALL DAY PARTY
It Could Only Happen at.
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO 843-9273 A Campus Tradition Since 1919
L. A. Ramblers
Friday March 13 AT
BENCHWARMERS
2 FOR 1 WELL DRINKS
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9
Recycle the Kansan
WAGON WHEELCAFE
Friday, March 12, 1993
Uphold a KU Tradition- Visit the Wagon Wheel Cafe
BIG EIGHT TOURNAMENT SPECIAL
$2.00
Cheeseburger & Fries
$1.00
Cans of Beer
All day Sat & Sun open at 11:00 Sun
140 Lost & Found
Lost waller 3allet floor student in the laden rest room, soft. cloth blue if found call Lilu 665
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Hélp Wanted
2 males of 2 females provided for Job Share/Live in Personal Care Attendant; pre- nursing, premed, pre O.T. P, T. P or Speech Pathology student-ideal (pre-school). To meet additional assistance on lifting and transfers to chair, bed, Prefer experience, but will train Live in separate quarters of private residence. 2 beds, baths, living area. Exchange rent for service plus 3 weeks' work weekdays a week. Phone after 842-3370
30 hr position with small design firm. Must be mature, responsible, with good communication skills Will train Good advancement potential RLC $40,392
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT fisheries
Earn $400 + week in canvases or $4,000 + mo on fishing boats Free transportation! Room &
Fisheries Employment program call 1-866-543-4157 ext. A975
CAMP COUNSELORS want for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $101 or more plus RAB, Mare Secreta 719 Maple, NID, IL.
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
hammers, housekeeper, maintenance person
for Mountain Summer Camp, Box 11, Boulder, CO.
in the following areas
OUTDOOR DAYTON BRAM-SPECIALISTS
INSTRUCTORS
OUTDOOR MUSICIST
SPORTS INSTRUCTORS
PLAYGROUND PROGRAM
MUNICIPAL
SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS PROGRAM
CONCESSIONS
MAINTENANCE AND LABORER INSPECTIONS
The City is accepting applications for all summer, part and full-time positions. Positions are avail-
Complete application at Administrative
IS 60544
No phone calls please. Deadline Friday, April
24th
Clerical/Word Processing. Flex 12 hrs now & thru summer. 3.3 GPa & KSres Exe / Macw or Microsoft Word for Windows W/ pg layout exp. Mem Exp Span Co 749-5402
*study children a camps/northeast top salary, rm/rd laundry, travel allowance, rm/nd sports, golf, basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama, basketball, fencing, field football, hockey, golf, guitar
Cookie aids 7-30 lbs. 39 in. Wkspages. Ability to work w/ children request $43 per app. At apply www.cookiefoundation.org
jugging, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, pano, rocky terrain, rollerblading, ropes, surfing, tennis, weightlifting, wateraikis, weights, wood. Support staff-kitchen steward/workers, bakers cooks, bus drivers, maintenance. Waterballs, gymnastics. Winadu, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10543 (914) 381-588, Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 841-267-8320.
Cruise line entry level on board/landside positions
and/or year round, great pay,
transportation options.
Evening wait person(s): wanted. Chinese restaurant. Experience required. Minimal knowledge of Lawrence areas. Be dependable. hard working. Apply Peking Restaurant. 749-6003.
Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience needed. Resume offered. Resume to Wakana Partners, P.O. Box 1751, Lawrence KS 60044
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make $2,000 per person for international Japanese and Taiwanan travel to Japan, Japan and board + other benefits. No previous training or teaching certificate required. For prior experience please email us.
KU student needles as live-in building manager at First United Methodist Church. Compensation includes housing and monthly steward. Employment begins June 1, 2024, with more than 750 positions at bureaus at 841-750-3800.
Line up your summer job now. We are currently hiring a crew for our new location in May. Email us at smokinin@gmail.com. Call 913-525-6826. Nominate Combining Inc Models needed pre- $750-$300 & TV/Film
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" and "The Men of Kansas City" calendars call me.
Models wanted for the "Girl of Kansas City" and "Men of Kansas City" calendars. Please call Toni
Nancy positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii summer/yr. round Great pay,
Hawaii summer/yr. round Great pay
Need baby sitas in our home for two boys & 4.
Non-monkeys only. Mon-Fri 2-50 p.m. 50 p.m.
Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
Need Dearness in our home for 3 year. 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m. M-F $1 per week. After 2 p.m. Call
me.
New Hiring at Clinton Marina. Positions for Marina store clerks available. Please apply at Clinton Marina in Clinton State Park March 11-12 from 1-9pm and March 13-3pm. 740-3222
Spring and summer employment position available for pool service technician. Must have knowledge in chemical chemistry and do pool operation and an apprentice. Please call 843-6257 for an appointment.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Fred P. O'Brien G. Stuart & Gill on Country Club Plaza seeks personal, quality minded people to cook, cater and basting the meals available. Experience helpful, but not mandatory. Apply in person after 2 p.m. at Fred P.'s O'Brien G. Stu. Nichols Parkway 715-806-3232. For more information call 135-723-2878.
Tennis jule-summer children s camp-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call Jenner wheeler BAI 1480-680 Men call or write: Camp Winadu, S Glen Lake, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10529
Waterfront Jobs: WSJ-summer children in camps-prompt-means and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterski (salmon) or skiing, teach swimming, lake and pool and lakes good. salary room & board, travel allowance. Men call or write. Camp Winadu 5. Glen Lane, Mamayne, NY 10549. 914-381-3681.
Weekend air talent for KLWN and KLZR. Prior experience required. Job will resume to PID 0. PLEASE READ BEFORE ASSIGNMENT.
$$$
Spring Break Party Cash!
New Donors earn $25 for 1st 2 plasma donations in 1 week Return donors earn up to $135 per month!
149-5750
1816 W24th
225 Professional Services
NABI
C CC Desktop Publishing Resumes. Cover Letters
Flyers. Term Papers. Newsletters
Call 643-8491
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFICBURG
Fake ID and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the lawoffices of
The law offices
DONALDG. STROLE
Donald G Stroie Sally G Keisey
16 East 13th 842-1133
FREE MONEY for school avail include Fundraiser aid, scholarships & grants; tutoring; homework help; LCS 6966 Promo Photos and Headshots. B&W Darkroom. Fast Service. Fast Photography. #814-423
SWDr. seeks M?F "Let's Talk About Sex"
Sexually confused? Let me straighten you out. Very discreet, honest and supportive. Into safe sex. Call me, Dr Janell Carroll at (816)576-7681, KCMO Radio 810, weeknights. 9-11 p.m.
235 Typing Services
FADDLEARD TYPEING & EDITING. Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 hrs.
a day. Tutoring w/ allay. Near campus. Lowest rates
in town. 832-1296.
Experting typing by experienced secretary. IBM Corp.
advises candidates to page advance. East Lawrence Call Mrs. Mutual
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters.
$1/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
rush jobs. Paul Gall 749-4648
305 For Sale
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
graphic presentations, Law review and research
journals.
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Chair
No calls AFTER 9:34pm. 843-8568
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes, Editing, composition, rash reports, presentations
X
Papers dude? Accurate, fast word processing. High quality print $2.00/page. Call #328-BYTE
7-day round trip airline ticket to exciting South Padre Island for $150 *Leverage March 20, 2023*
300s Merchandise
5-drawer chest oak finish, $85 Call Brud. $42-1605
40 per 20 m.
Blanche. Bianchi cross film $460, bianchi road $96m
$550, 2 sets tuba dura tape $150, wrist $190,
$190, $190,
Improve messages 10k gold gunset band with
the value value. Asking $130: Mm86-2051
message
Ibm Compatible 386 SX, 170 MB hard drive, 3.3 & 2.52 bipy mouse, drive, mouseboard, VGA monitor, 24 pin Panasonic printer, 240 baud modem, excellent cond. $1300 B.O., Call 865-8899
For Sale New 60% Specialized Hard Rock Sport
many extra Greatprice 842-938
Professional 3mm Penetex Camera without flash just 140 Call 865-203 leave message
Kimia Kline is in the 1993 Model. Low charge, good campus access. Making for $50 on best offer for 2 weeks. Send resume to Kimia Kline.
USE
KANSAN
CLASSIFIED
Snowboard Burton 165 $25, skis 185 & poses $30,
skis boot 10/2 $15, all nig. Call Elegan 845-588.
Specialized stockKopper Sport, lock and light $30,
JBL Speakers 101, Call 847-709.
Study desk #4$^20. ^20 Road like bake 2&o, Sony alarm clock radio 11$^21. Call 749-3837
Wedding Dress, size 10, Alfred Armor as seen in Brides Mag $350 + Shoulder length仗 $40 - $82
8. Subaru DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/FM Cass,
Winter car寒“W”Call 842-8542 Leave
phone
**STUDENTS why pay retail for travel!** Wholesale travel research center offers to save $$$'s Guaranteed savings. No gimmicks. Great for last minute Spring Break. Call Larry at 800-745-3600.
360 Miscellaneous
1984 Manda RX-7 Y SE, burgundy/grey, 5 speed
Manda RX-7 Y SE, crush, power roof. Call:
632-6740 or 719-4840.
Wanted: To box, a "82" & "94" VW Rabbit Convertible or Cabrietin in good condition. Call Adrian #448 at (212) 537-8620.
Business Opportunity Also Available
370 Want to Buy
405 For Rent
1 bdm. Meadowbrook, very close to campus on bus route, cable, patio, fireplace, some utilities.
400s Real Estate
BIR Bur. apt. available now. New paint + mini blinds 1 yr lease 843-4217
160 NAISMITH & 3 & 4 Bath, 2 Bath. Lg rooms.
microw. etc. Cable TV cable. coin operated laundry.
dishwasher. microwave.
Available now furnished Rms / w shared kitchen
and office space; UA 814-565-9200 or UA 814-565-
9200, pet care, no pets. Call 814-565-9200.
4kdm Apt. summer sublayers needed, Orchard Curtains furnished, 2th bus, pool, buswail, Call
forest. April 1 - August 1 1/4 month free, no
deposit for 2 berm 354 OHio #1 call 749-7525
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apes at August 11. You can bring your own bed or the rest. 2R unfurn. apes, in buildings at West Hills Apts. 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS. 841-3800 or -607-8359.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
FREE CASE OF BEER when you sublease for thu summer 3 Bed/2 Bath camp at campus HKY. HKU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apartments is now leasing St. 1 & St. 2 bedroom apartments Luxuria, Leisure Center, Heat & Spa, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage parks, 383R Beach K. B C KS 616S, across Rainbow Park, 383R Beach K. B C KS 616S
SUMMER SPECIALS
• 1.2, & 3 bedroom units
• 3 month leases
FIRST MGT. INC.
*NOW LEASING*
Bradford Square
Chamberlin Court
Carson Place
Stadium View
Oread Apartments
1425 Kentucky
call 739-1558 M-F 2-5 pm or
2/19th Feb 2016
21st Bus line bus set
19th bus lans route
Pc: private buslines Palates
Pc: cable TV Plates
Od: drive management
Od: maintenance
Outdoor A/B C4: B1, 841 15
5:15am - Maid to 10:25
Or Call for appointments
Nice, quiet 3 BR duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl. cary, A/G, gas, heat: 10' BA, W/D hookups, garage. No pets. References. $450/mo.
843-2888.
Now leasing for Fall at Aspen West Apartments. 2 BR, 1 yr lease, no pets, water paid, on bus route 865-2500 for appt
House for rent 2m brd. lease, no pets 842-4403
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. ROMN 3+ BRD
on bus line. Basement, garage, FC. PA, WC
monthly. BASEMENT, NO. mo. negotiable
842-7528 after $2 owner/Agent.
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 1. 3 yr old, luxury laptops, close to campus. All AIRB, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appliance 2. Wet and well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1166
call 749-1556 M-F2-5pm or
841-8468 M-F9-12pm for an appt
MUST Sub-lease starting April 1. Unfurnished, one
room, mic, low, mc $120/month.
Call 854-793-6511.
susettele 3BR Bath. Furnished appl. close to cam-paul. avail May-15 Aug 10 Call 749-4364.
Sublease. 5 mo lease, large 1 bedroom. 2 blocks to KU 841-5979 or 865-1324.
Naismith Place
Boardwalk
journey
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and
842-4200
The Perfect Apartment!
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall MoveIns
NOW
524 Frontier 842-4444
meadowbrook
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling unquickly!
524 Frontier 842-4444
Online Fitting is a way for your convenience.
842-4200 15th & Crestline
MEADOWBROOK
Spacious 2 bedroom apt. Summer sublease all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable & quiet swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3628
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE BEACH-
Rocking Ridge Party on 2/28 323-472-1444
Party on 2/29 323-472-1444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 br
Affordable Price!!
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Bill!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am SAT.
No Appt Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Spacious 2 bedroom Appl.
on bus route, close to campus and downtown.
Designated quiet bldg. A great deal at $395 mo. Call
822-2348
Super-huge + 4 bdm house near campground
submulease with option for fall. Wood floors, 2
kitchens 3 porches, a/c / & baths $800/per
summer. Camp 842-4826
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
one bedroom. April rent-free Woods, $380
pent at. Pool, microwave, juicery. 642-8444 after
them.
Gravstone Apts.
S
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
One BR, apt. near campus, Avail. June 1. Hard-
dough floors. $290. 841-579.
Swan Management
- Graystone
-1-2-3 bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer
friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-
0484. Store by 1406 Tennessee.
Two bedm sublease ASAP through Aug. Full size Dave or John 861-1444 free BQB $100 total. Dave Jorge 861-1444
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing.
Mon-Pri call for appt 843-644-2166
- Volleyball Court
OPENDAILY
On KU Bus Route with
4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
Hookups
9:00 a.m- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
Campus Place-841-1429 1445 Louisiana
We are now accept
FURNISHED
Hanover Place-841-1212
44th Floor
Studios, 1,2,2+3, &4 bdrm
apts., designed with you in
mind!
Park25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Regents Court-749-0445
1905 Mass
Orchard Corners-749-4221
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, A93
842-1455
(sorry for pets)
Summer & Fall Leasing. Furnished 1 & berm
patio, 2 & balcony. KU w/ off-street parking,
no phone. Call 141-841-3600.
Summer sublease studio apt. at Trailrour, Available May 1. On bane route $300/mo
Fully furnished studio
Ouail Creek
A
2111 Kasold843-4300
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
1 F roommate needed to share a 2B br, 1Ba, 2yr ap, in scenic area. Must be a non-mosr, clean and responsible, on bus route. Starts Aug. 1, $197.50 M + ou! . Please call
| M to share open imap | 3 BR townhouse in summer, Valley LN 1282 | N254-069-0070 |
| :--- | :--- | --- |
| 1984-54 Naimish contract for sale | % of a double room available. Mobile males only | B44-822-6477 |
| :--- | :--- | --- |
Female Roommate Needed for summer or next spring. Send resume to CLOSE, Close to campus. Washer / Dyer in apt cat. M/F roommate wanted to share a BIR. Available new 1 bks from campus i8ms & /\sail Call
Male or Female roommate need ASAP 179 /m
+1) until No deposit on Bus Route 865-360
need roommate June & July. Spacious townhouse
Near park. Dawn from $150/mo +1) utilities
+1) until No deposit on Bus Route 865-360
Roammate Wanted NOW! $200/mo, water, gas,
and cable paid. Call Brian at 842-5323
Mature, female roommate wanted for 2
begin. Spanish Crest Apartments. Sublease from
April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 + 1% utilities. Call 842-
424.
Calculating Rates:
- by phone: 043-853-6300
* As phone used may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
- in person: 191 Slaters Flat
* by phone: between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be relied on, cash or check, or charged on Business or Card Visa
- By Mail: 119 Stairfarst Flit, Lawrence KS, b60459
You may print your classification form on the order and mail it with payment to the Kanana clinics. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date
Classified Information and order form
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of digit lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the daily cost by the total number of the ad will run.
Num. of Insertions:
Brain out but more...
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
**NOTE**
When canning a classified asset that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Reduced cash annuities that were pre paid by check or cash are not available.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to
1.XX 2-3X 4-7X 0-14X 15-29X 30-49X
1.X5 1.50 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.65
1.X6 1.50 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.65
1.78 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 1.00 0.60 0.55 0.55 0.35
Classifications
148 lion & land
225 hw wanted
225 pretential services
225 presales services
360 for sale
360 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
105 personal
118 business personalis
129 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print.
1
2
3
4
5
370 want to buy
495 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☑ Check enclosed ☑ MasterCard
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad.
Account number:
Expiration Date:
Magic Card
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Dalry Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
MARCH
M T W T F S
Kill something and eat it.
Kill something or eat it.
Kill something and eat it.
Kill something or eat it.
Kill something and eat it.
Jurassic calendars
Friday, March 12, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Student travelers need immunizations
By Vicki Bode
Kansan staff writer
Students planning to travel out of the United States for spring break should stop by Watkins Memorial Health Center to check the immunizations required for their destination.
In February, Watkins started using a software program, Travel Care, that listed the immunizations required for almost every country in the world.
Jody Woods, nurse practitioner at Watkins, said students should come into Watkins as soon as their travel itineraries were determined, because some countries required immunizations that must be given six months in advance.
The students must come into Watkins knowing where and when they will travel, she said. The students should also know how long they will be in the country, any allergies they have and what prescription drugs they are taking.
"The amount of time the student will spend in a country often determines what shots need to be given." Woods said.
The information is entered into a
computer and a printout is given to the students to take with them on their trips. The service is free for KU students.
The printout includes the following information:
immunization requirements
advice for people with allergies risks of malaria, yellow fever and rash
regional diseases
any current disease outbreaks
- a short description of the country
- crime information about the country.
Travel Care is updated every month by the national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and then the updated version is sent to Watkins, Woods said.
Nurses at Watkins had to look up information about foreign countries in updated books before they received Travel Care, she said.
She said it used to take three times longer using the old method. Travel Care allows a student to receive the information in less than half an hour.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said that Travel Care was an invaluable resource.
No bones about it
Teresa Hedges, Lawrence graduate student, examines a leg bone from a cow. The bone was found in Kansas City, Mo., and was dated between 1820 and 1840. Yesterday, Hedges was organizing artifacts found at the archeological site.
Engineering researcher bending bars for better buildings
Special to the Kansan
People flee as the ground rumbles, buildings tumble and bridges crumble.
This may be the reality of an earthquake now, but Steven McCabe, associate professor of civil engineering, is doing research that will help buildings and bridges of the future withstand an earthquake and other forces of nature.
McCabe does research on the steel bars that are encased in concrete. These bars help buildings withstand an earthquake because of their ability to stretch. During an earthquake, concrete, because it does not stretch, would normally crack and cause a building to crumble to the ground. However, the steel bars encased in
the concrete stretch with the movements of the earth and help the building to remain standing.
"During earthquakes, horrible things happen to buildings from the tension created," he said. "The steel bars act like rubber bands. They stretch like crazy so that the building does not collapse.
"These steel bars are something most people are not aware of, but they are everywhere. People don't see them through the concrete so they don't realize that they are there."
McCabe is focusing on the connections, or couplers, between the steel bars. Couplers are necessary because steel bars only come in standard sizes. McCabe said. Since the steel bars cannot run the length of a building, couplers connect them to each other.
McCabe's research, which will be completed sometime in July, will determine a correct and safe standard for couplers. The standard will be added to the seismic design section of the American Concrete Institute's "Building Code Requirements for Reinforced Concrete."
There are rigorous standards for how flexible the steel bars have to be, but there is no standard for the couplers. McCabe said. This creates a problem because if the couplers are less flexible than the bars, then they defeat the purpose of the bars. The building would just collapse when the coupler snapped, even if the bar was stretching.
There are three different ways to connect the steel bars, said Dave Schlimme, graduate research assistant for McCabe. The bars can be tied
Schilmein said the equipment used to test the bars can produce up to 100,000 pounds of tension on the bar and couplers.
or welded together, but McCabe's research is focused on the mechanical couplers that are used in seismic areas. They are trying to determine which mechanical couplers are as flexible as the steel bars.
"The machine pulls on the bar until either the bar or the coupler snaps." Schlinne said. "We are trying to find couplers that can equal the performance of the steel bars. The current standard for steel bars is that they be able to stretch 4 percent of their length."
So far, their research shows that if the bar and coupler can withstand the tension once, they can withstand it 20 times. Schlimme said.
its length and then let it snap back like a rubber band. They did this about 20 times to see whether the action wore down the bar or the coupler.
Schlumme said that he and McCabe ran tests to try to mimic what would happen in an earthquake. To do this, they stretched the bar to 2 percent of
McCabe said that in severe earthquakes, engineers would like to see the bar and coupler bend, maybe even permanently, but not break. This would save lives because the building would not collapse even though it would be deformed.
"With progressively bigger earthquakes, we can only do so much," he said. "There is no such thing as the earthquake-proof house. What we want to happen is for the bars to bend and stretch, but not break."
Class brings world's music to students
By Lisa Miller
Special to the Kansan
George Heller, professor of art and music education and music therapy, has taken a new approach to this music culture class.
Stand up and clap your hands to the beat of a Romanian wedding song. And welcome to the new and improved class of Music and World Culture.
Music and World Culture, MHST 560, has been taught by different professors over the years, so the course's curriculum has been diverse.
Now the class has changed again. Heller chose to teach it as a general survey of world music for the "general" student. It is not a music class for specialized music students, and it fulfills the non-Western civilization requirement for different schools.
The course's goal is to examine the music of 12 world cultures ranging from European to Aboriginal Australian. Class participation includes singing and conducting to the various beats and rhythms of cultural songs. An occasional dance step around the room is required and welcomed.
ouke Gifford, Tulsa, Okla., junior,
likes the class involvement.
"You learn about cultures through music, not through textbooks," he said.
Heller said that the course fits in with Masterworks of Music and Jazz and American Popular Music. The ethnicity of the music adds to the trio of classes for students interested, but not majoring, in music.
Heller holds himself responsible for creating a "different" class. He said he had a feeling that was what the students wanted and needed.
Heller also asked the class about their expectations for the semester. He handed out an evaluation sheet questioning the student's musical backgrounds, majors and ideas for a class format.
Some students suggested that music be played on a daily basis so the class could hear the culture instead of just reading about it.
"I have taken those suggestions to heart," Heller said. "And I will continue to do so."
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3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team split a double header with Iowa yesterday. Page 6.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
VOL.102.NO.120
MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Report to force field house safety upgrade
(USPS 650-640)
Kansan staff writer
NEWS:864-4810
By WILL LEWIS
Officials say crowds must be more restricted
Allen Field House will see tighter regulations and more safety features next basketball season in its attempt to comply with a 1991 state fire marshal's report.
*What we want to do is control seat*
ing to 15,800 when everyone is in the building," said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. "It's important for us to keep it at that level. We have to exercise every option we have to control the crowd and manage the numbers."
The building's advertised capacity is 15,800.
Meyen said overcrowding had not been a problem in the past, but that more would be done in the future to increase enforcement.
Crowd monitors will make sure fans are not blocking aisles or wandering around the building in search of a better seat, Meyen said.
"They do everything they can to make sure it doesn't exceed capacity," he said. "We're just doing more in the future to make sure that's true."
A $1.9 million increase proposal in capital improvement funds to provide the additional exits needed will be
Ross Boelling, chief of fire prevention at the state fire marshal's office, who wrote the report, said the lack of exits and width of the stairways topped the list of concerns.
presented to the Senate Ways and Means committee tomorrow, Meyen said.
A report conducted December 10, 1991, by the state fire marshal's office said the upper balcony of the field house seated 2,540 people more than could safely exit the building.
Until the provisions are funded and constructed, a careful eye will be kept on the number of people who enter the field house, he said.
Emergency lighting, a fire sprinkler system and a fire alarm system will be installed to comply with other sections of the report stating the field house is deficient in these areas, he said.
"I think we need to be responsive on any potential safety problem." Meyen said. "We're pushing for our resources to do this."
One way to control the number of fans is to allow only reserved seating, in which every season ticket holder would sit in the same seat for the entire season, he said.
Boelling said it was essential that the numbers be controlled.
we prefer to find ways to accommodate the crowd and allow flexibility for students," Meyen said.
Any time you have a large number of people in a confined space like that we just want to make sure that there's adequate ways for exit," Boelling said.
in a pane situation, it's hard to tell what people would do."
Reducing the number of seats in the building is one option, he said.
"That would allow them to operate safely within the capacity of exiting that they have," Boelling said.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, said he did not know if tickets would be cut, but that student representatives of the KU Athletic Center might have to devise a lottery system for students ticket holders if demand increased.
Because of all the sporting events going on, not enough time has been available to give consideration to the various options, he said.
Police arrest suspect in shootings Victim's estranged husband held in double homicide
By Mark Kiefer
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence police arrested a 35-year-old man early yesterday in connection with the Saturday morning shootings that left two Lawrence residents dead.
John L. Pease, 47, and Linda M. Smith, 34, were found dead by police in their apartment in Sunrise Place, 837 Michigan St., at 5:02 a.m. Saturday. Autopsies conducted by Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner, determined that both victims died of gunshot wounds to the head.
At 9:02 p.m. Saturday, a man called 911 from a Chanute restaurant claiming to be responsible for the two Lawrence deaths. Mike Myers, a dispatch officer with the Chanute police department, said Lawrence police arrived in Chanute at 11:23 p.m.
Lawrence Police Chief Ron Oln said that investigators talked with the man in Chanute before bringing him into the Douglas County jail at 4:15 a.m. Sunday. He said that police recovered a handgun from the man, and that tests were being done to determine if the gun was the weapon used in the murders.
"All of this has transpired really quickly, and we have a lot to do before handing it to the district attorney." Oln said.
Olln said the man was Smith's estranged husband whose last known address was in Wichita. He said that the man had been camping out in the Lawrence area for some time but would not say where. Olln said that the man was a suspect before he called the Chanute police.
Neighbors said that Smith had evicted her husband from the apartment about six weeks ago and that Pease had recently moved into the apartment.
The Smith's 12-year-old daughter, whose name has not been released, was spending the night at a relative's house and was not in the apartment Saturday morning.
Police said there were no signs of forced entry into the apartment.
Neighbors in the apartment complex said that it was common to hear arguments between Smith and others in the apartment.
"There were a lot of times when people had to open up their windows and yell at them to shut up," said Peter Mallouk, Prairie Village senior, who lives in an apartment across a courtyard from Smith's apartment. Mallouk said that he did not hear the gunshots Saturday.
Brian Hutchinson, Wichita junior, lives less than 20 feet from Smith's apartment and also said that he did not hear any gunshots. He said he found out about the shootings at 6 a.m. when police came to his door to question him.
Jennifer Pratt, Seattle junior, lives behind the Smith apartment and also said that she did not hear the shots. She said that the nearness of the murders gave her an uneasy feeling.
"It was uncomfortable to see a body bag going by my window at nine o'clock in the morning," she said.
- Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells said that he expected to file charges against the man today.
Goin' to the Big Dance
By David Dorsey and Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriters
BIG 8
PHILLIPS
66
BASKETBALL
TOURNAMENT
The Jayhawks won the regular season Big Eight Conference title by three games but they lost Saturday to Kansas State in the semifinals of the conference tournament.
No.2 seeded men to face Ball State in Midwest region
Kansas, 25-6, is the second seed in the Midwest Region and will play the No. 15-seeded Cardinals, 26-7, Thursday at the Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Ill., a suburb of Chicago. The game time will be announced tomorrow.
But the team will put the season's triumphs and struggles behind it as it prepares to play Ball State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, said Kansas coach Roy Williams.
The Kansas team met yesterday afternoon at Williams' home for ice cream and brownies to watch the announcement of the NCAA Tournament pairings.
PANCAK
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
"It wasn't a jump up and down kind of thing," Williams said about when the bracket was announced.
In the post-game news conference, senior guard Adonis Jordan hangs his head. The top-seeded Jayhawks fell to Kansas State Saturday afternoon in the semifinals of the Big Eight Conference Tournament at Kemper Arena.
"We are very happy to still be playing. We're looking at it like we have one game left now in the season. Our 25 wins can't help us and our six losses cannot hurt us."
"We just couldn't hit any open shots near the end of the game," he said. "K-State got us into their type of ball game, a slow-paced game."
Kansas' inability to hit shots in the final six minutes against K-State was the downfall for the Jayhawks, said Justin Bogart, Tonganoxic senior.
The top four seeds in the Midwest Region are Indiana, Kansas, Duke and Louisville. Kansas defeated Indiana and Louisville earlier this season.
Jarrod Nichols, Garden City sophomore,
Kansas had won its last eight contests against Kansas State.
"I thought we were a No. 2 going in," Williams said. "I think our strength of schedule really helped us."
The last time K-State defeated Kansas in the Big Eight semifinals was in 1988, when Kansas last won the national championship.
Kansas' last two trips to the Final Four.
1988 and 1991, came after the Jahawks lost in the semifinals of the Big Eight Tournament.
After Saturday's 74-67 loss to Kansas State in the semifinals of the Big Eight Tournament at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. Kansas fans were left wondering what NCAA Tournament seed the Jayhawks would get and where they would be sent.
"If that was an omen and you could guarantee that, I'd love it," Williams said.
"We should have won this tournament easily," Nichols said. "There's no team in the Big Eight that can beat us when we are playing at our best."
said Kansas should not have lost in the conference tournament.
10. SMU
Men's team
Jayhawks in Midwest ... twice
The basketball teams were both placed in Midwest regions. The men's team will be the No. 2 seed and will play Thursday in Rosemont, Ill. Tip-off time will be announced tomorrow. The team will play on Wednesday at California at Alten Field House at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Tickets are $3.50. See both men's and women's brackets on Page 7.
15. Ball St.
2. KANSAS
Women's team
Women's team 1 Vanderbilt
KANSAS
California
TITLE
Women will face California
The NCAA tournament selection committee filled in those particular yesterday morning. The who is the California Golden Bears. The where is here — 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Allen Field House.
Kansan staff report
INSIDE
The Kansas women's basketball team knew it was going to the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship. What it lacked were the details, such as who and where the Jayhawks would play.
The team gathered yesterday in the lobby of Naismith Hall to watch the pairings on television. At 11:45 a.m., many team members cheered and jumped up from their seats when they saw the Kansas pairing announced, relieved to learn where and who they would play next.
"I'm delighted we're at home," said Kansas coach Marian Washington. "It's very good for our fans and for the University. It will help us get off to a good start."
Tickets for the contest will cost $5 for adults and $3.50 for students.
See story, Page 3.
Sporting physics
Lied's first show to be 'Secret Garden'
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
Musical to be part of KU Concert Series
the new Lied Center, which has been under construction since 1991, will hold its first major show in September.
Jacqueline Davis, director of KU's Concert Series and director of the center, said a professional touring company would present "The Secret Garden," a musical based on the 1911 children's book.
The production will not be the first event in the center. A summer music camp for high school students and other activities will be held there to test the acoustics.
The first KU event held in the center will be the chancellor's convocation Aug 22
Davis said that continuing the musical production Friday fulfilled a year-and-a-
"It's the kind of experience that makes people happy. This story celebrates
life."
Jaqueline Davis Director of KU's Concert Series
half-old dream of her own and a request by Christina Hixson, executor of the Erust F. Lied Foundation of Omaha, Neb., which donated $10 million for the center's construction.
instruction.
"She said, 'I want this place to be a build
The words stayed with Davis when she planned the performance.
ing everyone will want to come to." Davis said, recalling Hixson's words when the women met two years ago.
"I wanted an event that was special," Davis said of the search "That was always in the back of my mind."
in the back by my hands.
She said she first considered "The Secret Garden" when she saw it on Broadway in October, 1991.
Sherman Warner, producer of the musical, said that the show spent 92 weeks on Broadway and closed in January.
The story, adapted from a book by Frances Hodgson Burnett, is about a young orphan who moves to England to live with her uncle. There she finds a secret garden in disrepair, and, while working to restore it, adapts to her new family.
"I saw it in New York and the response to it was very positive," Davis said. "It's the kind of experience that makes people happy. This story celebrates life."
Lied Center grand opening
The Lied Center will open this fall with "The Secret Garden."
---
Performances
Sept. 28 Tuesday
29 Wednesday
30 Thursday
Oct. 1 Friday
2 Saturday
3 Sunday
Matinee performances will be on Oct. 2, and KU students can get tickets for the Sept. 29 performance at half price.
2
Monday, March 15, 1993
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ON CAMPUS
International studies and programs will hold a special lecture, "Ireland in the 1900s: A Question of Identities," as part of Irian Week from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today in the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
The Office of Minority Affairs and Watkins Memorial Health Center will hold a stEp Program Seminar on a safe spring break at 4 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more
A. C.T.I.O.N. Coalition will hold its kick-off at 8 tonight in the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. The coalition will hold its benefit concert at 9 tonight at the Jazwhaz, 926% Massachusetts St. For more information, call Jason McIntosh at 832-2846.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will hold its business meeting tonight. For more information, call the GLSOX office at 864-3091.
information, call Roland Diaz at 864-4351.
ON THE RECORD
■ A student's motorcycle was damaged Saturday in the 1000 block of Emery Drive, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $350.
■ A student's wallet, cash and other contents, valued together at $184, were taken Thursday from a vehicle in the 800 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police reported.
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Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 56°/40'
Chicago: 38°/32'
Houston: 62°/50'
Miami: 65°/62'
Minneapolis: 38°/23'
Phoenix: 79°/56'
Salt Lake City: 58°/42'
Seattle: 50°/41'
LAWRENCE: 50°/33° Kansas City: 53°/36°
St. Louis: 53°/38°
Wichita: 59°/37°
Tulsa: 63°/45°
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
Partly cloudy.
High: 50°
Low: 33°
Partly cloudy.
High: 54°
Low: 37°
Partly cloudy.
High: 56°
Low: 40°
Source: Jim Burnham, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Dan Schauer / KANSAN
Omaha: 502
Sunny
Tomorrow Wednesday
Partly cloudy.
High: 50°
Low: 33°
Partly cloudy.
High: 54°
Low: 37°
Partly cloudy.
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Low: 40°
Source: Jim Burnham, KU Weather Service: 864-3300 Dan Schauer / KANSAN
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COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
1
CAMPUS/AREA
Monday, March 15, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
BRIEFS
Parking Department to hold public hearing
The Parking Department will conduct a public hearing at 3 p.m. today in the Parking Facility for a bill that would change some parking lot restrictions on campus.
People will be allowed to share their opinions about the new restrictions, which were passed by University Council last week.
Permit-only times for some lots would be reduced, while the classifications for other lots would be changed. The price of yellow parking stickers would increase from $50 to $53. Residence hall permits
would increase from $33 to $35.
KU organizations sponsor Safe Break Week
"This is the chance to make sure everyone has had a chance to have their say in what we have done," said Jason McIntosh, council member. "It's part of the procedure that we have to follow."
Before the changes can be enacted, the new measures must have two readings by the Board of Regents. The Regents already have read the bill once and are expected to conduct the second reading at their next meeting Wednesday and Thursday.
Free condoms, sunscreen and nonalcoholic drinks will be handed out this week in front of Wescoe Hall as part of the Safe Break Week.
The week is sponsored by Watkins Memorial Health Center, the Department of Student Housing, Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You, Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol and Forming Awareness of Cancer Through Students.
Shonna Terry, member of PARTY, said the week was started nationally by the group Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students to persuade students to be careful during spring break. Universities around the atonic sponsor similar activities the week before spring break, she said.
"Last year the week was really successful because of the mock accident done on campus." Terry said.
Last spring a fake accident was staged on campus that showed students the dangers involved in
rockless driving.
reckless driving The activities begin today
The activities begin.
Free candy bars, sunscreen and
sunscreen. Be handed out from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today and tomor-
ward in front of Wescow Hall.
An a capella group, 8 Men Out,
will perform from 11:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. today in front of Wescue Hall
The Kansas Highway Patrol will demonstrate mock car crashes from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; today in front of Wesco Hall.
PARTY and GAMMA will provide Safe Break pledge cards for students to sign from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today and tomorrow in front of Wescoe Hall.
A Fort Hays State University theater group will perform a program showing responsible spring break behavior 7.30 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
GAMMA will hold a nonalcoholic party for fraternity and sorority members at 8 p.m. tomorrow house at Sigma Delta Tau sorority house, 1625 Edgehill Rd.
would not have a complete report until today.
three students were arrested early Friday in connection with property damage done the same day in Templin Hall.
The three students are residents of Templin.
A Salina freshman, Leavenworth sophomore and Springfield, Mo., freshman were arrested about 6 a.m. Friday.
KU students arrested for damage at Templin
bond for each of them was $1,000. Each student posted the money and was released from the Douglas County jail later Friday.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that a television and some furniture were damaged, but that police
No charges have been filed against the students.
KJHK began broadcasting "Talk Radio" March 1 to replace its canceled talk show, "Talk Soup." The show was canceled Feb. 22.
Talk radio fans, listen up. There's a new show in town.
New KJHK talk show hits the airwaves
The station's graduate teaching adviser, Chris Beurman, said "Talk Soup" was canceled because the show did not adhere to the station's constitution, which states that KJHK is a laboratory radio station with programming meant to serve the student body.
Russ Johnson, Lawrence junior, is the host of "Talk Radio."
would be a blend of light humor and some serious issues, but that the show was not yet completely defined.
Johnson said that his show
"On our first official show we interviewed a New York police chief from the port authority about the bombing in the Trade Center, and we talked with an Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms agent whose partner was killed in the shootout in Waco, Texas," he said.
Margo Werber, station manager,
said the show was very popular
and had generated a lot of calls.
"We're extremely pleased with the show," Werber said.
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writer Todd Selfert, Vicki Bode, Mark Klefer and Eral Wolfe.
Eat, Drink, And Be Merry With Us On St. Patrick 's Day!
OREAD computer system clogged
"The answer is it has to be a reallocation within the existing budget," Niebaum said, adding that Academic Computing Services' budget did not allow for such flexibility.
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After more than a year in existence, OREAD, a computer system for KU students, is experiencing growing pains.
pains.
"When we originally set this up, we thought it could handle 300 at most," said Richard Kershenbaum, manager of technical support services in Academic Computing Services. "We can't meet the needs with the current system."
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Niemau said he hesitated to request money for programs such as OREAD while some faculty members were without microcomputers.
He said he was concerned that student systems like OREAD were not a high priority at KU.
were in an attempt to alleviate the burden on OREAD, some applicants are encouraged to sign up on VAX 9000, a similar system used primarily by research faculty, Niebium said.
A new system, which would catch the spill-over of OREAD users, is being considered, he said.
Kershenbaum said, "It's so popular because people have a natural human urge to communicate."
Crossen said that during the day OREAD took up to an hour and a half to connect to networks.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
JOHNNY'S
According to Jerry Niebaum, director of Academic Computing Services, a new, more efficient computer would cost about $15,000.
tent.
At KU, 810 students are registered to use the system, which is free to users. OREAD users can communicate
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Girardeau, Mo. junior. "I work different hours, and at 2 or 3 in the morning I can log on and it runs five to 10 times faster."
The overcrowding problem is magnified by the fact that the seven-year-old OREAD hardware, salvaged from the department of physics, is a fossil by computer standards and lacks power, Kershenbaum said.
The growing demand, coupled with the outdated hardware, has rendered OREAD sluggish in connecting its users to coveted networks of information and may prevent future students from getting OREAD accounts.
internationally through such services as electronic mail or Usenet News, a bulletin board forum.
"OREAD's main problem is that it's
slow," said Richard Crossen, Cape
Pupils learn about physics
Faculty, students show the science of KU basketball
LIONS
10-TON
KU women's basketball guard Shannon Kite stepped to the threepoint line yesterday in the Lawrence High School gymnasium and eared the rim.
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
She was about to demonstrate projectile motion.
nine was among students and faculty from KU who participated in a program, "The Physics of Sports and Dance," designed to show elementary students that science existed everywhere, not just in the classroom.
As Lawrence elementary school students watched, the senior drained four three-pointers in a row.
"We tried to connect science with the things they see every day and show them that they're not separate worlds," said Drew Dummer, Lawrence graduate student in physics.
Jerel Hilding, assistant professor of music and dance, and Maureen DuBois, Overland Park junior, leaped and spun, gracefully demonstrating how the human body adjusts to changes in its center of gravity.
gratey
"All of her body's weight has to be centered above that point of contact on her toe," said Barbara Twaro, professor of astronomy, who narrated much of the program.
Eric Southard, a nine-year-old Lawrence student, attempts to stay on a balcony beam, as Jeremy Manweller, Lawrence resident, explains the laws of physics at work. Southard volunteered during a physics demonstration put on yesterday by KU faculty and students in Lawrence High School.
Twarog said she wanted to break stereotypes that students had about science being "geeky and too hard."
Graduate students in physics demonstrated basic principles of motion by throwing a frisbee, firing an orange ball with a giant sling-shot, and hurling a Nerf boomerang.
booktalking
Program organizers said about 75 students attended the program, the
"At some point later they'll think back and say, 'Oh yeah, I remember something about that, and I understood for a minute how a curve ball curves or why a boomerang comes back," she said.
Praeger warns KU about cuts
second annual physics program sponsored by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department and KU's department of physical education.
Another nine-year-old, Eric Southard, volunteered to walk on a balance beam during the program. When someone handed him a bucket with a basketball in it, he teetered and fell from the beam. A narrator explained that Eric had trouble maintaining his center of gravity. But that wasn't all the nine-year-old learned. Eric said.
Nine-year-old Jeff Cravens attended the physics program with his mother but said he was not thrilled with the subject.
"I don't really like science," he said.
By Ben Grove
But he liked learning about it at the program better than at school.
Kansan staff writer
telling you," he said. "Here, they're showing you."
"Physics can be fun," he said
"In the classroom, they're just
With just a month to go in the state legislative session, State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, told KU administrators Saturday that Lawrence legislators were facing a struggle over the Board of Regents budget.
"I think from now on out, we're going to be trying to hold on," Praeger said at a meeting between Lawrence legislators and KU administrators.
registers Senate passed the $1,046 billion Regents budget last week, which included a 2.5 percent increase for faculty and student employees at the state universities.
The Regents had requested a 5.5 percent raise for faculty and a 5 percent raise for student employees.
The Senate passed the Regents budget Tuesday, Praeger said legislators had not yet exceeded the governor's proposed overall budget. If spending does exceed Joan Finney's proposal by the end of the session, the Legislature would consider across-the-board cuts.
Because the Regents budget is a large part of the overall budget — about 15 percent — across-the-board cuts would be bad news for the six Regent universities, she said.
"When we do across-the-board cuts, it hits higher education disproportionately harder than it hits many of the other agencies," she said.
the other agent the other agent She said that state legislators were nervous about the effect on state revenue of layoff announcements at Boeing and Sears in Wichita. She said legislators were hesitant to finance budget increases and new programs for any of the state's agencies.
By controlling its own tuition increases, KU would receive the money those increases would generate. As it is, the same tuition increase made at all the Regents universities merely increases the budget of the whole system, not of the individual schools.
Praeger said there was talk of finding new ways to finance the universities. One proposal would create a base budget that would remain the same each year. The universities would be guaranteed a 1 percent annual increase and would be allowed to set tuition increases.
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4
Monday, March 15. 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
IN OUR OPINION
Media give Westerners only negatives of Islam
Last Thursday, Mohammed Salameh, a New Jersey man described as a Muslim fundamentalist, was arrested in connection to the bombing of the World Trade Center. Also under investigation in connection with the incident is the Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, Mohammed's alleged religious leader. He has been linked to the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981. Rahman was acquitted of any wrongdoing. However, he is still closely monitored by the United States government for his openly radical and militant religious message.
Since the early 1980s, U.S. citizens have found a new adversary in radical Muslims who have declared jihad (holy war) on the Western world. This notion has become more prevalent since the end of the Cold War. Unfortunately, this perception has led to an underserved negative stereotype of Islam.
served negative scrutiny. The media can be blamed for reinforcing this generalization. In the wake of this latest incident and with ongoing tensions between the Middle East and Western nations, a constant negative picture has been impressed upon the minds of U.S. citizens of what the Muslim faith is and who the people are that follow its teachings.
This began with conflicts with the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran in the early '80s, Libya's Muammar Qaddafi during the late '80s, and finally with Saddam Hussein during the Persian Gulf war. Granted, these are events of terrorism and violence that are considered more newsworthy than more positive events. However, this type of coverage in the media is playing a tremendous role in perpetuating negative stereotypes of Islam to people in a predominantly Christian society who have little concept of what it means to be Muslim.
The notion that all Muslims are fundamentalists with militant tendencies who despise the Western world is simply not true. Aside from what we learn from the media, Islam has one of the largest followings in the world, with most of its followers concentrated in Arab and other Central Asian countries. Those factions of Islam that can genuinely be categorized as "fundamentalist," "radical" or even "militant" are, in proportion to the rest of the Muslim faith, "microscopic," according to Omar Jabara, system organizer at the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee in Washington D.C.
Unfortunately, it is solely this microscopic view that the U.S. public is exposed to and takes as the truth for all Muslims. Accordingly, it should be no surprise that during the gulf war in 1991, hate crimes against Muslims in the United States went up a staggering 300 percent. More recently, two of the national weekly news publications, Time and Newsweek, in their latest issues ran as their cover stories: "After the Blast: A Militant Islamic Link," and "In the Name of God — What happens when believers embrace the dark side of faith." The latter cover depicts the Sheik Rahman alongside David Koresh, the fundamentalist Christian who is currently in a standoff in Waco, Texas.
Although it is the smaller factions of the Muslim faith and their acts of terrorism and violence that warrant serious news coverage, the media should take on a more responsible role in ensuring that the negative stereotypes are not perpetuated. Likewise, the U.S public in general should be more receptive and open to understanding any religion or society that is not Western or Christian.
SIMON NALDOZA FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
DEPUTY ASSISTANT ASSOCIATE TO THE ANGILLARY SECRETARY ADJUNCT OF THE AUXILIARY COADJUTANT SUB-DEPARTMENT OF THE OFFICE OF SUPPORT SERVICES TO THE BRANCH DIVISION OF FISH AND FIREARMS
HE SAYS COME BACK NEXT WEEK.
ASSOCIATE SUB-SECRETARY IN THE DEPUTY ASSISTANT ANGILLARY
GORE EFFICIENCY IN GOVT COMM.
BUT CALL FIRST
UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATION
3 1947 THE BUFFALO NEW
Recruitment of football players degrades women
When a potential football recruit makes an official campus visit to the University of Kansas, he receives special treatment. In addition to extra attention from the football players and coaches, the football recruit is assigned a member of the KU Crinson Crew as an escort for the day. The purpose of the Crimson Crew hostess is no more than to show "a student's perspective" of KU, as RD. Helt, the head of the football recruiting program, said. However, for some reason this "student's perspective" comes from an attractive female. In order to make sure the recruits enjoy their visit to Kansas, the recruit is offered a pretty hostess to sit with and to talk to.
The duties of a Crimson Crew member include writing the recruit letters, showing the recruit around campus once he visits, eating lunch with him and then taking him to the game. The rules are made clear. A hostess must not buy the recruit anything of material worth. She cannot give him cash. She is also not supposed to date him. However, the Crimson Crew manual does state that "what you do with your own time is your business." The manual also encourages the hostesses to "try to get in his (the recruit's) comfort zone—let him tell you things he isn't telling the recruiters or other hostesses from other schools."
According to Jennifer Klemp, Leavenworth junior and 1929 Crimson Crew member, the group is not more than a "high-class football escrort service." Leah Davis, former Crimson member and Panhellenic vice president says she felt like "nothing more than a hostess, someone pretty for the recruits to sit with at the game."
This is not implying that any sexual favors are given to the recruits. Helt stresses over and again that "this is not a dating service." However, stressing this at the informational meeting for prospective Crimson Crew members caused two of the five men who showed up to think twice about joining. From the informational meeting, Tom Chadwell, Lenexa junior and Barry Ziglari, Chanute freshman, received the impression that the Crimson Crew is perfective legitimate. However, when asked if they were going to join the Crimson Crew, they both chuckled and shook their heads.
Vered Hankin
high school, and only in high school. Although Helt insists that the Crimson Crew is open to both men and women, the only two men in last year's group did not escort the recruits. They served as runners and helped to check the recruits in. Helt explained this difference as necessary so that none of the recruits would feel as if he were being treated differently. If one recruit has a male host while all the others have female hosts, he might feel as if he were being singled out. However, the Crimson Crew manual did not include males in its list of members. Also, in the Crimson and Blue football program, only females were in the Crew photo.
Chadwell pointed out that the application for Crimson Crew asks the applicants "How did you hear about crimson crew?" and gives the choices: a friend, the Kansan, a sorority house or flyer. In no place does it mention a fraternity or any other male organization. "It sounds like they are unintentionally trying to get female recruits. They're not turning guys away, but they're not encouraging them either," Chadwell said. Chadwell also said, "If girls sell the school, we better use them" and that "the thought of having a college girl write you a letter would be tempting to any high school guy."
Two years ago a postcard was sent out to the football recruits with the picture of the members of the KU Crimson Crew, no men included. The recruits were encouraged to come to KU for "the beautiful scenery," referring to the women in the picture. Ann Schofield, associate professor of Women's Studies and American Studies, said that the postcard indicates that the University endorses the notion of women as a commodity. By using sex to sell KU, the University presents itself as a place advocating good times and women as objects rather than a good education. As
Klemp put it, the recruiting program "wants the recruits to be attracted to the school not just for the school."
Although many feel that this negative portrayal of the Crimson Crew is unfounded, the stereotype of the Crimson Crew still exists. Mention the group and people will raise eyebrows, however, the hostess program at KU is not a dating service. Sexual relations are definitely discouraged and not condoned in any manner. The problem is not sexual, but it is sexist. Women are being portrayed as objects whose purpose is to serve the male athletes.
The NCAA has two rules that may be applied to possible situations. First, no recruit can receive any "extra benefits." Second, the recruit is not allowed any special favors. However, as Shane Lyons, legislative assistant of the NCAA said, the NCAA must look at each case separately. There is no way to regulate dating, he said. However, if every single recruite who goes to a certain school receives inappropriate favors, there might be a case.
I realize it is a lot to ask KU to give its hostess groups such as the football Crismon Crew and the baseball team's Diamond Crew. Other schools would definitely have an advantage over KU in the recruiting game. Comparable groups at other universities are named the Crismon and Cream at the University of Oklahoma and Catamount Kittens at Western Carolina University. Compared to these schools, KU is innocent. However, if the NCAA would ban such escort services, universities would have to find another way to recruit. If the true goal of Crismon Crew is, as Helt claims, to "show a student's perspective of KU," the recruit is welcome to attend the student ambassador tour of KU. He could also go through orientation or simply talk to the players.
EDITORIAL COMMENTS
EDITORIAL COMMENT
The services of the Crimson Crew are not needed. Unlike student ambassadors or orientation assistants, members of the Crimson Crew do not receive any official training. They are simply expected to smile pretty and make small talk. This idea of women is long outdated. There is no place for such a sexist attitude at any university.
Vered Hankin is an Overland Park sophomore majoring in comparative literature and women's studies.
Once again, the subject of qualified admissions for Kansas Board of Regents universities has reared its provocative head. The issue is, at once, old and new.
another high school graduation.
Both bills will be decided by the state House of Representatives at a later date.
On March 3, the state Senate passed a bill that requires students to meet at least one of three academic standards in order to be admitted: a 2.0 grade point average, a cumulative score of at least 65 in the top third of their high school class.
This issue is fraught with emotion. Certainly taxpayers should be able to send their children to any school that their dollars support. But in this case, we're talking about higher education and tuition that goes far beyond tax dollars. By the time students graduate from high school, they are expected to know how to read and write and apply mathematics.
apply thank yous
so they will tax dollars be used for professional program like KU's Supportive Educational Services?
Wouldn't the funds be better invested in additional courses for those who paid attention the first time around?
patience and paying attention wasn't enough. In the case of one SES student, it was discovered that she had a learning disability. Why didn't someone discover this years ago?
Perhaps the high school she attended was substandard. If that's the case, more money needs to be spent there, not here. The same may be said of lower schools where students certain ethnic and cultural backstones taught information pertinent to functioning in the "outside" world.
But a low-income area, where many of these students live, would not provide a tax base that supports quality education. Should educational quality be sacrificed elsewhere because of this inequity?
this nearly.
KU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences nearly matches a federal grant of about $160,000 for the SES program, which tutors about 250 students. Could those monies be redistributed for everyone's benefit?
— the federal grant to students preparing for college, the matching funds kept for improvement in the college?
compete.
A Kansan article quoted a state senator opposed to qualified admissions as saying his son would not have been admitted under qualified conditions. The boy, however, went on to earn a master's degree.
Residents of Kansas need qualified admissions
What does this say about the policy? Would it discriminate against "late bloomers," as some claim? What does this say about the boy? Did he finally decide, after foofing around school, to take a responsible attitude toward his studies? Or did time and adequate atmosphere improve his ability?
r president Clinton is working on several plans to provide higher education to anyone who wants it. But he is attempting to deal only with the financial disparities of our present system.
If this suggestions, such as community service to repay college loans, come to pass, perhaps he'll also be able to figure out how to assure quality secondary education so those who do want more will be motivated and prepared when the time comes to get it.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Editors
Asst Managing... Justin Knupp
News... Monique Gusialm
Features... Lymne McAdoo
Graphics... Dan Shauger
SteVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr... Brad Breon
Regional Sales mgr... Wade Baxter
Goo-p sales mgr... Ashley Hessel
Production mgr... Amy Stumbo
Marketing director... Angela Cleverange
Creative director... Holly Perry
Classified mgr... Jill Torney
Art Director... Hafagher
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include their class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
Gravitas should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be audited or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
CECILE
JULIAN
Cecilia Julian is a Leawood senior majoring in journalism.
STAFF COLUMNIST
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 15, 1993
5
Wildcats tear up top-seeded Jayhawks
Daron J. Bennett/ KANSAN
AS 32
Kansas State senior forward Vincent Jackson drives around Kansas junior forward Darin Hancock. Jackson finished with a game high 25 points and was one of four Wildcats who scored in double digits in K-State's 74-67 victory Saturday. Junior guard Anthony Beane, senior forward Aaron Collier, and junior guard/forward Askia Jones also scored in double figures.
Late surge helps K-State win semifinal
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
"It was a total breakdown of our team, and that's my responsibility."
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas coach Roy Williams wandered down a long, Kemper Arena corridor. When he reached the doorway to his team's locker room, he did not enter. He continued down the hallway — alone.
Kansas senior point guard Adonis Jordan said the players were to blame.
Whathas blamed you? "This is the poorest coaching job I ever done," he said, "I've always said if you can't dunk it, don't try to. And we were coming down and shooting three-pointers on the break.
Williams had just explained at a post-game news conference the Jayhawks' 74-67 Big Eight Tournament loss to Kansas State.
batter.
"We's all up to us," Jordan said. "We have to go out there and play. We're 25-6. He couldn't have done that bad of a job coaching."
Williams blamed himself.
The Wildcats, who lost yesterday 68-56 to Missouri in the championship game, surged late in the second half against Kansas with an 14-4 run.
K-State had trailed 50-40 with 12:38 remaining after Kansas junior forward Steve Woodberry put in a shot missed by Kansas senior center Eric Pauley.
Kansas senior guard Rex Walters, who scored 22 points in Friday's 82-65 first-round victory against Colorado, scored 10 points against K-State.
With 1.09 remaining, Beane hit a 21-
foot three-pointer over Jordan and gave
the Wildcats their first lead of the
second half at 68-65.
"They went up by 10 today, and we kept our composition," said K-State junior point guard Anthony Beane.
the Wildcats surged, the Jayhawks broke down.
And Pauley, with 45 seconds remaining, missed what he called "the stupidest shot" he had ever taken, his first career three-point attempt.
Kansas sophonome center Greg Ostertag, normally a back-to-the-basket player, fired up a 16-foot jump shot that bounced off the rim.
"I didn't want to be too close to him because of my leg," said Jordan, who had aggravated a stress fracture in his lower left leg early in the first half. "I'd rather have him take a long shot than penetrate."
scores of pointers.
"I didnt play the way I should have played, but there is a tomorrow," Walters said. "I'll bounce back."
several possessions later, Jordan,
on the right side of the court, sensed
that the left side was open and rifled a
pass — to no one.
the tomorrow for the Jayhawks is
Thursday in Rosemont, Ill., a suburb
Player fgm/tga ftm/ta tp
Jackson 6-12 11/12 12
Coller 5-8 1-2 4
Graham 2-5 1-4 8
Beane 7-11 3-6 19
Jones 5-11 0-0 11
Lucas 0-2 0-0
Henson 0-4 0-0
McHyreye 0-5 0-0
Totals 25-53 19-23
Kansas State 74, Kansas 67
of Chicago, where they will play Ball State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
we've put what happened this weekend behind us," Williams said yesterday in Lawrence after learning that his team was the Midwest Region's second seed. "We're looking at it like we have one game left in the season, and we have to play our tails off."
Kansan sportswriter
Halftime Kansas 33, Kansas State 23, 5-point
goals Kansas 33, Jackson 21, Beavers 2,
Bucks 17, Leafy 18, Oklahoma 14, Rochester 1,
Royals 17, Leafy 1, Woodbury 0, Rochester 1,
Royals 0, Rebounds 0, Anteaters 0, Kansas State 1
(Antelope) Kansas State 10 (Beaver 5), Kansas State 13 (Jordan), Kansas State 23 (Trophy) 5 points
fought Kansas 16, Kansas 18 Attendance
KANSAS
Hancock 1.3 1.2 3
Lansing 1.8 0.1 10
Pauley 5-14 2.3 12
Walters 3-13 3.4 10
Jordan 5-10 0.0 13
Woodberry 4-9 0.2 10
Gurley 0.0 0.0 0
Cheshire 1.3 3.3 5
Rayford 0.1 0.0 0
Ostertling 2.6 0.0 4
Totals 26-67 11-15 67
'Hawks get home-court start
The Kansas women's basketball team hopes there is no place like home.
By Jay Williams
The Jayhawks, 21-8, will play host to California in the first round of the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Allen Field House.
California, 19-8, earned an at-large bid after finishing in a fourth-place tie in the Pacific 10 Conference
Kansas received the home-court advantage thanks to its strong finish. The Jayhawks have won seven in a row and 10 of their last 11 games. Kansas has beaten No. 9 Colorado. No. 20 Nebraska and No. 25 Oklahoma State in the last three weeks but has not played since Monday, when
Women's Basketball KU
the team clinched the Big Eight Conference Tournament title with a 64-60 victory against the Cornhuskers.
Despite the layoff, the momentum built during their late-season rush will help the Jayhawks Wednesday, freshman guard Charisse Sampson said.
"Those wins give us more confidence in ourselves," she said.
The Golden Bears are 4-4 in their last eight games.
"We would have liked to have a stronger finish," California coach Gooch Foster said.
on the road to open the NCAA tournament. She said that she was glad she did not have to play against West Coast teams that knew the Golden Bears' tendencies.
The two combine for 28.8 points, 8.7 rebounds and 10.2 assists a game.
beas's a hatcher.
"To be truthful, we're glad to be out of the West," she said. "We think it gives us an advantage."
Ukrainian.
"It doesn't matter if you know what Ukradinovic is doing," she said. "She'll do it anyway."
Foster said she did not mind going
But Stanford coach Tara Van-Derverve, whose team lost to California once this season, said advance knowledge did not help in stopping Vukadinovic.
Washington and the rest of the Jayhawk coaching staff spent yesterday scrambling to find out about their first-round opponent.
The dayhawks might want to swing by the office of international studies and programs to do their research because the Bears rely on two foreign players who form one of the most productive backcourts in the nation: senior guard Milica Vukadinovic and sophomore guard Jack Lear.
Lear, from Gold Coast, Australia,
scored 20 Saturday in the season
finale against Oregon. She averages
12.6 points and 4.1 assists a game.
Vukadinovic, a 6-foot-12 year old from Belgrade, Yugoslavia, has been called by many coaches on the West Coast the female equivalent of Magic Johnson. She averages 16.2 points, 5.2 rebounds and 6.1 assists a game.
Foster said that she liked playing against a team that had not seen Vukadinovic this season because California used her in many roles.
KANSAS BRIEFS
Kansas will not have any divers competing at this year's NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships. None of the Jayhawks who participated at the NCAA Zone meet in Austin, Texas, qualified for the championships.
Divers fail to qualify for championships
Kansan staff report
Freshman Kris Hoffman was 19th.
Junior Tim Davidson finished 11th, but only the top nine divers qualified for the men's NCAA Championships in Indianapolis March 25-27.
for the women, sophomore Amy Graham placed 19th, and sophomore Erika Rasmusson placed 20th.
Two track athletes compete at indoors
Kansan staff report
Senior high jumper MaryBeth Labosky and junior mueller Michael Cox competed at the NCAA Indoor Championships this weekend at the Hoosierdome in Indianapolis.
Cox made the finals in the mule and finished ninth with a time of 4:09.02. Niall Bruton of Arkansas won the event in 4:00.05.
Labosky, who earned All-America honors by placing sixth in last year's NCAA Outdoors, failed to place in the top six. Her best jump was 5-10. Arizona high jumper J.C. Brunton captured the title by clearing an NCAA record 6-3%.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas splits double header
Baseball KU
Grand slam powers Jayhawks to victory; Iowa wins game two
By Brady Prauser Kansan sportswriter
Despite batting back from a 6-0 deficit to win the first game of a 2-0 header with Iowa yesterday, Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham was less than happy with his team's performance in both games.
"We were very fortunate to win the first ball game," Bingham said. "We didn't play very well. It wasn't a very fundamental baseball approach."
kansas was behind 6-0 after five innings before scoring two runs in the sixth inning and one run in the seventh to make the score 7-3. The bases were loaded when Rude stepped to the plate in the eighth inning.
Powered by an eighth-inning grand-slam by sophomore shortstop Dan Rude, Kansas won the first game 7-6 but lost 9-5 to the Hawkeys in game two. The loss, the Jayhawks' first at home, snapped Kansas' seven-game winning streak and dropped it to 10-4.
the place to be the hitter.
Rude, the No. 9 hitter in the batting order, launched a fast ball from Iowa starting pitcher Dave Weilbrenner over the left-center field fence, giving Kansas a 7-1 lead.
Senior right-hander David Soult started game one. Freshman Clay Baird relieved Soult in the second inning after giving up eight hits.
Iowa coach Duane Banks said his team's loss in the first game was difficult to stomach.
"Those are tough when one pitch makes the difference in the game, when the nine-hole hitter hits it about nine miles," Banks said.
Rude said hitting the grand slam was one of the highlights of his career.
"Or the nightingale that
"I's just an incredible feeling," Rude said.
Baird pitched two- and one-third innings, giving up two hits and no earned runs when senior Jimmy Walker relieved him in the top of the seventh innning. Walker gave up one hit and struck out six in the final three innings for the victory. He is 2-1.
Kansas scored first in game two, with one run in the first inning, but gave up 13 hits and committed three errors in the game.
senior Tom Stewart, 3-1, pitched four-and one-third innings, giving up seven hits and seven earned runs for his first loss. Freshman Jamie Splitorff and junior David Meyer combined to pitch the final two- and two-thirds innings of the double header. The second games of double headers last seven innings.
The Jayhawks were victimized by a five-for-five performance at the plate by Iowa fieldier Jay Polson.
Bingham said the Kansas hitters were not as aggressive as he would have liked.
"We were a little defensive today," he said. "We didn't challenge them the
iowa 9, Kansas 5, second game
| | ab | r | h | rb |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| cf Reed | 5 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
|lf Poison | 5 | 3 | 5 | 1 |
|rf Kraus | 5 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
|3b Morris | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
|1b Lewis | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
|ss Edie | 4 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
|2b Larsen | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
dh Potter | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
c Fishman | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
|3 | 13 | 9 | 17 |
**KANASI (105)**
| | ab | r | h | rbl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2b Belerling | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| cf Morone | 3 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| if Iguo | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| c Niemeyer | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 1b Waycheck | 4 | 0 | 3 | 1 |
| fr Tardinio | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 3b Wilhelm | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| dh King | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
sa Rude | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | 27 | 5 | 7 | 3 |
lowa IP H H R R ER BB SO
Weiner, 5.1 1.0 2 R E B SO
Small 1.0 2 3 2 2
Beigler 0.2 0 0 0 1 1
Kansas IP H H R R ER BB SO
Stewart 4.1 7 4 4 2 5
Spitfortorf 1.1 3 3 1 0 1
Meyer 1.1 3 2 0 1 0
E Edde, Fisherman, Birdbinger, Woychck, Wielheim LD Bowna B, Kaisers 28 Bison, Eddie, Larsen, Monroe, Iguene, Igemeiner 38 Poison, Eddie S8 Wu check (3), Monroe (7)
way I would like to have seen us. There's no magic solution to it, other than to go out and hit."
Kansas plays six home games in the next six days, playing Northwest Missouri State at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Single games with Emporia State and Washburn, and three games with Chicago State are scheduled Wednesday through Sunday.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 15, 1993
7
TOURNAMENT TIME
Men's Division I
Semifinals
New Orleans
April 3
regional champions
The final
April 5
1993 NCAA
FINAL
FOUR
NEW ORLEANS
regional champions
First Round
March 18-19
1. Kentucky
16. Rider
8. Utah
9. Pittsburgh
5. Wake Forest
12. Chattanooga
4. Iowa
13. NE Louisiana
Second Round
March 20-21
Regionals
March 25-28
Second Round
March 20-21
North Carolina 1.
East Carolina 16.
Rhode Island 8.
Purdue 9.
St. John's 5.
Texas Tech 12.
Arkansas 4.
Holy Cross 13.
EAST
Meadowlands Arena
East Rutherford, N.J.
Virginia 6.
Manhattan 11.
Massachusetts 3.
Pennsylvania 14.
New Mexico St. 7.
Nebraska 10.
Cincinnati 2.
Coppin St. 15.
McKale Center, Tuscon, Azt.
1. Michigan
16. Coastal Carolina
8. Iowa St.
9. UCLA
5. New Mexico
12. George Wash.
4. Georgia Tech
13. Southern
WEST
The Kingdome
Seattle, Wash.
6. Illinois
11. Long Beach St.
3. Vanderbilt
14. Boise St.
7. Temple
10. Missouri
2. Arizona
15. Santa Clara
MIDWEST
St. Louis Arena
St. Louis, Mts.
Indiana 1.
Wright St. 16.
New Orleans 8.
Xavier (Oh.) 9.
Oklahoma St. 5.
Marquette 12.
Louisville 4.
Delaware 13.
California 6.
LSU 11.
Duke 3.
Southern Illinois 14.
BYU 7.
SMU 10.
KANSAS 2.
Ball St. 15.
1993 NCAA BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
First Round March 18-19
1. Kentucky
16. Rider
8. Utah
9. Pittsburgh
5. Wake Forest
12. Chattanooga
4. Iowa
13. NE Louisiana
Second Round March 20-21
Regionals March 25-28
Men's Division I
Semifinals New Orleans April 3
regional champions
SOUTHEAST
Charlotte Coliseum Charlotte, N.C.
6. Kansas St.
11. Tulane
3. Florida St.
14. Evansville
7. W. Kentucky
10. Memphis St.
2. Seton Hall
15. Tennessee St.
The final April 5
1993 NCAA FINAL FOUR NEW ORLEANS
regional champions
MCKALE CENTER, Tuscon, AZ.
8. Iowa St.
9. UCLA
5. New Mexico
12. George Wash.
4. Georgia Tech
13. Southern
6. Illinois
11. Long Beach St.
3. Vanderbilt
14. Boise St.
7. Temple
10. Missouri
2. Arizona
15. Santa Clara
WEST
The Kingdome Seattle, Wash.
regional champions
MIDWEST
St. Louis Arms St. Louis, Mo.
Indiana 1.
Wright St. 16.
New Orleans 8.
Xavier (Oh.) 9.
Oklahoma St. 5.
Marquette 12.
Louisville 4.
Delaware 13.
California 6.
LSU 11.
Duke 3.
Southern Illinois 14.
BYU 7.
SMU 10.
KANSAS 2.
Bail St. 15.
Women's Division I
First Round March 17
1. Ohio St.
Vermont
Rutgers
Miami (Fla.)
St. Peter's
4. W. Kentucky
3. Penn St.
Georgetown
Northern Illinois
Bowling Green
Florida
2. Virginia
1. Tennessee
Northwestern
Georgia Tech
Alabama
Georgia Southern
4. North Carolina
3. Auburn
Connecticut
Louisville
Old Dominion
Tennessee Tech
EAST
Richmond, Va.
The final, April 4
NCAA WOMEN'S FINAL FOUR ATLANTA 1993
regional champions
Regionals March 25-27
Second Round March 20-21
First Round March 17
Vanderbilt 1.
KANSAS
California
Clemson
Xavier (Oh.)
Texas 3.
Louisiana Tech
DePaul
SW Missouri St.
Oklahoma St.
Stanford 1.
Georgia
San Diego St.
UCSB
BYU
Colorado 4.
Southern Cal 3.
Nebraska
San Diego
Washington
Montana St.
WEST
Missouri, Mont.
Women's Division I
First Round March 17
Second Round March 20-21
Regionals March 25-27
Semifinals Atlanta April 3
Regionals March 25-27
Second Round March 20-21
First Round March 17
1. Ohio St.
Vermont
Rutgers
Miami (Fla.)
St. Peter's
4. W. Kentucky
3. Penn St.
Georgetown
Northern Illinois
Bowling Green
Florida
2. Virginia
EAST Richmond, Va.
The final, April 4
NCAA WOMEN'S FINAL FOUR ATLANTA 1993
regional champions
MIDWEST Nacogdoches, Texas
Texas 3.
Louisiana Tech
DePaul
SW Missouri St.
Oklahoma St.
1. Tennessee
Northwestern
Georgia Tech
Alabama
Georgia Southern
4. North Carolina
3. Auburn
Connecticut
Louisville
Old Dominion
Tennessee Tech
2. Iowa
regional champions
WEST Missoula Mont.
Stanford 1.
Georgia
San Diego St.
UCSB
BYU
Colorado 4.
Southern Cal 3.
Nebraska
San Diego
Washington
Montana St.
8
Monday, March 15, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Potholes dent KU's budget
Ice is main reason for damage to roads
By Dan England
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
Potholes are costing the University $150,000 and generating some extra work for facilities operations.
The extra money and effort are needed to repair the holes and cracks on most of the roads on campus. Each snow this winter meant that more road work would have to be done, said Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations.
"Iwould look out the window during one of our snowstorms and I'd think 'not again,' Richardson said.
facilities operations crews began to fill most of the potholes on the roads two weeks ago. However, the repairs are temporary. Crews will fix the holes permanently this summer, said Steve Helsen, associate director of facilities operations.
The crews are filling the potholes with a temporary cold asphalt mix.
tatter this summer, they will repair the holes with a hot mix.
The money for the cold mix repair comes out of facilities operations' general fund. However, the work done this summer with the hot mix will have to come out of money that the Kansas Legislature receives from property taxes. The Legislature intentionally underestimates the money that it will receive from taxes to provide for such projects, Richardson said.
Helsel said that ice had caused the most damage. When water freezes in cracks in the road, it exerts 30,000 pounds per square inch of force on the concrete, pushing it up and breaking it away from the ground, he said.
"Moisture is the enemy of good pavement," Helsel said.
Although this winter was the main cause of the poor condition of the roads, Richardson said the roads needed repair before the season began.
The roads have gotten progressively worse in the six-and-a-half years
Patching KU's potholes
After a potpole is "cleaned out," or made more concave shaped using a jackhammer, it can be filled in two ways. The process facilities operations has used for the last two weeks uses a cold mix of asphalt. This method is inexpensive, but the mixture dresses itself since it is never damaged. The other method of patching a potpole uses a hot mixture, where the asphalt is heated to 380° (water boils at 210°).
---
Source: Facilities Operations
I've been here," he said.
This winter also was the most expensive for facilities operations since Richardson has been here, he said. Last winter, the department spent $30,000 on snow removal. This year required more than $120,000.
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Daily Re-affirmation
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CONGRATULATIONS
1993-1994
SUA COORDINATORS
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Spectrum Films - Shannon Skelton
Fine Arts - Danielle Raymond
Forums - David Stevens
Videos
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Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the college
Criteria may include the following:
outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator,and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
How lucky can ye be?
St. Patrick's Day
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office, 864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to one single-spaced page.
Sendyour nominations to: Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045. Deadline is April 2, 1993
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Achievements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
138 Entertainment
130 Lost and Found
200s
2005 Employment
2025 Help Wanted
2025 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any ad蓬豢entirement for housing or employment that discribes against any person or organization of the region, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal for a person to own an apartment or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handback, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or dislike.
warm readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
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105 Personals
Amy,
H-M-K-N, RH-RK I love you
Roses are red, violets are blue
Happy Birthday Megan and Marnie Love, The Gale
Andrew
Roses are red. The Mist I mat outside of Wescuse last Nov. I'm looking for you. Hints, baseball cap, nursing student, sophomore, wide of Toppea, may apply Bob 20, c/o The University Daly Kansan.
Happy Birthday
P
Shelley SMG Holmes
---
110 Bus. Personals
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The Mt. Shop
$35-$49.95
Bausch & Lomb Rax-Ban and Viurnet-France
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 943-0611
Watkins Health Center
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon-Fri 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Sat 11 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon-Fri 4 30 p.m. - 10 p.m.
Sat 11 30 p.m. - 4 30 p.m.
Sun 8 a.m. - 4 30 p.m.
Students
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
120 Announcements
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
At the Beach!
**Party with the Best**
Hotels or Condos with Per Person Package of $250 / Person/Per Night, Sunchase and Saida units starting at $24 Per Person/Per Night Taxes Not included
Locks up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $80. 100% Guarantee.
(90) 215-456-7900
*or anonymous info and support for AIDS cemer*
*call 641-2545. Headquarters.*
400s Real Estate
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to R...
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
People with insulin-dependent diabetes:
Call 864-4076 to inquire about the diabetes study
Earn cash when participating in an exercise study.
If anyone saw an accident last lusts (Mar 2) at 23rd and Nailsmith. Please call 865-9400
CERTAIN Please call 865-7940
MIRACLE VIDEO
$14.95 Adult Video Sale
$12.95 Adult DVD
190 Haskell, 841-7940
QUESTIONS? Call Buscalw, Gay, and Lesbian Peer Counseling, Free, confidential referrals through Headquarters (814.245) or KU Info (864-3590). Called returned.
Obedience Classes - Lawrence Jayhawk Kennel
Club 9 week课程
Middle School 17: 7: 20am, 17: 3: 45pm, national
Guard Armory. Orientation 8pm. Cell Bar Clarion
B42-4844, or Lee Bidy 13: 57am-17: 40 For more info
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 814-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
YOU'RE NOT ALONE! Bisexual, Gay, and Lesbian Support Group on Tuesday at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters (814-2345) or KU Info (864-3306) for confidential location
130 Entertainment
SKI Colorado
Ski area Classic
Spring Break quad occupancy. Daytona Beach
2/7-16/19 7p36 Fri 7p19-18u, bus, room, limiled
2/7-16/19 7p36 Fri 7p19-18u
Discount Lift Tickets
Mangage 356 28
Keystone 38 28
Copper Mountain 37 28
Park 36 26
- Call to order lift tickets
tickets can be delivered
- lift tickets are fully refundable
* lift tickets must be ordered in advance to ensure Availability
Classic Travel & Tours (913) 537-7546
Live Comedy
National touring comedians performing routines seen on HBO and Showtime Wednesday March 17 AT BENCHWARMERS 50 cent draws
AT
140 Lost & Found
Lost: wallet 2nd student room in the lattice rest room, soft cloth, blue cloth. If found call Lili Ai
Substantial Reward: Information leading to
return of Silver Bach Stradivarius Trumpet.
Model 5180-37 Serial #22108, Case #1804. Call
Collect W. (318) 531-2133
男士厕所
女士厕所
200s Employment
205 Help-Wanted
'ELEMARKETING' Salary plus commission
venings. Call 041-1289
1
100
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 15, 1993
9
2 males or 2 females required for Job Share/Live in Personal Care Attendant (pre nursing, premed, pre O T, P: T or Speech Pathology student-ideal) with former Professor Maximum assistance on lifting床. Preference experience, but will train. Live in separate quarters of private residence. 2 beds, bath, living area. Exchange rent for service (plus wk-weekdays) . Phone after 844-3370
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, $100 more each plus RAB Mace. Marseeg 176 Maple Nild. IL
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
hands, nurse housekeeper, maintenance person
80306 1032 445-697, Camp B5, Box 711, Boiler
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH
NABBIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
CITY OF LAWRENCE SUMMER JOBS
The City is accepting applications for all summer part- and full-time positions. Positions are available online.
OUTDOOR DAY PROGRAM-SPECIALISTS
SPORTS INSTRUCTORS
PLAYGROUND PROGRAM
MUNICIPAL P.O.
SPECIAL POPULATIONS PROGRAM
CONCERTS
MAINTENANCE AND LABORER
INSPECTIONS
$$$
Spring Break Party Cash!
New Donors earn $25 for 1st 2 plasma donations in 1 week Return donors earn up to $135 per month! 740.5750
749-5750
Counselors/Support
816 W 24th
study children's camps/northeast top salary,
rm blah, laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill
in basketball, soccer, football, basketball, baskets, bicycling, crafts, drama, dramas, drumming, fencing hoof, football golf, guitar.
Playground equipment, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, piano, rocketry, rollerblading, roses, sailboats, gymnastics, weightlifting, weights, wood support, staff-kitchen steward,
bakers' work clothes, men or write or call: Camp Winadu, 3 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N Y. 10540
1911-381-968. Women call Jennifer Wheelner at 841-
Evening wait person(s) wanted. Chinese restaurant. Experience required. Minimal knowledge of Lawrence areas. Be dependable. hard working. Apply Peking Restaurant, 749-6033. Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school. Take on duties including food preparation necessary, cattle and maintenance experience preferred. Resume to Wakarua Partners, P.O. Box 1751, Kansas, KS 60444
Line缆车 line level on board/landside positions
transportation paid. a) 12 hrs round, great pay
transportation paid. a) 12 hrs
Line up your summer job now. We are currently hiring a Marketing Manager in May Only drug free, non smoking individual. Call 913-525-6326. Numbine Combining IIM Models needed $175-$300 and TV/Film needs $149-$200.
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" & "The Men of Kansas City" calendars *Plea call*
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make $2,000
+ per month teaching you basic math.
The school is located in Manyville. Many provide room and board + other benefits. No previous training or teaching certificate required. For position,
please send resume to: Job ID # 1803185.
Models wanted for "Girl of Kansas City" and "Men of Kansas City" calendars. Please Call Tony
Nation positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii, summer/yr Round great. Pay.
Need babysitter in our home for two boys & 7;
non-smokers only - 10pm to 5:30 p.m *Call*
*SEND A REQUEST FOR SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION*
Need Daycare in our home for 2 year old. B m to 6.
2 pm M - F $100 per week. B m to 8. Call 734-559-2300.
NEEDED 100 people to lose weight NOW. NO WILL POWEREDENew brand, just patented, 100% natural, 100% guaranteed, Dr. recommended. (363) 778-3854
Spring and summer employment position available for pool service technician. Must have knowledge of pool water chemistry and/or pool cleaning procedures. Please call 843-6527 for an appointment.
Summer Positions Available
Dort's Bar & Grill on Country Club
Pred. F. O'Hair & Grill on Country Club Plaza seeks personal, quality minded people to fill server, cook and bartending positions Day or Night, full-time or part time. Experience in but not mandatory. Apply by
person after 3p m at. fred P' O'Hl's 4770 J.C
Carpark Pathway 6591 N. 82nd St. Mina for
Mina for 8291 N. 8287 St. (861) 753-2887
Tennis jule-summer in camps-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Men call Jennifer Wheeler at 841-6000 Men call or Jenifer Wheeler at 841-6000 Marmorac, N.Y. 19543 (841) 381-5003
Waterfront Job: WS-Summer children's camp-northeast men and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterski (saluon) trick, hockey, lacrosse, golf. Good salary, room & board. travel allowance. Call or write. Camp Wunda, 8 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, NY 10573. Email wunda@waterski.watercenter.org Wheater at 841-8900
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUTS'
Fake ID'S & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 Ease 13th 842-1133
FREE MONEY for holiday avail include Financial
Money to ESSMs Co P Box 42341 or InRr income
from ESMS to ESSMs Co P Box 42341
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 834-4023
Promo Photos and Headshots. B&W Darkroom.
Fast Service. Firstlight Photography . #641-4234
SWDr.seeks M/F "Let's Talk About Sex"
235 Typing Services
$1. Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check
rush jobs. Call Paul 749-4648
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transfer her word processing into accurate pages of letter formats: 852-2603
AFDOWARD TYPING & EDITING. Honors
English Grad will type 4 editable any paper 24 hrs.
a day. Tutoring aural. Near campus. Lowest rates in
linen.832-1296
Expet typing by experienced secretary IBH Corp-
lawyer. Call Mrs. Matilia Mati 812-159 Eight
Lawrence, Call Mrs. Matilia Mati 812-159
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Corners.
No calls AFTER 934.845-8386
word processing, applications, term papers,
dissertation resumes, Editing, composition,
russellism, writing style, language skills.
Word processing, thesis dissertations, papers,
experiments, a new rev. of engines,
engineering, Call Me Engineer
X
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
7-day round trip airline ticket to exciting South
Miami, Florida for $150 | Leave March 29,
1963 Must be 18 years
Acoustic Gibson Epiphone钢琴 with hard case.
Rare used. $500. Call 767-6268. Robin NOW
@noblepiano.com
Aquaria for (1) 140 gallon includes base, top lights, power and undergallery $750 and (2) 200 gallon includes stand, top lights, undergallery filter. 2 power filters at £99 call 847-1013
Bianchi Bianchi cross i400 $460 bianchi road 968m
Call. Nagel B42-609 $150 wheels $150m, call
Nagel B42-609
SEIZED CARS
Computers: New and Used
P.C. Compatibles
P.C. Source 823-1126
Trucks, Boats, 4 wheeler,
motorhomes, by FBI, IRA, DEA.
Available in your area now
Call 1-800-436-4363 ext. C-2888
Fernandes PA-15 Amplifier. Convenient size: 13" x 17"
x 7", used for 20 times, $150 or best offer
For Sale New 92 Specialized Hard Rock Sport.
many extra's Great price 842-9383
Honda Elite 80 1990 Model low mileage, good
condition. Available for best offer or
best price at cell 820-001-8000.
Sail boat 16 ft Catamaran with trailer $300 or
offer Call 1-831-0942, evenings at 6pm
Snowboard Burton 165 $125, skis 185 & pole $30
skis boot 105 & legs call. Nail Call 842-5568
Specialized Rockhopper Sport, lock and light $350
JBL Speaks $101; Call 842-7089
@ Subaru DL, FWD, AT PS, PB, AM/FM Class,
@ Cold Winter Car $380 $460 #422-424 Leave
HOMES
1988 Mazda RX7 XSE burgundy/灰, 5 speed
1988 Mazda RX7 XSE burgundy/灰, 5 speed
63-078 or 67-088船, PB cruise, power roof Call
4bdm. Apl-summer subcases needed, Orchard
Apl-20th, 29nd, bush,床, laundry, Call 811
10:30am - 6:30pm
405 For Rent
85 Ford temp glac G/L A/C Automatic. Clean but
slight front temperature or negligible. 864-6211
$-member cooperative, near campus/downstreet
$-member cooperative, Greenbush off-street parking
award garden, in yard
HKEYCU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apart-
ment, 365 Lexington Rd. KC, PA 19028,
Luxury Hi Rise Living. Limited Entry, Hatch
& Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa
guards. 365 Rainbow Hill KC R V 6165 Arrows
Avenue, 365 Lexington Rd. KC, PA 19028.
For less 4 BR Townhouse, $2,600
$760 per month or $800 with water & dryer. Avail
on weekends only.
1 BR Bur, apt. available now. New paint + min blinds. 1 yr lease 843-4217
400s Real Estate
Available Now furnished Rws. / wash | dish kitchen & bath freshroom | kuw | oi | off street store | C941-856-3201 | C941-856-3201
BEAT THE CROWd! Everyone wants these apts. for August, but if you can take one June, you can take another. You will need buildings at West Hill Apts 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near new NC. NO PPTS 841-3900 or -866-279-8510.
NOISMATSH 3 X 4 R 2 Bath Lg. rooms micro, enclosed laundry variable locations 1-696-797-001 variable locations 1-696-797-001
House for rent 12 bd rn lease, no peta 843-443-
LEASE NOW for RALLY FOON: 3 BD + BRUDS
on bus line Residential garage PA CF WA
ndable table 843-774 after Owner Agent
JUPLEX for RENT: Three bedroom,
bath, attached garage: 209-11 University Call
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 1. 3 yr-old, luxury alps, close to campus. All MRC, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appli. 2 yr-old, luxury alps. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 748-116
Bird
Ouail Creek
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Nice, quiet 3 BBP寝 in southwest location. All kitchen appli. C/A, gas, heat. 1' BA, W/D hookups. garage. No pets. References. $40/mo.
847.7988
2111 Kasold843-4300
MUS Sub-lease starting April 1 In furnished one
bedroom HUSBAND w/mic. lc, loc. iu $860/mm2
room
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
Boardwalk
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
524 Frontier 842-4444
at Aspen West Apartments, board 2 BR 18
no pets, water on bus, on road. 865-200
for rent.
Now leasing for Fall
Omaha BR, near campus. Avail. June 1. Hard-
edged. 426.493.471.81
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Spacious 2 bedroom
>Laundry facility
>Swimming Pool
>Waterbed allowed
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
2126 W 85th St
Now taking students to summer/fall leasing
Mont-Franc for App. 843-644-2166
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
S
Naismith Place
Swan Management
·Graystone
·1-2-3 bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
Spacious 2 bedrm apt. Summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3629
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
843-4754 (call for appt.)
- 2 bedroom (1&1/2 baths)
- 3 bedroom (2 baths)
- laundry facilities
- quiet location
Sublueza 3 bedroom / 2 bath. Furnished apt., close to campus, avail. May-15 Aug 19.
-1 bedroom
- on-site management
*Some with Fireplaces
*On KU Bus Route
*Swimming Pool and
Tennis Courts
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom TownHomes
•Garages: $ \frac{2}{3} $Baihs
841-8400
841-128
*Garages;2 1/2 Baths
- Microwave Ovens
meadowbrook
The Perfect Apartment!
- Some with Fireplaces
- 28 IHR from 9:30S
* Juice bar and juice box route
* Private batehouses/Parks
* Pd cable TV/TVPs
* On-site management
* On-site Dustfall * CQ. 841-1855
* Office Hours
* 1-6pm or 2-5am
* Or Call for Appointments
200
*Luxurious 2,3, &4
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and waiting for you!
NOW
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
Summer & Fall Lease Furnished 1 & 2 bdmr
& Parking KU W/ off-street parking, no
pets. Cali 841-758-9600
Summer sublease studio apt at Trailridge
Available May! On bus route $100/mo
at Trailridge, 5765 Main St, NW.
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
841-3800 Now Leasing for June or August
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
$245 off
*2 bedroom apts. 950 sqft
$375 to $450 per month
WATERPROOF ADDITIONAL APTS
GREAT LOCATION Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed, Thurs
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for
info or appt.
SUMMER BURLEASE: Spacious 2 bedroom Appt on bus route, close to campus and downtown. Designated quiet bldg. A great deal at $395 mo. Call 832-2348.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!
No Appt Necessary
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Two bfrm. furnished. apt. Now - Aug 31. Call 864-809
or 864-8583. Price negotiable.
---
2 Pools
Volleyball Court
On KU Bus Route with
4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
Super-huge + 4 bdm house near campus for summer sublease with option for fall. Wood floors, 2 kitchens, 3 porches, a/c / & baths $800 per month for summer. Call 842-4026.
FURNISHED
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House. Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0848. Stop by 140 Tennessee
Hookups
OPENDAILY
Studios,1,2,2+3,& 4 bdrm
apts...designed with you in
mind!
Campus Place-841-1429
14th & Mass.
Park25
Hanover Place-841-1212
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Regents Court-749-0445 1005 Mass
Orchard Corners-749-4226
15th & Kasold
We present have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th& Arkansas
Orchard Corners-749-4226
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
FIRST MGT. INC.
*NOW LEASING*
*Bradford Square
Chamberlin Court
Carson Place
Stadium View
Oread Apartments
1425 Kentucky
call 749-1556 M-F-25 pm or
841-8468 M-F-12 pm for an app
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Two bedm sublease ASAP through Aug. Full size Dave or John 8431459 free HTQ $1000 total David or John 8431459
430 Roommate Wanted
Female Roommates Needed for summer or next year
Roommate Needs:
Waher Dryer in apl Catheline at 862-290-5137
M/F roommate to share 3 BR. Available from campus | 188/ma & /title Calliston Kirsten 822-647-5137
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
I roommate need to share a 2br, Ibra. 1yr a
f room in scenic area. Must be a non-mosher, clean
and responsible, on bus route. Starts Aug. 1,
$197.50 M+) + vtl. Please call
Male or Female roommate needed ASAP 179/mo
or less. No deposit required. On Bus
time only.
1 | M to share open immacil 3 BR townhouse in summer
2 | M to rent $225/month. Plan no.
3 | M to build 400 SF condominium with a
4 | M to build 400 SF condominium with a
- $p$ phone:
Adn phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Ship: EMS.
Roommate Wanted NOW! $290/mo. water, gas,
and cable paid. C brain at Brian at 84-333-333
Summer Sublease. 5 Females to share large 8dbrm. a$90+ / u/l W/D. pain. b$92-292
Stay by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Quiet, mature, female roommate want for 2 bdm,
British Spanish Crest Apartments. Sublease from
April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 + 1/2 utilities. Call 842-4324
Classified Information and order form
- By Mian Y.
* 1. $50 Identifier Print, LawnEase AS, *Kaos*
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas Office. Or you may choose to have it submitted to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cibles been before their expiration date.
Calculating Rates:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the daily cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Failed cancellations are made with pre-paid by check or with cash and are available.
Dine you manually.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4 on
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Classifications
105 personal
118 business personali
120 anacomments
130 entertainment
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X$
1.95 1.50 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.65
1.85 1.10 1.00 0.80 0.70 0.65
1.79 1.05 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.35
1.67 0.80 0.60 0.55 0.50 0.35
140 lack of fund 365 for sale
208 help wanted 340 auto sales
225 professional services 366 miscellaneous
755 ruine services
370 want to buy
485 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Address:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification.
Date of Birth
Total ad cost. Classification
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kanean)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
Master Card
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of Dalmatia Karnataka, 119 Sawai Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence KS. 68045
**KARNATAKA**
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Jason
3-16
Several times more dangerous than his African cousin, the junkyard rhino offers the ultimate in property protection.
10
Monday, March 15, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU Men's Soccer Club Spring Season Meeting
WHEN: March 17th,5pm
WHERE: 23rd & Iowa
Shenk Complex
QUESTIONS:
KIPPER HESSE 841-6472
BRIAN ROBEZ 842-6971
---
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
OFFICE & WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for 1993-1994 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
DEADLINE
Return NEW Applications to SUA Office by 5:00 pm on MARCH 31,1993
Remember these pointers to go
The Key
To A Safe Break
Is In Your Hands!
Safe Break '93
Remember these pointers to open your way to a Safe Break:
Seat Belts: Always buckle up. Seat belts save life!
Sunscreen: Use it whether sunny or cloudy, beach or mountains.
Safer Sex: Abstinence is the safest sex, but if you choose to have sex, use a latex condom and spermicide with nonoxynol-9.
Substances: If you use alcohol - don't drive.
If you choose to use drugs, consider the serious consequences.
Special Monday Event
"TIGER BY THE TALE"
S
SPECIAL MONDAY EVENT
"TIGER BY THE TALE"
Kansas Union Ballroom
7:30 p.m.
An exciting, theatrical performance of humorous, dramatic, and entertaining skits, songs, and dance. This peer education theatre troupe wants you to get the message about your good health! Admission is free.
KICK-OFF, Wescoe Beach, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
> Ride the Seat Belt Convincer and watch a demo of the Rollover Machine.
Monday
Hear 8 Men Out, an a capella singing group, 11:45-12:20.
> Free Non-Alcohol Beverages plus buttons, condoms,
sunscreen, health-related literature, and more!
to come back safe and you've got a chance to win prizes!
Free Non-Alcoholic Revenues plus buttons, condoms.
> Take the BACCHUS Safe Break Pledge: Sign the pledge to come back safe and not change a chance to win prizes.
> Sex, Travel, and Spring Break. McColum Hall, 7-8 p.m.
Refreshments and travel information.
Sponsored by Student Housing.
Tuesday
> How To Have A Safe Break, Wescoe Beach, 10-2.
free sunscreen, condoms, buttons, health literature!
> Mocktail Contest. Sponsored by GAMMA.
Sponsored by Student Housing
> Mocktail Contest. Sponsored by GAMMA
Sponsored by: Watkins Health Center, GAMMA, PARTY, FACTS, KU Police Department, Association of University Residence Halls, Center for Sexual Health, Kansas Highway Patrol, and Safe Break Planning Committee.
WASHINGTON STATES
Spring Break Budget Blues?
We loan $$$$ in exchange for your valuables! Guaranteed security while you're away!
There is no easier way to get a quick, short-term loan with no credit check!
Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply 718 New Hampshire 843-4344
WAREHOUSE
Salon & Supplies
620 W. 23rd·841-5885
KMS JOICO NEUS
REDKEN
Brocatto
SORBIE IMAGE
The 843-0611
Etc. Shop 928 Mass
Focus 21
framesi PAUL MITCHELL
HORSE
Jewish Film Festival March 17 and 18 7 pm StudentUnion
March17
The Giving Tree
Shoot and Cry
March18
Rachel
Empty Chair
Leaving Home
Gefilte Fish
Hillel
UPCOMING EVENTS
For rides, reservations or information call Hillel at 864-3948.
Hillel House Applications available in office. Due March 19
Midnighttanning
Ray-Ban
BAUCH & LOMB
The world's best programs.
Get the tan you want at a time that is convenient for you! Tan until midnight March 8-18 (Mon.-Thurs.). Call for an appointment today!
Ask about $100 off annual membership!
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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for you to add your voice message to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your art runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voices will prompt you lead along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. if you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. include a phone number where you can be reached.
FEATURES: Spencer Research Library's Special Collection is more than just dusty books, Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102, NO.121
TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Man charged with murders
Shooting victim had restraining order against ex-husband
NEWS:864-4810
By Mark Kiefer
By Mark Riefer
Kansan staff writer
The man who called police in Chanute and claimed responsibility for the homicides of two Lawrence residents was charged yesterday in Douglas County District Court with two counts of first-degree murder.
Victor James Smith, 35, the ex-husband of one of the victims and whose last known address was in Wichita, is being held in Douglas County jail with a $1 million bond. The murders claimed the lives of John L.
Pease, 47, and Linda M. Smith, 34, who were found dead by police in their apartment at Sunrise Place, 837 Michigan St., at 5:02 a.m. Saturday. Autopsies determined that each victim died of gunshot wounds to the head.
In the petition for the restraining order, Linda Smith said that her husband "has hit me in the past. Last night, he came to the apartment after doing drugs, and I wouldn't lie him in so he left. He came back later, and I told him that it was over between us, and he threatened to kill me."
Court records indicate that Victor Smith
According to court records, Linda Smith filed for a divorce with her husband, Victor Smith. Nov. 6, 1992. On the same day she asked for a restraining order against her husband.
was living at the Salvation Army, 946 New Hampshire StL, when he was served the divorce papers Dec. 1, 1992. The Smiths were divorced Feb. 1. Police and neighbors said that Pease moved into Linda Smith's apartment soon after the divorce was finalized.
In May 1987, Victor Smith was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and aggravated burglary when he allegedly entered Linda Smith's residence and hit her, according to court records. The charges were dismissed 17 days later when Linda Smith chose not to press charges.
Victor Smith and Linda Smith were married in 1980. Their daughter, 12-year-old Christina, was staying with relatives the morning of the shootings and was not in the apartment at the time.
Lawrence police Sgt. Mark Warren said that police had responded to disturbance calls from Linda Smith's 15-A apartment in the past but would not say how often.
Warren said that 16 investigators were gathering information about the case yesterday in Lawrence, Chanute and Wichita.
"I seriously doubt that we'll be done today," he said.
Police found Victor Smith when he called 911 from a Chanute restaurant at 9:02 p.m. Saturday. Lawrence police talked with Smith at the Chanute police department before bringing him back to Douglas County jail.
Police said that Smith had been camping out in the Lawrence area for some time. A preliminary hearing has been set for Victor Smith March 24.
Rachel G. Thompson/KANSAN
KANSAS
Phi Gamma Delta member Chad Bechard, Overland Park freshman, center, tries to twist his way around Kappa Alpha Theta member Kristin Marlar, Phoenix freshman, in a Twister tournament Saturday at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. Phi Gamma Delta member Chris Gannett, Dallas sophomore, left, tried to keep his balance during the tournament, which helped raise money for the National Committee for the Prevention of Child Abuse.
Doin'the twist
Resolution aims to educate state on rape issues
By Ben Grove
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
If Kansas colleges and universities haven't already implemented rape education programs, it's tin Barbara Ballard. D-Lawrence
education programs, it's time they did, says State Rep.
Barbara Ballard. D-Lawrence.
Ballard said she introduced the resolution because of alarming statistics about campus crime. In the resolution, Ballard wrote that one report said 80 percent of all campus crime was committed by students. It also said 25 percent of all college women would be raped or involved in an attempted rape during their college careers.
As a member of the Kansas House of Representatives Education Committee, Ballard has introduced a concurrent resolution that encourages all the state's schools of education to establish programs aimed at preventing rape on campuses.
The House Education Committee passed the resolution Thursday and the House could take action on it this week. It encourages women to report rapes, promotes coordinated efforts between universities and police and advises communication between universities about rape education programs.
Baudard said the resolution also encouraged colleges and universities that had date-rape programs to look for fresh ideas for new programs.
"We may continue to do the same or we may look at new things that might work," she said. "If we did get new programs, it would be because we were taking a closer look at this issue."
A concurrent resolution follows a path like that of a bill but carries no legal requirements. It is designed to clarify the state's position on an issue and encourage action.
Ballard said that bills often carry requests for financing. She said legislators who were nervous about overpending the budget were more likely to enact a resolution than a bill that would require state financing.
The resolution is working in tandem with separate legislation that would redefine rape when alcohol is involved, she said.
"We have known for a long time that the majority of these cases have been alcohol-related," she said. "You won't be able to hide behind that," I was drinking 'anymore.'
Ballard said most rapes were not perpetrated by strangers but by acquaintances or dates.
1nese education programs have made it clear that you need to receive a 'Yes, go ahead,' so that if you proceed, you know you are not violating a woman's rights," Ballard said.
About 23 percent of the women that came to universities had been raped, which made rape education programs important at all schooling levels, she said.
Ballard is on leave of absence from her position as director of KU's Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center during her first term as a state legislator.
"Women need to know what their rights are; men need to know what their rights are," Ballard said. "Maybe what's fun for you equates to pain and rape for someone else."
Ballard said KU already had a number of date-rape education programs that were presented to campus organizations and living groups, including student housing.
Sherrill Robinson, acting director of the women's center, said the center also provided workshops to any organization that requested one and trained peer educators to counsel rape survivors.
Robinson said programs such as the ones at KU were necessary on every campus in the nation.
It is imperative that campuses have something in place to educate the student community to what is date and acquaintance rape," she said. "There are people who don't know what that is."
Former basketball player pleads guilty in drug sale
By Mark Kiefer
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
A former KU basketball player was convicted on one count of selling cocaine yesterday in Douglas County District Court.
Sean L. Tunstall, 23, who last played for Kansas during the 1980-91 season, pleaded guilty to the felony charge in
Tunstall's conviction on the one charge of selling cocaine is a Class C Felony, punishable with a maximum sentence of five to 20 years in prison with an optional fine of up to $15,000. On April 29, 1993, I sold a con-
a plea bargaining agreement. In return, the state dropped one charge of selling cocaine and one charge of attempting to sell cocaine.
trolled substance to an unknown individual who was in an undercover operation," Tunstall said at yesterday's hearing, which was scheduled to be the first day of Tunstall's jury trial.
Tunstall confirmed to Judge Michael Malone that he had known the controlled substance was cocaine.
"On April 29,1992,I sold a con-
According to court documents, a warrant for Tunstall's arrest was issued June 15, 1992. AKU police officer identified Tunstall at the Kansas-East Tennessee State basketball game Dec. 19 and arrested Tunstall after the game.
Tunstall first appeared in court to face the charges Dec. 21. Tunstall waived his right to a preliminary hear-
The two charges dropped by the state were separate incidents. Tunstall had been charged with attempting to sell cocaine on May 4 and charged with selling cocaine on May 14.
According to court records, Tun-
mg on Jan. 20, when yesterday's trial was set.
stall has been out of jail since posting bond Dec. 29.
John Gerstle, Tunstall's attorney,
said that Tunstall had been living with
his parents in St. Louis for some time
and that he would be returning to St.
Louis after yesterday's hearing.
Tunstall is scheduled for sentencing May 6.
INSIDE
Long-range bomber
14
Blizzard fails to spoil students' spring break plans
Kansas women's baskball player Shannon Kite is known for her three-point shooting.
But the senior guard has made兢 defensively as well as offensively this season.
See story, Page 11.
Kite and her teammates will play in the first round of the NCAA tournament at home tomorrow night.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Special to the Kansan
Broken glass and trashed buildings are usually what remain after spring break, not before it.
Yet, after last weekend's winter storm, which ravaged the entire East Coast, Florida residents are beginning to pick up the pieces and prepare for the onslaught of college students.
Ruth Nye, manager for Adventure Travel, 544 Columbia Drive, said he hoped that most people would not change their travel plans.
"We're busy enough as it is," she said. "We don't need any more hassles."
Despite the storm, which has caused the death of 128 people, student and local travel agencies' plans have not changed.
Student Union Activities' trip to Panama City. Fla. was not affected either.
"It's seven days out, so we're not too worried," said Lance Brown, graduate adviser for Student Union Activities.
"We've planned our trip to Florida for months," said Jason Loving, Oloisaopsa sophomore. "Not even the storm of the century is going to keep us away."
Florida, the traditional spot for spring break, which already was devastated by Hurricane Andrew last year, was hit again by high winds, tornadoes, floods and heavy rain. The devastation was so great that President Clinton granted federal disaster relief to 21 Florida counties.
rights into Miami International Airport were affected by the storm only for a short period of time and now are running as scheduled, airport officials said yesterday.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency was prepared for the damage and able to react quickly, said Marvin Davis, agency representative.
dive.
"This was probably the most predicted storm in history," he said. "Everybody could see it comet."
Next week will determine whether Florida is as well prepared for spring break.
THE YOUNG BEGINNER'S BASKETBALL
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
James Johnson, 4, finds his backyard basketball hoop covered with ice yesterday morning in Apopka, Fla. His grandmother had been turned the sprinkler on the night before to determine how cold the temperature was.
2
Tuesday.March 16.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint-Hall, Lawn, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA6045.
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
With any $10 purchase during CASTLE COMIC'S GRAND OPENING DAYS, receive a CASTLE COMIC'S discount card, good for 10% off all new comics for a year. A$5 value, FREE with any $10 purchase! This coupon is only good during our GRAND OPENING SALE.
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"At the top of Naismith Hill!" 642 2006
The brief on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansan titled "Parking Department to hold public hearing" incorrectly stated the date of the hearing. The hearing will be April 15.
The NCAA basketball tournament brackets on Page 7 of yesterday's Kansan contained unclear information. In the men's tournament, the winner of the East region will play the winner of the Midwest region, and the winner of the Southeast region will play the winner of the West region in the national semifinals. In the women's tournament, the winner of the Midwest region will play the winner of the West region, and the winner of the East region will play the winner of the Mideast region in the national semifinals.
CLARIFICATION
843-3826
Hrs: 8-5:30 M-F, 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun
A Macintosh computer, monitor and keyboard, valued together at $3,990, were taken Friday or Saturday from a room in the Art and Design Building, KU police reported.
A convertible top of a student's car was damaged Saturday or Sunday in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $500.
CORRECTION
A window of a fraternity house in the 1600 block of West 15th Street was damaged Sunday, Lawrence police reported. The damage was estimated at $300.
WEATHER
The University of
Kansas Theatre for
Young People
Presents the Classic
Brothers Gnmm
Folk Tale
Hansel
and Gretel
?
Chance for rain.
多云 晴
The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People
Presents the Classic Brothers Grimm
Folk Tale
Hansel and Gretel
Adapted by Max Bush
2:30 & 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 20, 1993
Crafton-Preyer
Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy
Hall Box Office. KU student
tickets available through the
SUA Office. Kansas Union; all
seats reserved for $3
regardless of age to charge
tickets by phone, using VISA or
MasterCard, call 913/864-3982.
Because of dark lighting, and
scary noises, this production is
recommended for children ages five
and older.
March is Theatre in our
School Month
Omaha: 55'/30'
LAWRENCE: 53'/33'
Kansas City: 58'/39'
St. Louis: 54'/40'
Wichita: 67'/41'
Tulsa: 70'/48'
March is Theatre in our
Schools Month
WEATHER
Omaha: 55°/30°
LAWRENCE: 53°/33°
Kansas City: 58°/39°
St. Louis: 54°/40°
Atlanta: 63°/44°
Chicago: 44°/28°
Houston: 75°/52°
Miami: 70°/57°
Minneapolis: 35°/14°
Phoenix: 87°/59°
Salt Lake City: 59°/45°
Seattle: 59°/35°
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
North winds will bring down afternoon temperatures.
High: 53°
Low: 33°
Slight chance for rain.
High: 38°
Low: 27°
Chance for rain.
High: 41°
Low: 32°
Dan Schauer / KANSAN
Cloud
Slight chance for rain
---
KU Homeless Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Steve Nguyen at 842-691-842.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 843-6250 or Laura Hanson at 842-6887.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 832-8337.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will hold its meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-4256.
KU Republicans will sponsor Kansas Speaker of the House Bob Miller at 7:30 tonight in the Frontier Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call David Olson at 841-6249.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Beth Powers at 864-4606.
ON CAMPUS
Trifathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Center pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2734.
International studies and programs will hold a lecture, "Modern Ireland: Politics as History," at noon today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in 156 Strong Hall for students interested in studying in a Spanish-speaking country.
Source: Susan Koons, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization will hold a brown-bag lunch at 11 a.m. today in the Rock Chalk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
PRE-LAW SOCIETY
Speaker: Enrique Torres Third Year Law Student
LAWYER
Tuesday
March16
7:00 pm
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
3
City: KU may pay for fire services
Kansan staff writer
By Todd Selfert
In an effort to pay for encumbered city services, the Lawrence City Commission is considering whether to ask the University to pay for municipal fire services.
The University currently does not fay the city for fire protection.
"With more people, city services get stretched." Mayor Bob Schulte said. "Because they are thinned out we need to find more ways to increase revenue to pay for them.
"If you want to hold the line on taxes, you either save money, which is something the city looks at everyday, or you find additional ways of raising money."
Schulte said the suggestion that KU pay for fire services came at a goal-setting meeting a few months ago. The issue resurfaced at the city's annual luncheon with KU and Haskell Indian Junior College officials about one month ago.
"Each school and the city brought an agenda with them to the meeting." Schulte said. "This was just to let the University know that we had discussed the issue."
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said the University could not enter into a contract with the city for fire services without the approval of the Legislature.
"We have a situation where we have public funds involved," Meyen said. "The question that is really being raised is, 'Should the state pay for fire services?'"
Meyen said the University would have to reallocate money to pay the city for fire services.
"We're only authorized for certain expenditures with very specific functions" he said. "It's not like we receive an amount of money and can spend that amount on anything."
Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain said that although KU had not paid for fire services in the past, it had contributed to special projects such as the purchase of new trucks.
Some other Big Eight universities contribute money on a regular basis to their cities' fire departments. Iowa State University pays the city of Ames, Iowa, about $600,000 a year for fire protection. The University of Missouri-COLUMBIA does not pay the city of Columbia for fire services, but it does provide the free use and maintenance of a fire station on its campus.
Kansas State University has a contract with the city of Manhattan and pays about $50,000 a year, said John Lambert, K-State director of public safety. He said the agreement was reached in 1974.
Task force to tackle KU's future
Schulte said that the City Commission had not discussed the issue in detail and that no action would be taken until after the April 6 city election.
Campus organizations to review two-year plan
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
For the first time in 20 years, a task force will develop a plan for KU's campus of the future, the University announced Friday.
"This plan will be a blueprint for the future of the campus," said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor.
the committee, which will first meet April 10, will study recent issues such as lighting on campus, transportation, parking, student housing and possible future sites for new buildings. It also will study how KU's growing population will affect the campus, Meyen said.
When the report is completed in two years, campus organizations will be able to study the plan and get an idea of what the University will
be like in the next 10 to 15 years, Meyen said.
"We hope to fit those proposals of the committee into what we are trying to accomplish at this University," he said.
KU's last long-range plan was developed in 1973 as a 10-year plan. By 1988, more than 85 percent of the plan's recommendations had been carried out, said University Director Allen Wiechert in a statement.
Wiechert said the 1973 plan predicted that KU's enrollment would peak at 20,000. This spring's campus enrollment is about 25,000.
"The tremendous enrollment growth at KU and the resulting strain on campus facilities is just one of the many reasons why a new long-range plan is needed," he said.
Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor for administration and finance and a member of the committee, said large organizations should have a long-range plan for a growing environment.
Eakin said the first meeting of the 25-member committee mostly would cover background on what the University was trying to accomplish. The committee then will divide into subcommittees that will concentrate on a certain area of the University.
This will be a very detailed study," Eakin said. "This is going to be a very concrete plan for the future of KU."
Committee members include the following people:
The final plan of the future will carry a lot of weight when proposals are presented from different organizations at KU, Eakin said.
Max Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, will head the committee; Marin Harmony, professor of chemistry; Eakin; Edwyna Gilbert, a retired professor of English; Hobart Jackson, associate professor of architecture and urban design.
Edward Zamarripa, director of finance and administration, Institute for Life Span Studies; Peter Thompson, dean of Fine Arts; Arthur
Anderson, Lawrence; Jean Milstead, Lawrence; Mike Russel, environmental health and safety officer.
Betsy Stephenson, associate director, KU Athletic Corp.; Fred Williams, president, KU Alumni Association; Glee Smith, Lawrence; William Hougland, Wichita; Stanley Rolfie, Albert Learned, distinguished professor of civil engineering.
K. Sam Shannonmug, J.L Constant distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering; Stephen Fawcett, professor of human development and family life; Fred Van Vleck, Chancellors Club teaching professor of mathematics; Linda Mullens, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs; William Crowe, dean of libraries.
Cindy Riling, registrar, School of Law, Michael Raymond Miller, assistant director, facilities operations; James Hamilton, Lawrence graduate student; Chris Schumm, Lawrence junior; and Laura Brophy, Prairie Village senior.
CER.
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Kansas Highway Patrol Officer S.D. Jensen checks to make sure Julie Russell, Eureka senior, is strapped into the crash-test simulator, The Convincer. The contraption was set up in front of Wescoe Hall yesterday to demonstrate how a safety belt can prevent injury in low-speed collision.
Mock crash reminds all to buckle up
By Will Lewis Kansan staff writer
Sgt. Steve Jensen helped John Trudt, St. Louis freshman, fasten his safety belt yesterday in front of Wescoe Hall.
"Put your head back against the head restraint and keep your mouth closed so you don't bite your tongue," Jensen told Trudt as he strapped him in the Convictor.
The Convincer, a ride promoting seat-belt use, sends a passenger in an open carriage down a 12-foot decline at five miles per hour. The impact at the end jolts the rider to demonstrate how slow speeds can be dangerous.
The ride was sponsored by the Kansas Highway Patrol as part of Safe Break '93, a week of activities to increase safety awareness in students before they leave for spring break.
Trudt's eyes closed and his mouth opened as the carriage slammed to the bottom of the Convincer. His seat belt could be heard locking into place.
"I think it's a kind of a neat experiment to show people who have never experienced an accident what one can be like," Trudt said. "The Convinceer's a good name for it. It's a good thing to do before spring break."
After unbuckling and climbing out of his seat, he said he was surreised at how effective the seat belt was.
"It's weird because you feel like you're going to go forward, but the seat belt keeps you in," he said.
In case the Convincer did not live up to its name, the Rollover Machine was nearby. The machine spun the cab of a Ford pick-up truck upside down several times as a 35-pound dummy rolled around inside and fell out of an open passenger window.
Jensen said common sense would not be a top priority among college students during spring break.
"We know they're going to have a lot of things on their mind instead of safety," Jensen said. "The easiest thing to do is wear a seat belt."
Statistics are another way to warn passengers, he said.
One in 10 persons in the United States will be involved in some kind of car crash this year, he said. Every 11 seconds someone is injured, and every 11 minutes someone dies in automobile-related accidents.
Jensen said the trick to making wearing a seat belt second nature was to develop a habit.
"We're all creatures of habit," Jensen said. "If you concentrate 12 days on wearing that seat belt, the 13th day, it's automatic." Sgt. R.L. Lueske said the number of people who wore seat belts had increased in the last 10 years.
"Some people will do it because it's the right thing to do." Lueske said. "Other people will do it after you educate them."
Students remember professor
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Siegfried Lindenbaum, a professor who was respected by students and faculty for his unselfish assistance to students, died Thursday of lymphatic cancer.
Lindenbaum had worked at the University since 1971 as a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and as the department's director of graduate affairs.
Students who worked with Lindenbaum said he always had found time to listen to their academic or personal problems.
"He would listen to your problems very carefully. You could talk to him about anything," said Mike Nicolau, Lawrence graduate student.
Xinyi Tan, Beijing graduate student,
said that after he moved to Lawrence
from China, he had no kitchenware
until Lindenbaum brought him bowls
and dishes.
Vandana Cheruvalladh, Bombay,
India, graduate student, said she
admired the courage and optimism he
showed toward his bout with cancer.
"He never once complained about his disease," said Cheruvalladh, who worked with him for more than five years.
Pat Williams, an accountant in the department, said she had worked with Lindenbaum for about 18 years. She handled his grant money, paid his graduate students and ordered equipment for him.
"He was a neat human being to know," she said. "He was one of the most humble, caring individuals on our staff."
Landenbaum was a fellow of the Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences and the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists. He was a finalist for the 1901 Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator award, which is sponsored and voted on by the senior class.
John Stobaugh, associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, will serve as acting director of graduate affairs.
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COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within theCollege. Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator, and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office, 864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to one single-spaced page.
Send your nominations to Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 66045. Deadline is April 2, 1993
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Tuesday, March 16, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Liberal arts students need full-time advisers
As May approaches, many seniors are hurriedly attending to the final details of graduation. Unfortunately for some seniors,these arrangements include hasty appointments with graduation counselors.
These meetings can inspire every emotion from a slight degree of anxiety to outright fear. The horror stories are legendary. After spending four or five years in Lawrence and preparing to embark on the post-college life, some seniors find that, in the middle of March, they are one class short of major credit hours, or that the classes they took at junior college during the summer won't count toward a degree.
These scenarios are almost exclusively played out within the chaotic parameters of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The journalism, business, and architecture schools are able to assign their students to counselors who will advise them each semester until graduation.
In the college, after the sophomore year, students are virtually on their own, free to venture into the hit-orniss world of scheduling.
Each student, within his or her respective department, must go to the department office to learn which professor will be advising for that given day. Often the professor has much more to do than advise undergraduates and is rarely concerned about the various requirements that lie outside the major.
Many other universities have full-time advisers in their liberal arts departments. Students are assigned to these advisers for the duration of their undergraduate years. It is evident that the number of students in the college impedes this type of hands-on advising, but the school would be better served by spending time and energy in a more productive manner.
The college should let the professors teach and assign students specific advisers that could counsel them throughout their college careers.
With these changes in the advising procedure, the eleventh hour "I'm not going to graduate" drama would likely be a thing of the past.
JEFF HAYS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
CORRECTED LETTER
Editor's note. Due to an editing error, the following letter was printed incorrectly in Friday's Kansan.
Anti-abortion advocates harm rights of others
interruptive and unquestionably rude. While I believe strongly in the right for all people to hold and express their own opinions, I do not believe that this entitles a small group to express themselves at the expense of the majority. The behavior of the "group of five" infringed upon my right to concentrate on what Ms Wattleton had to say. This is not an issue of freedom of speech, but rather one of common courtesy.
I went to hear Faye Wattleton speak March 5 because I was interested in hearing what she had to say. Unfortunately, I was seated two rows behind a group of five anti-abortion advocates. From the very beginning of the lecture, these five people were disruptive,
Michelle Givertz Niotaze junior
Kansan Editorial Board:
Kris Belden, Greg Farmer, Vered Hankin, Jeff Hays, Val Huber, Kyle Kickhaefer, Tiffany Knight Stephen Martino, Jolinda Mathews, Colleen McCain, Chris Moeser, Simon Naldoza, David Olson, Carol Pfaff, Jeff Reynolds, Chris Ronan, and Michael Taylor.
OF COURSE
IM PRO-
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ABORTION IS
MURDER!
ABORTION
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P. UDK 593
Population explosion must halt to preserve the environment
STAFF COLUMNIST
Many aspects of the U.S. environment have improved in the last two decades. Awareness of important issues is higher than ever, and numerous success stories give us a warm and fuzzy feeling, while keeping contributions to environmental causes rolling in. But a flurry of misguided religious pressure threatens the future of everything achieved during 20 years of environmental activism. Meanwhile, to avoid confrontation with powerful fundamentalists, many environmental groups remain mum about the central environmental issue which dwarfs all others.
The world's population has grown by about 2 billion, nearly a 60 percent increase, since Paul Ehrlich's 1970 warnings in "The Population Bomb." But discussion of population growth is now as rare as the spotted owl, although the bomb ticks faster and louder with every passing year. When we ignore population growth, we ignore a critical half of Ehrlich's classic Impact Equation:
total environmental impact = impact per person x the number of people.
STEVE CHAPMAN
In other words, it's futile to use recycling and conservation to limit each person's impact, while continually adding more people at an ever increasing rate.
Writing in E. the Environmental Magazine, science scientist Garrett Hardin pointed out why environmental groups may be squeamish about openly advocating population control: "By ignoring population, environmental organizations and magazines have avoided arguments and
have probably maximized their support."
But avoiding the risk of offending extremists is a clear case of throwing out the baby with the bath water. Through their deafening silence on population growth, environmentalists become passive allies of religious fanatics who, with the help of the Reagan and Bush administrations, successfully shut down the central U.S. role in global efforts to limit population growth. Global population can be stabilized by the year 2000, but only if an international population strategy includes U.S. support. According to the World Bank, the proportion of couples using contraception in developing countries simply needs to increase from 40 percent to 72 percent.
There's no question that population growth eventually will halt. The only unknown is whether it will happen through rationally lowering the birth rate or insanely increasing the death rate. Those who block birth control
are unwitting advocating death for the Third World, and a sharply reduced living standard for citizens of all countries.
In the absence of an applicable biblical passage, they remain blind to the immorality of their own position. The rational majority of U.S. citizens must be aware of the urgent need to act now and not be persuaded by the misleading appeals of emotionally disabled zealots.
It's inevitable that healthy ecosystems will be considered expendable in an overpopulated future world, since even intense development will fail to provide expected living standards to exponentially growing populations. The result may be that the environmental gains of the 70s and 80s will be lamented as trivial, fleeting and naive. If we lack the courage to take on the population problem soon, the future of environmental protection will prove as unsustainable as the
Steve Chapman is an Overland Park senior majoring in systems and ecology.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Rock Chalk Revue deserves better Kansan coverage
For the past 42 years, Rock Chalk Revue has been an important part of the University of Kansas and Douglas County. Everyone involved with the show donates their time and efforts to raise thousands of dollars for the United Way. For this, they deserve to be commended. The Kansan has covered Rock Chalk Revue in at least three articles since November. Yet, in each article, there has been a mistake. In November, the Kansan misidentified a photo. This past week, the Kansan deleted two organizations from the roster of participants. Finally, the article in the March issue of the Kansan, which detailed the many donations and awards of Rock Chalk Revue 1993, didn't give the many participants the recognition they deserve. Not only were awards for best original song, costumes, sets, and supporting actor not listed, the Kansan forgot to list the
organization that won for most charitable. I understand that mistakes happen, but why must they constantly be the article related to Rock Chuck Revue?
Students realize how important Rock Chalk Revue is to the University and the community. In the future, I hope the Kansan realizes this and devotes more time in preparing and editing articles related to Rock Chalk Revue.
David Lutman
Lindsborg senior
Lindsborg senior
Prejudice extends to greek houses
Ignorance is bliss and being close-minded comes all too easily, but people continue to cite dolish, bigoted stereotypes for their explanations. Unfortunately, these stereotypical examples can too often come from the very minds that seek to enlighten the students of the University of Kansas.
My friend, Jack, once told me that he was prejudiced. Jack went on to state that he had earned that prejudice because of the troubles he experienced with one person. This same sentiment was expressed to me the other day by a staff member. Members of a certain department on campus, I was informed, expect greets to attempt to cheat on tests because they have access to test files and old papers. Just a few months ago, the Kansan made reference to a three-year-old racial incident at a Greek house, citing it as a blanket statement for all greek houses, continuing this discriminatory trend.
Saying "a fraternity man" is no less wrong than saying "a Black man." Pre-conceptions about the greek community are no less inaccurate than those of other minority groups. A number of professors on campus hide their Greek affiliation from colleagues because of the antipathy for the community. Contempt for Greeks is due to a small fraction of incidents committed by a few people, who are often times no longer associated with chapters, like the student in the racial incident.
The greek community donates thousands of hours and dollars to commu
nty organizations like the United Way and Special Olympics. The Greek community attempts to get thousands of students not only to join their organizations, but also to come to KU. The Greek community is not composed of a group of stuck-up Caucasians, it encourages people who are presses and the Inter-ternary Council, Panhellenic and Black Panhellenic have worked diligently to make the University a better place.
I rejuice can be attributed to knowing too little about a group and stereotyping it. No two people are ever exactly alike, and no one has the right to pass judgment on another community because of the acts of a single individual. Some people support the greeks, and others do not; but Greeks are simply a group of people building a together to help one mother and to help others. If you believe you are immune to prejudice, then consider this: What ethnic group did you assume Jack belonged to?
Christopher Livingston Dallas freshman
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Editors
Asat. Managing .. Justin Knupp
News .. Monique Guelain
David Mitchell
Editorial .. Stephen Martino
Campus .. KC Traun
Sports .. David Mitchell
Photo .. Mark Rowlands
Features .. Lymne McAdow
Graphics .. Dan Schauer
Wire .. Tiffany Laush Hata
Assistant Editors
Assoc. Editorial .. Chris Mooser
Assoc. Campus .. Joe Harder
Asst. Campus .. Christina Lane
Graphics .. Stacy Morford
Assoc. Sports .. David Bartkowski
Reporters
Vicki Bode .. Mark Button
Jess DeHaven .. David Dorsay
Matt Doyle .. England
Ben Grove .. Mark Xler
Will Leavis .. Frank McClary
Terrellyn McCormick .. Brady Prauser
Jim Reece Beach Brett Riggs
Todd Seifert Blake Spurgia
Emilian Walters Erin Welsh
Jerry Anderson © Editors Shelly Solon Heather Anderson J.R. Clairborne Almee Estrada John Paul Fogel Kristi Fogler Kevin Furlong Katie Greenwald Karan Hadley Tiffany Lashurt Hurt Chris Jenson Noelle Kastens Christine Laue Allison Ullipp Tim Marks Stacy Morford Montenegrin Mason Tracy Wittleen Coney Shoup Jules Wasson Jay Williams
Andrew Amone **Jason Aaid**
Kim Buden **No Cillie**
Kim Burdell **Kathy Discollo**
Douglas Hesse **Jason Hyman**
Renae Kneeer **Paul Katz**
Rachel Thompson
Dave Campbell Andrew Hogges
Katherine Mankweller Derek Nolan
Erin Fogarty
Darrell Nolen
Katherine Mansellier
Bean Tevius
News Clark
Stephany Kimball
STEVE PERRY Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
BILLTHOMAS Production
PAT BOYLE Accounting
Business Staff
Business Owner
Campus sales mgr Brad Broad
Regional Sales mgr Wade Baxter
National sales mgr Amanda Hewitt
Co-op sales mgr Ashley Hesblood
Production mgrs Amy Stumbo
Ashley Langford
Marketing director Angela Stoneger
Creative director Holly Perry
AD Director Dave Habler
Classified mgr Elli Tomey
Special Sections Bytheh Toulfer
Classified Assistant Mark Donnikli
Classified Assistant Laura Guth
Zone Managers
Jennifer Blowey...Kim Brown
John Carton...Amy Casey
Jodi Cole
Retail Account Executives
Retail Account Executive
Linda Boodeker ... Tricla Bumpus
Kate Burgess ... Ken Cole
Jason Eberly ... Jennifer Evenson
Justin Garberg ... Stephnee Greenwood
Josh Hahn ... Tammlie Johnson
Allison Kaplan ... Sue Krautty
Robin King ... Jemelia Keenan
Shelley McConnell ... Chris Morrissey
Mike Murray ... Karl Rathbun
Ed Schagner ... Judith Standley
Camous Account Executives
Campus Record Locker
Rebecca Boresow...Kristy Enlow
Mellasa Jenkins...Laura Manka
Russel Hass...
Regional Account Executive
Regional Account Executive Nicole Abbott
Gcatt McWilliams Troy Tarwater
Mendi Stauffer...
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
24
BOOKS!
More than just dusty books, Spencer Library's Special Collection is a time machine that can take readers on a trip through history. From stone tablets to the latest sci fi, it's available to everyone.
Bill North, Lawrence graduate student, tries to identify the date and origin of a piece of paper for graduate assignment in the Spencer Research Library.
Mark Rowlands / KANSAN
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
n a huge glassed-in room, surrounded by regal red carpeting, stand stacks upon stacks of the Spencer Research Library's special collection, mostly rare books, all available for use by the public.
On one shelf is a Roman tombstone,
on another is an English file of writings
like a great crumpled ball of newspaper, but they actually are many small pieces of paper string together on a string. Usually they were stored neatly, but this file was crumpled by a 17th-century chancellor of England who took it home to write a book.
In March, the library is exhibiting a small selection from its O'Hegary Collection, a 16,000-volume collection of books and manuscripts named after P.S. O'Hegary, the first head of the Irish Post Office and an ardent Irish nationalist and book collector.
A grant recently provided the library with funds to catalog the collection, so all of the books are now listed electronically. The special collection's books are not listed on the KU on-line catalog.
Besides the O'Hegarty collection, the library's holdings include various aspects of the English 18th century; writers such as Tennyson, Joyce, Yeats and Rilkue; post-World War II American Poetry, particularly anti-establishment poetry; science fiction and children's books.
Alexandra Mason, Spencer librarian, said the anti-establishment poetry collection started when the librarians, who have a strong interest in the French revolution, another of the library's specialities, noticed
COLUMBIA BIBLE GREAT SUPPLEMENT OF THE LARGEST AND MOST IMPORTANT CHURCH BOOKS IN THE WORLD.
Mark Rowlands / KANSAN
a sort of revolution going on locally during the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Published in 1628, this French fencing manual titled "Academy of Fencing," diagrams foot positions and foil strokes with detailed ink drawings.
"We started seeing poetry floating around and lying on tables," said Mason. "It was mostly anti-Vietnam War. So we started picking it up and buying or soliciting gifts of similar things. You could say we found it blowing in the wind."
Mason said most of the anti-establishment poetry was mimeographed or published in small, inexpensively published books.
The science fiction collection also started in an unusual way. A graduating senior left the library $15 to buy science fiction books because he wasn't able to find any of those books in the library and wanted other students to have a chance to read science fiction. Mason said.
In 1970 Gunn started working on "Alterate Worlds," an illustrated history of science fiction. At that time he helped convince the library to buy a collection of science fiction from a collector in Phoenix.
James Gunn, professor of English and science fiction author, also helped get the collection started.
"Gunn started writing to publishers and writers, and we now receive hundreds of pounds of newly published books," Mason said.
"The collection was really indispensable to the production of my book," Gunn said.
The library also has other uses besides research.
Mason said that this week she was called by a Garden City high school teacher who was bringing a chess club to Lawrence for a tournament. The教师 asked Mason to show them some books. Mason chose one of the oldest illustrated books on Virgil, an ancient Roman poet, because many of the chess club members also were learning Latin. Mason also plans to show them a beautifully illustrated fencing manual.
Mason said the value of the books in the Spencer Research Library never was considered beyond the purchase price, so she had no information about how valuable the books were.
"The most valuable research book may have only cost 50 cents," Mason said.
The oldest item in the library is a cuneiform tablet dated back to 2112 B.C. A cuneiform is primitive writing chiseled into a stone tablet. The oldest printed material is a page from a Gutenberg bible, dated back to 1454.
"The connectedness of things is one of the most interesting parts," Mason said. "It's a big time machine."
THE LEGACY OF THE GREEK LANGUAGE
A WORK BY H. G. C. M.
LONDON: JOHN W. HOLT & Sons, 1894.
...
Bucks for books—it's contest time
By Ezra Wolfe Kansan staff writer
By Ezra Wolfe
Collecting books can be almost as much fun as reading them. Those who are now collecting have a chance to be rewarded for their work.
The University of Kansas Libraries are holding their 37th annual Snyder book collecting contest with the sponsorship of Elizabeth Snyder. The Mount Oread Bookshop in the Kansas Union also sponsors the contest
The contest awards $200 and $100 to the first and second place winners in the graduate division and the undergraduate division. There is no faculty division. The
"The collections are judged on how well the collector meets the statement of purpose and how much energy and imagination goes into it," she said. "Collections don't need to be large or extensive or rare to win."
prizes are half cash and half gift certificates redeemable at the Mount Oread Bookshop.
The subject of the graduate winner's collection from last year was "Notes from underground anarchist and marginal small press." The undergraduate winner's subject was "Medieval and Renaissance music."
Rachel Miller, head of acquisitions for the library system, is a coordinator for the contest.
The contest was started by Snyder, who never attended KU, but who is an active member of the KU Alumni Association. Snyder has donated several of her collections to the KU libraries, including a collection of books written by Winnie the Pooh author A.A. Miney's and an H.L. Mencken collection.
Other topics included children's literature, Joseph Conrad, photography, and plant materials and their use in the environment.
Snyder started the collections with the intent of motivating young collectors and rewarding interest in books, Miller said.
Larry Hopkins, secretary of special collections, said he thought the collection contest was an
incentive for young collectors. Unsure about the quality of a collection?
"I encourage people to enter because the experience will be good," Snyder said. "In past years people who don't win get letters with comments on how to improve their collections."
Hopkins said he and Miller would be glad to talk to anyone about their collections before the contest.
The deadline for entry is April 2. Each entry should have at least 10 books in its bibliography and a statement of purpose and method in building the collection. Complete males are available at Watson Library.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MARCH 16, 1993 PAGE 5
KULife
ife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
Theater and Dance
Q
KU Performing Arts "Hansel and Gretel" performance by the KU Theatre for Young People continues
1 p.m., today, tomorrow, Thursday, Friday and at 2:30, 7:30 p.m., Saturday, Crafton-Preyer Theatre,$3, Murphy Hall Box office
7:30 p.m., tomorrow. Swarthout Recital Hall, Free
Concerts
Spring concert: University singers; James Ralston, director
Guitar
Swarthout Society Resident Artist: Edgar Meyer, Bass; Rita Sloan, piano 8 p.m., tomorrow, Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., Free
C concert: University Symphony Orchestra-Brian Priestman, conductor
"Bleeding Chunks from the Masterworks," movements from well known symphonies 8 p.m., Thursday, *Liberty Hall*, $3 students, $6 public
Lectures and Seminars
PUBLIC SPEAKING
Humanities Lecture
"Are rights enough? Social justice in our
do we rights enough? Social justice in our nation's third century," Rex Martin, professor of philosophy at the KU
8 p.m., Thursday, auditorium, Spencer Museum of Art
Environmental Colloquium
"Environmental Changes in the Communist Era of Czechoslovakia," presented by Leos Jelecek, research scholar at the Institute of Geography at the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences in Prague and a Rockefeller Fellow at KU, 4 p.m., Friday, main conference room, Hall Center for the Humanities
Reading for Comprehension and Speed workshoop
3:30-5:30 p.m., today, last session of pre-reg
istered class
-
Continued on Page 6.
6
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
KULIFE
Eat,Drink,And Be Merry With Us On St.Patrick 's Day!
$.50
Shamrock
Draws
all day and
night
Cornbeef and cabbage
St. Patrick's
special entree!
Get front row seats
for the St. Patrick's
Day Parade!
(starting at noon)
Listen to the
Witch Doctors at our
Leprechaun Bash
If you can't join us in
Lawrence come to K.C.
(6765 W. 119th St.)
$.50
Shamrock
Draws
all day and
night
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LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
401 N. 2nd 842-0377
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all day and
night
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LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
401 N. 2nd 842-0377
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA
THIS WEEK ONLY Free Kodak FunTime camera with purchase of your college ring
Preserve your memories by capturing them with the pictures and the ring that last forever.
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$100 off 18K
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Today thru March 17
10 am to 4pm
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Kansas and Burge Unions
Level Two • 864-4640
CITY JAIL
pInch
KU's comic and satire magazine, PINCH is now accepting submissions of fiction, original songwriting cartoons, playwriting, art, photography and bad poetry.
Send work to:
Wendy Jane Bantam
c/o PINCH
1228 Louisiana #3
Lawrence, KS
865-0114
Deailline : MARC 28 $ 1993
Continued from Page 5.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center "Discovering a New World: KU Through the Eyes of International Women Students," co-sponsored with the Office of International Student Services, 7-9 p.m., today. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Faculty Panel discussion
"A Sense of Place: Nature,
Culture, and Landscape"
3:30:5 p. 30.m., today, Big
Eight Room, Union
"Body Image Issues Time for Self Acceptance," 11 p.m., today, conference room, first floor, Watkins Memorial Health Center "The Risks of Tanning," 11 p.m., Thursday, same location.
Exhibitions
Avant-
Garde con-
tinues
through
Sunday,
Kress
Gallery in
Les XX and the Belgian
V
the Spencer Museum of Art
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
CREATION STATION
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726 Mass. + 841-1999
Sculptor immortalizes Twain
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
Jim Brothers, a 1970 University of Kansas graduate, calls himself an exhippie, a cowboy and realistic sculptor with an eye on the sweet part of life.
For him, that sweet part means earning a living creating sculptures based on his own past and on famous Midwesterners like Mark Twain.
The Lawrence artist is putting the finishing touches on the first of two life-sized bronze statues of Mark Twain, being cast now at Heartland Art Bronze, a foundry in North Lawrence.
"To me, it's the main art form," Brothers said of his sculpting "To me, it's the epitome. It's not if you can just mold something into a certain shape. It's your twist."
Brother's manager of two years, Paul Dorrell, said one Twain sculpture was commissioned by Hartford, Conn., the other by the Mark Twain Riverboat Co., Hannibal, Mo.
Dorrell said each sculpture would bring $35,000. Brothers also recently received a $91,000 commission for "Flight," a 200-piece pewter sculpture from General Electric Aircraft Engines.
Brothers was born in Eureka. He worked on oil wells until the oil wells ran dry, then worked as a cowboy on a ranch in Eureca.
B. L. H.
Brothers used old pictures of his cowboy grandfather as inspiration for his sculptures. One picture showed him, riffle in hand, sitting on a horse in the middle of a prairie.
I'm so into my heritage," he said. He worked in Seattle for several years in the 1970s but soon grew homesick.
"I never felt at home," Brothers said. "I'm a lander."
Renee Knoebe / KANSAN
EARTH SENSE
HERB SHOP
16 E. 8th
Lawrence, Kansas
(913)749-0367
KU, graduate, Jim Brothers, is putting the final touches on his life-size bronze statue of Mark Twain. The Lawrence sculptor has been commissioned to do two pieces of Mark Twain, one goes to the Mark Twain Riverboat Co. in Hammibai, Mo. and the other goes to Hartford, Conn.
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For more info Call 864-5223
1 Chapter in the Midwest
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Swarthout Society presents the 1993 Resident Artist In residence through Lawrence*; March 16 - 18, 1993
Egar
In performance: 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, March 17 Liberty Hall Free and open to the public
Egar MeyEr
assisted by Rita Sloan, Pianist
"...when he's not performing classical gigs, the mercurial Meyer lays down hot licks with a progressive bluegrass band ...then there's his work as sideman for pop singers such as James Taylor and Kathy Mattea."
*The Wall Street Journal*
*For a complete schedule of Meyer's activities, contact the KU Concert Series, 864-3469.
Meyer's residency is supported by the Kansas Arts Commission "Arts in Education" program and IBM Corporation. IBM
SUA SUA MOVIE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
MOVIES MOVIES CALL 864-SHOW
CALL 864-SHOW
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SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARSA
H. G. Lewis' Splatter Classic Color Me Blood Red
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TUES., MAR. 16 AT 7:00 PM
Jewish Film Festival
Wed. March 17
The Giving Tree
Shoot and Cry
Bachel cosponsored by
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Leaving Home: A Family in Transition
The Empty Chair
WED., MAR.17 AT 7:00 PM
THURS., MAR.18 AT 7:00 PM
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THURS., MAR.18 AT 9:30 PM
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.50
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday,March 16,1993
7
Van gives KU students a lift
Service provides rides for disabled
VAN
By Vicki Bode
Venon staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Renee Knoeber/ KANSAN
Wendy Petier, Lincolnshire, Ill.
senior, broken her leg while sliding down a snow-packed campus hill two weeks ago.
Jon Flom, St. Louis senior, helps Keith Soh, Johor Baru, Malaysia, senior from the vehicle. The Lift Vantakes students with physical disabilities and injured students to and from their homes and classes.
But a transportation service financed by Student Senate and operated by the University's motor pool helps students like Peiler get to class.
The Lift Van provides transportation to students who are temporarily and permanently disabled from their homes to class, said Silvia Vargas, graduate assistant coordinator at the motor pool, which is a part of the University's facilities operations.
"If the student needs to be taken from class to class, we will do that, too." Vargas said. "We try to be very accommodated."
So accommodating that the van's drivers carry students' books and supplies to their classes.
Peiler said the van was dependable.
"They will get you to class no matter what," she said. "I don't know
what I would do if the van wasn't available. It would be impossible for me to take the bus."
The Lift Van, which started in 1979,
provides an alternative to the KU on
Wheels bus service, which does not
accommodate students in
wheelchairs.
The van service is available only to KU students. It costs $1 for each trip or is free for students who have a bus pass.
"A student can ride for one day or six months," Vargas said. "But, if a student is going to ride for more than two weeks, they need to bring a doctor's note."
students using the van had permanent disabilities, while 60 percent had temporary injuries.
Vargas said that 40 percent of the
Vick Helsel, manager at the motor pool, said the University was required by the Americans with Disabilities Act to provide transportation for students with disabilities.
The Lift Van transports about six students a day. It runs from 7:30 a.m. until the last student's class ends.
"If a student needs our service at night and we have a driver available, then we will take them," Vargas said.
we can take them, Vargas said. The Lawrence Bus Company has a lift van that is used when the motor pool's van is not available.
Students represent Morocco in mock league
By Brett Riggs
Students from 10 colleges simulated debate from the real League of Arab States at the regional conference, which was sponsored by the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations and Northwestern College.
Three KU students received honors this weekend in the University's debut appearance at the Model League of 28 States in Orange City, Iowa.
Kansan staff writer
Andy Nolan, Hutchinson sophomore, Jon Tevehouse, Coffeyville sophomore, Sami Aawad, Overland Parksenier, and Elizabeth Erickson, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore, made in the delegation that represented Morocco.
Nolan and Tevehole were voted secretary general and vice secretary general, respectively, for next year's event by the league's general assembly. The secretary generals are the presiding officers of the league.
Tevehode and Awad received recognition as outstanding speakers within their league councils. Tevehode represented the delegation in the political council, while Awad spoke for the delegation in the economic council.
are the presidents said but he
"I was surprised to be nominated because we had the smallest delegation," Tevehouse said. "But I think people respected us."
Erickson said the mock league allowed students to represent Middle Eastern nations and profess their actual viewpoints on certain Middle Eastern and international issues.
"We debate current Middle Eastern issues and policies," she said. "We write resolutions and try to get a consensus." Erickson sad she got the idea to participate in the league from her politics of the Middle East class.
"I respect the Middle Eastern culture," she said. "The conflicts they are currently trying to resolve will impact the rest of the world."
Tevehole credited the delegation's success to the research it did on Moroccan policies.
Both Tevehouse and Erickson agreed that the goal for next year was to increase KU's participation.
"We think KU made a strong start," Erickson said. "Next year we hope to represent two states."
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ALL ROADS LEAD HOME TO THE HILL
SAA
RUSTIN STATE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
MULTI-STUDENT ALUMMY ASSOCIATION
JOBS
NEW CITIES
GRADUATE SCHOOL
ATTENTION, 1993 GRADUATES
Get ready for a SIX-MONTH FREE RIDE as an ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEMBER
■ Your membership trip begins with the SENIOR COOKOUT,
5:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 21, in the Adams Center parking lot.
Sponsored by your Student Alumni Association
Tour the Center and activate your FREE SIX-MONTH LEARNED CLUB MEMBERSHIP.The Club is the perfect place to dine before or after Commencement exercises,before KU football games and whenever you're on campus. Sponsored by the Alumni Association
Then go west for the JAYHAWK JOG, a 5- and 10-kilometer road race for students and alumni, or the HAWK WALK, an untimed campus walk, 8 a.m., Saturday, April 24, starting at Nichols Hall on Campus West. Call 864-4760 to sign up. Sponsored by SAA
We will follow you with Alumni Association benefits, but be sure to LEAVE US YOUR NEW ADDRESS.
Last stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST. 8 a.m., Sunday, May 16, for graduates and their families (program begins at 8:30). Sponsored by SAA, the Alumni Association and the Board of Class Officers
■ As you graduate, don't forget to take along your JAYHAWK BANK CARD, the only VISA or MasterCard that lets you show your 'Hawk heritage wherever you go.
Remember, wherever your new life takes you all roads lead home to the Hill. As an Alumni Association member you'll never be far away!
FIRST BANK CARO CENTER
915 804 2345
STATE NY
VISA
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Watch for our brochure in the mail. For more information about the Jayhawk Bank Card call the First Bank Card Center at 1-800-222-7458.
8
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MARCH MADNESS
1
---
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
9
MARCH MADNESS
10
HARD WEAR
Gym & Fitness Center
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Midwest
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5 Oklahoma St.
12 Marquette
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2 Cincinnati
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Available after 10 pm everyday and all day Sunday
We Specialize in Delivery 841-8002
We accept all Competitor Coupons
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841-9922
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great Food
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- Hates Beerey tails (long and short sleeve)
- Tank Tops & Tees in neon & all other colors
Personalized lettering with purchase (limit 6 letters per garment) on the following:
* Hanes Beefy Tees (long and short sleeve)
Spring Specials!
• Tank Tops $5.99
• Button down Baseball
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Numbers & Greek letters available Custom screen printing with no art or set-up charges Huge selection of KU shirts
RICKS Place BAR and GRILL
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We support KU Basketball on the road to the Final Four!
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We support KU Basketball on the road to the Final Four!
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Good Luck to the Men's and Women's Basketball Teams!
The Place to watch the Hawks
Treat yourself to a night of great food, beer, & fun.
Everyday Specials $6.75 Rib Eyes Pool Tables Big Screen TV
King
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2228 Iowa
9am-2am
842-8225
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Mt. Oread Bookshop
Kansas Union
Level Two 864-4431
8:30-5:00 M-F
10:00-4:00Sat
12:00-3:00Sum
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841-2866
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10
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spotlights give added protection to federal agents trying to end two-week standoff with Waco cult leader
WACO, Texas - Stadium-style spotlights lighted the fortified compound of a religious cult early yesterday in a new tactic by federal agents trying to end a two-week standoff with the cult.
Agents set up the lights Sunday, the same day cult members unfurked a ban per saving."FBI Broke Neotiations We Want Press."
Authorities said the lights were used to protect agents about 250 yards from the compound. FBI agent Dick Swensen said yesterday that no specific event had prompted the decision.
The rights illuminated the movement of unarmed tanks posted outside the Branch Davidian sect's 77-acre compound, which has been surrounded since the Feb. 28 gun battles that killed four federal agents and at least two cull members. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms wanted to arrest cult leader David Koresh for alleged weapons violations and search the compound for illegal guns.
Four adults and 21 children have left the compound. Eighty-eight adults and 17 children remain inside.
During the weekend, at least three cult members asked authorities what charges they would face if they surrendered, FBI agent Bob Bicks said.
"It indicates a very favorable sign when people are talking about what types of charges are going to be filed," Ricks said.
NATIONAL BRIEFS
NEW YORK—Police dogs sniffed rubble in the World Trade Center Sunday in the latest attempt to locate the remains of the lone victim who remains missing.
Police dogs sniff rubble in World Trade Center for remains of employee, bomb's timing device
Wilfredo Mercado, 37, a building worker, was last seen in the basement parking area where the blast went off Feb.26, killing five confirmed victims and injuring 1,000 people.
"We have every reason to believe he's in the debris somewhere," said Sal Sampert, Port Authority public safety official.
Thousands of tons of rubble sit at the bottom of the huge bomb crater. The debris was being removed slowly, in shoebox-size containers, so federal agents could check it all for clues.
agents commute between the dogs were led through the debris below the 110-story twin towers. Besides the dogs, agents志望 hope to find the bomb's timing device.
"It could be almost anything from a clock to an electronic timer to a wristband clock," said L. Walter Boser of the police bomb squad. "It's something that security agent that owns the
The Port Authority, the joint New York-New Jersey agency that owns the landmark complex, hopes to reopen the World Trade Center by April 1.
Three people have been arrested in connection with the bombing investigation. Published reports said authorities were looking for at least three more suspects.
Experimental machines give doctors chance to see inside of human beating heart without cutting it open
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Doctors are getting their first realistic view inside the beating heart without cutting it open, using experimental ultrasound machines and computers to shoot crisply detailed 3-D movies.
In one example that researchers displayed yesterday, doctors oriented the picture so it looked like they were standing inside a baby's heart, peering at a defect from different angles.
Doctors can simulate slicing through the heart at any angle, peek inside and watch valves flap and chamber walls pulse. The startlingly sharp pictures look as though a miniature video camera somehow had been threaded into the heart and turned on.
A team headed by Pandian reported on the technology at this week's meeting of the American College of Cardiology.
"We can open the heart, almost like splitting a piece of fruit, and then put it back together without doing any damage," said Dr. Natesa G. Pandian of the New England Medical Center in Boston.
enlastral already is a mainstay of heart testing. But until now, the pictures it produced had been grainy and flat. Like regular X-ray shots, they were two-dimensional and gave no hint of thickness or depth.
MARCH MADNESS
Compiled from Associated Press reports.
FINAL DAYS
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the university of
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When you're not watching the Jay-hawks plow their way through the NCAA tournament, come down to the Jaybowl and bowl through a few rounds yourself. The Jaybowl has all the ingredients for a winning combination - bowling, billiards, video games, and don't forget our wilderness discovery campionment!
Jaybowl KANSAS UNION
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
11
Brenna Knock
Three-point ace is more than an offensive threat
Senior guard Shannon Kite looks to pass around teammate Angela Aycock in practice. Kite, who has steadily improved during the season, hit eight of 10 three-point shots in the women's Big Eight Conference Tournament.
Senior guard makes progress on defensive end
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
Senior guard Shannon Kite has come up big for the Jayhawks this season.
season.
Kite's three-pointers have lifted the kansas women's basketball team on several occasions. But pinpointing the most important of her team-leading 61 three-pointers is difficult.
or more points." "It's been a weapon that has increased our dimensions," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "If they want to sag on the inside, they are going to have to pay a price."
bitter longest long-range bomb might have been the three-pointer she made in the late stages of the Big Eight Conference Women's Basketball Tournament final. Nebraska had cut the Jayhawks' lead to two points, but Kite stepped up, drilled a three-pointer from the right wing and extended Kansas' lead to five. The Cornhuskers never recovered, and Kansas received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship.
The Jayhawks will play host to California in the first round at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House. Tickets cost $5 for adults and $3.50 for students.
Kite took 10 three-pointers, making eight, setting a conference tournament record for three-point field goal percentage.
"The shot was there," Kite said of her last three-pointer in the tournament. "If I have an open shot, I'm supposed to take it."
Kite is a marked target when the opposition plays zone defense against the Jayhawks. Players make a point of pointing at Kite, making sure somebody is close enough to her to bother her shot. Kite said the extra attention did not bother her.
During the Big Eight Tournament,
"It's good because that gets other people upon" she said.
But don't think that Kite is only a shooter. Both Washington and Kite say she has improved greatly in all areas of the game, especially defense.
"In the past, we had to be careful how we matched her up," Washington said. "This year, she's playing great defense. She has learned how to compensate if someone is quicker than her."
Her high school did not need Kite's defense. It needed her offense. All 59.1 points a game that she provided her senior season. She scored 107 points in a single game that season,
Kite played for Elk Horn-Kimballton High School in Iowa's six-on-six half-court game, where each team has three players on offense and three playing defense. The offensive and defensive players cannot cross the half-court line. Kite played on the offensive end.
when I came here, I was pretty much clueless on defense coming from six-on-six," she said.
fourth on the all-time Iowa high school list.
Kite said she tired of people asking about her single-game explosion because most people thought it was something planned. It wasn't.
same thing happened.
"At halftime, I was told I wasn't being productive," she said. "I didn't know until after the game how many I had scored. It was one of those nights where everything was going in."
The pluses and minuses of six-on six balance out, Kite said.
"It did hurt not knowing how to play good defense, but it helped knowing the offensive game," she said.
high school boy, play hard "playing both positions helped me understand how a post player wants to receive the ball," she said.
Ages offensive skills include the ability to pass inside to post players. That is something she learned early in high school by playing at times.
Kite's career at Kansas is winding to a close. After this year, she will finish her degree in exercise science and prepare to start graduate work in physical therapy.
She has been a part of a conference regular-season champion and a conference tournament champion. Tomorrow, she and the Jayhawks will start their second consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance.
3 KANCLS
"It's been memorable," she said. "I don't know how else to explain it.
Two Kansas women swimmers make NCAA
Kansas has regained its position as a top-25 team. The Jayhawks were ranked No. 24 in the final poll released by the Associated Press yesterday.
NOTE:
With the NCAA Championships just a few days away, freshman Katie Chapeau takes a second out of practice to fix her goggles. Chapeau and sophomore Frankie Hanson are the two Kansas women's swimmers going to Nationals this weekend in Minneapolis.
By Matt Doyle
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Kansan sportswrite
The Kansas women's swimming team enjoyed its finest season in 10 years this year. Despite that success, the dajhawks will have only two team members at this weekend's NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships in Minnesota, Minn.
Both will be making their first appearances in the NCAA Championships.
Sophomore Frankie Hanson and freshman Katie Chapman will be the only representatives from a Jayhawk team that was ranked as high as No. 8 during the season.
sant.
"We were flat that weekend," he said. "We barely missed getting qualifiers in several situations."
Kansas' narrow victory against Nebraska at the Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships was a reason the Jayhawks will not have more swimmers in Minneapolis this weekend, coach Gary Kempf said.
All five relay teams, the 200-yard freestyle, 400 freestyle, 800 freestyle, 400 medley and 800 medley, met the NCAA consideration times for qualification to the championships, but were not selected for competition.
"We needed the relays there at NCAA, but again we just barely missed," he said. "It's disappointing, but that's reality."
Senior Amee Braumad, sophomore Kristen Carlson, junior Krista Cordsen and sophomore Ronda Lusty earned All-American recognition in the relay events at last year's NCAA Championships in Austin, Texas.
Based on the team's performance this season, Chapaue, who will swim the 100 back
stroke and 50 freestyle, said she thought that she and Hanson would be joined by about 10 of their teammates in Minneapolis this weekend.
"We've relied on the upperclassmen all year long." Chapeau said. "Now all of a sudden it's just me and Frankie."
weekend.
Now, the two swimmers will have to provide each other with the motivation that they usually receive from their teammates.
Hanson will swim the 1,650 freestyle and
bringing in the women. Haine said she hoped to improve her times in the two events, and not get intimidated by performing against some of the nation's best swimmers.
"I've got to remember what I've done in the past," she said. "You have to swim your own race, and not worry about what the other swimmers in your events have done."
500 freestyle this weekend. She placed first and second in those events respectively at the Big Eight Championships.
By David Dorsey
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
One game at a time.
One game at a time.
Since the regular season ended last week,
those five words have spewed from the mouths of the Jayhawks.
The concept of the NCAA Tournament, which begins for the Kansas mens basketball team at 11:45 a.m. Thursday in Rosemont, Ill., is simple.
Play one game. Win it, and advance to the next round. Lose it, and go home to watch the rest of the tournament on television.
The repetition of the philosophy, concept and process will continue until Monday, April 5, when the final two of the 64 teams battle for the National Championship.
The Jayhawks last reached that point two years ago in Indianapolis. Kansas defeated New Orleans, Pittsburgh, Indiana, Arkansas and North Carolina on the road to the championship game against Duke, which Kansas lost 72-65.
Four current Kansas players, senior guard Adonis Jordan and junior forwards Patrick Richey, Richard Scott and Steve Woodberry played in the championship game.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that once his team saw that it was a No. 2 seed in the Midwest Region on Sunday, it knew its 25-6 record no longer mattered.
"We're not going to talk about what we have done or have not done up to this point," Williams said. "We looking at it like we have one game left in our season, and we are going to try to play our tails off in that game."
Williams said he had mixed emotions about
Men's basketbal
how the season went for his team up to this point.
The Jayhawks gathered at Williams' home Sunday evening when the bracket was revealed, and Williams said that freshman guard Sean Pearson was a little more excited than the rest of the team when its first round site was announced.
"We do feel good about getting a No.2 seed, and we do feel good about what we have accomplished," he said. "We'd like to have accomplished even more, but again, we're looking at it like we've got one more game left in our season. Hopefully we'll play well against Ball State."
Rosemont, Ill., is near Pearson's hometown, LaGrange, Ill. Both are suburbs of Chicago.
"It'll be nice to be near home and nice to see my family," Pearson said. "It feels good this year to be a part of the team and to be able to contribute in the games instead of just watching them on T.V."
as tor thoughts on what he would do after Thursday in Chicago, Pearson's response was in line with his coach and teammates.
"We're going up there tomorrow," he said.
"And we're just going to take it one game at at time."
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications for OFFICE & WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for 1993-1994 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
DEADLINE
Return NEW Applications to SUA Office by 5:00 pm on MARCH 31,1993
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To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SWM 24 Grad Student musician, creative, off-beat, easy going, in to live music, Mpthon, KYJH, good beer, and talking forever about anything and everything. Seeks intelligent, arti/alternative musician.
SWM looking for someone who appreciates the experiment, tells a go-in through to the "Experiment" club.
meek seeks SWF traveling companion to New Orleans during Final Four week. Must be fun living, enjoy sports and adventures. Call Box # 10114 The world is already full of wanna-be.ben.but I can't wait to get back to sound mind with enough backbone to be true to themselves before others. My interests are Muzik, weights, and the ultimate adventure. I don't drink because I'm not a musician. All calls will be responded to. Call box # 10118.
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2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both here and 20, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet me w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down to earth. Like long walks, movies, talking on the phone, & trying to find any scam to get us rich. Call box
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To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You place an ad in the Jaytak Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
1. Check out an ad
2. The ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone) enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don’t interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You’ll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
'Hawks go outside to prepare for game
By Brady Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team yesterday experienced something it had not in a long time: an outdoor practice.
"We have not had a full-fledged practice since the 15th of February," said Kansas coach Dave Bingham.
When not on the road for their first six games or playing at home for their last eight, the Jayhawks have been forced to practice indoors at Anschutz Sports Pavilion because of inclement weather.
Although yesterday's practice provided Bingham and the Jahawks a welcomed opportunity to practice outdoors, they will be too busy playing games to have another one anytime soon.
Beginning with a 3 p.m. game today at home with Northwest Missouri State, Kansas plays six home games in as many days.
The Jayhawks will play tomorrow against Emporia State and Thursday against Washburn. Chicago State will be here for a three-game weekend series beginning Friday.
Bingham said that playing many consecutive games sometimes was difficult.
"The hardest thing about baseball at this level is regrouping you within 24 hours when you have another game on top of you," he said.
Kansas, 10-4, split a doubleheader with Iowa last weekend. The loss in the second game was the Jayhawks' first at home and ended their seven-game winning streak.
Kansas baseball 10-4 vs. KU
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2222 Iowa
NW Missouri State
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2222 Iowa
| athwakes lineup | avg. | HR | RBI |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1.2b Jeb Berlinger .B1 | 468 | 20 | 12 |
| 2.cf Daryll Murone .R2 | 262 | 5 | 9 |
| 3.cf Jeffrey Cheek check .C4 | 304 | 0 | 13 |
| 4.cf Jeffrey Check .C4 | 304 | 5 | 13 |
| 5.rf Rory Tarquino .R2 | 282 | 0 | 10 |
| 6.rf Rory Tarquino .R2 | 282 | 10 | 14 |
| 7.brent Willeim .S9 | 359 | 2 | 14 |
| 8.dh Jel Bennighngo .F38 | 538 | 3 | 11 |
| 9.ss Dan Rude .J24 | 214 | 1 | 10 |
Chris Corn, 1.0 (2.84 ERA) Head coach: Dave Bingham
12.3
GAME NOTES
Kansas is 7.1 at home.
In 13 at hats, Joel
highlight his four
single, one double, two
triples and three home
runs.
3 p.m.
Hoglund-Maupin Stadium
Despite his team's .318 batting average, Bingham said his players still did not appear comfortable at the plate.
"We haven't had enough repetitions and haven't had enough practice opportunities," he said. "We just need more time and more opportunities to swing the bat."
Junior right-hander Chris Corn, 1-0,
will start today's game.
Northwest Missouri State is an NCAA Division II team. The game with Kansas will be its only one against a Division I opponent this season.
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Tennis team loses to No.3 Longhorns
Kansan staff report
The No.19 Kansas women's tennis team was defeated 5-2 by No.3 Texas on Sunday in Austin, Texas.
Kansas 'No. 1 singles player,
sophomore Rebecca Jensen, fell
to Texas' No.1 player Susan
Gilchrist, 6-7, 6-3. Jensen is ranked eighth nationally, and Gilchrist is ranked third.
Freshman Jenny Atkerson was the only victor in singles play for Kansas, defeating the Longhorns Ashley Johnson 6-2, 3-6, 7-5.
The day before the Texas match, Kansas defeated Texas A&M 6-3. Jensen defeated the player, Janine Burton-Durham.
Junior miler wins All-American honor
Kansanstaffreport
Junior miler Michael Cox earned All-America honors at the NCAA Indoors last weekend in Indianapolis.
Cox made the finals of the mile, running the distance in 4:09.02 and placing ninth in the race.
He is the first Kansas male athlete to be named All-American in the mule since Jim Ryun in 1969.
Cathy Palacios earned All-America honors last year in the mule with her 10th place finish at the NCAA Indoors.
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Tuesday,March 16,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Tuesday, March 16. 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA N
Owners corrupting baseball
The start of spring training used to be a refreshing sign that the long winter was beginning to thaw
It was a rebirth, a fresh start. For baseball fans everywhere, spring training was a time when every team
champion and cellar dweller showed promise.
Now it is simply another reminder that professional baseball is going to hell.
Last summer the owners of Major League Baseball forced the resignation of commissioner Fay Vincent. Since then baseball has been a ship without a rudder, a game without an umpire. In other words, without a voice of reason, the owners have had a heedday.
Despite the fact that the city of San Francisco refused to pay for the building of a new stadium to replace the disaster that is Candlestick Park, the owners blocked the Giants' move to Florida.
With disregard for traditional rivalry, the owners are considering realignment.
- The owners are discussing expanding the playoff format, which would lengthen the season and allow undeserving teams a shot at the title.
The owners reopened the collective bargaining agreement with labor, making a player lockout likely in 1994.
The worst offense though, was the owners whining all season about their financial difficulties and then spending $513 million on 70 free agents in the off-season.
Bobby Bonds brought a whole new meaning to the term Most Valuable Player. Bonds got $43.75 million to leave Pittsburgh, where he played in three National League Championships, and join the mediocre Giants.
In fact, baseball set a record for the most player moves in an off-season.
SPORTS EDITOR
DAVID MITCHELL
The World Champion Toronto Blue Jays will have a hard time staying on their lofty perch. The Jays lost slugger Dave Winfield, stoplight Manuel Lee, third baseman Kelly Gruber and pitcher Dane Cone and Jimmy Key.
Toronto hopes to replace Cone with aging A's ace Dave Stewart. The Jays also acquired Paul Molitor. The oft-injured All-Star had played his entire big league career with Milwaukee. Sadly, Molitor's former teammate Robin Yount could be one of the last Hall of Famers to spend his entire career in one uniform.
However, it's hard to blame the players for their lack of loyalty when the owners continue to hand out ridiculous sums of money for mediocre players. Unlike the NBA, baseball has shown no signs of adopting a salary cap to bring escalating salaries under control.
The Cubs let Cy Young winner Greg Maddux get away but signed Jose Guzman, 66-62 lifetime, for more than $14 million. The Atlanta Braves, two-time defending National League champs and proud owner of the game's best pitching rotation, stole Maddux away from Chicago.
In fact, last season 351 players saw time on the disabled list missing a total of 17,746 days. The owners paid $102 million, 13 percent of the league's payroll, to players on the disabled list.
Meanwhile, some of the game's worst teams did little to improve. Philadelphia, the joke of the National League East, hopes to improve by adding one-time pitching ace Danny Jackson. The often-injured Jackson has not had a winning season since
Easy money if you can get the work. Next season, baseball's agreements with the television networks expire. The new contracts will be signed for substantially less money because the networks have taken a bath under the current contracts. The result will be less money available to pay players. That means to continue with skyrocketing salaries, owners will be forced to squeeze the fans at the gate, at the concession stand and in the parking lot.
1988. Jackson joins a team that put 18 players on the disabled list last season.
What it all means is that baseball desperately needs a new leader. Unfortunately, the owners would rather not have a strong commissioner to settle labor disputes and look out for the best interests of the game — someone who could tell them what to do.
The owners, who got $95 million from both of the expansion franchises in exchange for 48 mediocre players, would rather continue to throw tradition and logic out the window.
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LA SMITH PUBLIC
BAHAMIC & LOBBY
Realigning the leagues and expanding the playoff format will generate more money. Locking out the players will ensure that the owner's get their way.
The Eic. Shop
TM 923 M B43 0611
Ray Ban
MAGNIFICENT
BAUCH & LOMB
TEL. (855) 768-9121
Without a strong commissioner, like David Stern of the NBA, these are the things baseball can look forward to because baseball is a sinking ship at the mercy of the misguided men steering it into the sunset.
David Mitchell is a DeSoto, Kan., senior matroring in journalism.
From heavy to light
Your money spending after dressing yourself with your values
sathriftstore
SUN
928Mass 843-0611
Catch Some Rays!
with Sunglasses from
•Vuarnet-France
•Bausch & Lomb
•Ray-Bans
•Mary McFadden
•Marilyn Monroe
•The Etc. Shop
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass.
DUI or OUI?
Court Evaluations
Walking Distance to KU
CrossBridge 749-2626
- Format and design assistance
- Typesetting
- Reproduction on fine stationery
At Kinko's, we'll help you create a resume package that introduces you in a professional way.
CLASSIF Resume
Resumés that really work
Affordable prices
$29.99 resumé package
Includes one page typeset and saved on disk, 25 copies on fine stationery,
25 matching blank sheets (for cover letters), and 25 envelopes (#10). One coupon per customer at the Kinko's listed. Not valid with other offers. Good through April 30, 1993.
kinko's
Open 24 hours
520 W. 23rd St. • 749-5392
904 Vermont • 843-8019
the copy center
--grill & bar
$250
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company is currently seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study
Healthy Men Needed Receive up to
*flexible dates during spring break
1-800-669-4682
*Call IMTCI today for more information
To qualify you must:
*be 18-40 years old. No dental or vision care*
*be able to stay in your clinic on two occasions; 30 hrs each*
International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. Lenexa, Kansas
ATTENTION!! GRADUATES CLASS OF 1993
Order your personalized Graduation Announcements
Tuesday & Wednesday March 16 & 17
10:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m.
KU Bookstores Kansas Union, Level Four Lobby Burge Union, Level Two
All orders must be prepared when placed
Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express accepted
We are looking forward to assisting you with all your graduation needs.
Kansas and Burge Unions, Level 2
KU Bookstores
How lucky can ye be?
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Release
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
OLLY MCGOOD
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
FOR THE LATEST IN KU APPAREL AND JAYHAWK GIFT IDEAS...REMEMBER IT'S...
Jayhawk Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill!"
Grill open 11 am-midnight Cocktails until 2:00 am
2429 Iowa 841-9922
235 Typing Services
Classified Directory
200s
- $1.00 16 oz. Green Beer
•$6.95 Corn Beef & Cabbage
•$5¢ Electric Leprechaun Jello Shots
•$1.00 Jameson Irish Whiskey
Y
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, gender, religion, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation in
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is all tied to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any prefereed category. It allows a person to race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or disobjection.
100s Announcements
molly mcgees
Homes are the marsh. We are the Mist I meet outside of Wescon last秋. I'm looking to you. Hints, baseball, cap, nursing student, sophomore, west of Toplea, daily magazine. Katy box 62c, © The University of Alabama.
300s
Mortgage
105 Personals
110 Bus. Personals
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Need a little Sunshine?
The Ete. Store has new shipments of handmade
pendants, crystals and semiprecious stones.
Asserted Bear fetishes.
$5 - 95 $24 - 95
The Ete. Shop
928 Mass
Recycle the Kansan
USE DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
Bausch & Lomb Bay Ban and Wavnet-France
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
928 Mass. 843-0611
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
Bounty with the Best!!
Party with the Best!*
Hotels or Condos with Party/Activity Package off beach or downtown South Beach. Night Sun. Beach and Saida units starting at $4 Per Person/Per Night Taxes Not included
400s Real Estab
Lease up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $30, 100% Guarantee.
832-9487
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon-Fri 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11.30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hour charge)
Mon-Fri 4.30 p.m - 5.30 p.m
Sat 4.30 p.m - 5.30 p.m
Sun 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
120 Announcements
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 814-2343, Headquarters
MIRACLE VIDEO
$140.00 Double Video Scale
910 N. 2nd, 814-8903
Obsidence Classes • Lawrence Jayhawk Kennel
库班 9 weeks. übers 32 dogs all months or older.
Observation Classes • Lawrence Jayhawk
Guard Armory. Orientation 16. Call Bar Citation
842-6848, or Lee Boyd 130-747-470 For more info.
QUESTIONS? Call Bisselux, Gay, and Lesbian Peer Counseling, free, confidential referrals through Headquarters (841-2345) or KU Info (864-2345) Colleared
Social Intervention If you're thinking about soci-
ial intervention, visit us at 149-283-6197 or visit 149-537-6001. Headquarters Councero-
mers
YOURE NOT ALONE! Bueaux, Gay, and Lesbian Support Group on Tuesday at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters (814-2345) or KU Info (864-3506) for confidential location.
diabetes.
Earn cash when participating in an
People with insulin-dependent
Earn cash when participating in an exercise study.
Call 864-4076 to inquire about the diabetes study.
Sexually confused? Let me straighten you out. Very discreet, honest and supportive. Into safe sex. Call me, Dr Janell Carroll at (816)576-7681, KCMO Radio 810, weeknights, 9-11 p.m.
SWDr. seeks M/F "Let's Talk About Sex"
Sperm Break quad occupancy: Daytona Beach,
Florida person including man, room, limited
1.30 Entertainment
Jayhawk CAFE Presents KARAOKF
$1.25 Barrel Refills
SING-ALONG
TUESDAY, Mar 16
It Could Only Happen at.
THE HAWK
$1.50 Monster Draws
75¢ Electric Jello
1340 OHIO 843-9273
Live Comedy
AT
BENCHWARMERS 50 cent draws
National touring comedians performing routines seen on HBO and Showtime Wednesday March 17
BENCHWARMERS
for
Call Today!
- Summer travel plans
- Airline tickets home
AIRLINES
Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
On-campus location in the Burge Union and 831 Massachusetts.
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
140 Lost & Found
Substantial Reward- Information leading to return of Silver Bach Stradivarius Trumpet. Model 5180-37 Serial 4229108, Case1804. Call collect W. Drake (315) 321-2113
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
2 males or 2 females preferred for Job Share/Live in Personal Care Attendant (premise, nursed, pre- O T, P. T. or Speech Pathology student-ideal) Assisting Disabled Friend with meals and transfers to chair, bed. Preference experience, but will train Live in separate quarters of private residence. 2 bedrooms bath living area. Exchange rent for service plus $36.97 wk weekend free. Phone also 844.3370.3370
APPLY NOW
118 STARTING
NO EXPERIENCE. NEC great resume builder. Scholarships avail, temp over. Spring Break-participant. Apply online at campn.org. CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boy/girl summer camps. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance. Salary $10 or more. 768-754-2940. 768-754-1846. Maple Ridge, MN. 768-754-3048.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 16, 1993
15
Children's counselor, instructors, herese people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
hands, maintenance housekeeper, maintenance person
Camp, Camp Box 701, Boulder 80306 (8030 342-4557)
CITY OF LAWRENCE SUMMER JOBS
MERCH IMMOBILES
The City is accepting applicants for all summer part- and full-time positions. Positions are available in the following areas:
OUTDOOR DAYCAR SUPPLIERS
SPORTS INSTRUCTORS
PLAYGROUND PROGRAM
FINAL POINT
SPECIAL POPULATIONS PROGRAM
CONCESSIONS
MAINTENANCE OPERATOR
INSPECTIONS
Complete application at Administrative Serv., 290 North Floor, Citi Center, 12th Avenue, New York, NY. No phone calls please. Deadline: Friday, April 26.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BYDONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-7570
Counselors/Support
study*children* camp/northeast-talp salary,
rm/bd/ laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill
in computer lab, basketball, baseball, basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama, drums, fencing, field basketball, golf, guitar, juggling, karate, lacrosse, photography, juggling, karate, lacrosse, photography, juggling, sailing, scuba, tennnature, track, waikers, weights, wood support kit/staffen steward/dr,
nurses, secretaries, men call or write; Camp Winnab,
5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 10543
9143-1988-598 Women call Jenner Wheeler at 841
$$$
Spring Break Party Cash!
New Donors earn $25 for 1st 2 plasma donations in 1 week Return donors earn up to $135 per month!
749-5759
1816 W 24th NABI
Cruise line entry level on board/handie positions
of the ship, great pay, great
payment options (229-549)
(229-549)
Full-time, home-based therapist to provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children. Requires a master's degree with reimbursable credentials, minimum of 2 yrs exp, providing mental health services to severely emotionally disturbed children. Req. Send resume to Bert Shann Community Mental Health Center. Inc. 386 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence, KS 74510. UBraoch Dental Applicaiton deadline 24.11.1993.
Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience necessary, cattle and maintenance experience preferred. Send resume to Wakasanu
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make $2,000
+ per month teaching basic conversational
rules and skills in the room and board + other benefits. No previous training or teaching certificate required. For pro-
viders only.
Line up your summer job now. We are currently hiring a crew for 190 learner, harvesting in May. Send resume to: Jobfinder.com, call $125-825-6286, Nangelo Combining Inc Models needed pay $175-300 & TV/Film
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" & call
@thegrims (816) 762-5900
& @bizmusic (816) 762-5900
Motivated District Manager for property management company. Full-time experience preferred. Send resume to P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 60044
Models wanted for "Girl of Kansas City" and
"Girl of Chicago." Please call Tony
at 876-900-4000 for apps.
Need Daycare in our home for 2 year old. 8 m to.
2 p.m. M $100 per week. After 2 p., Call 982-764-3900.
Nationals positions available nationwide including
yrs round Great pay.
Free travel. 612/634-8000.
www.nationals.com
NEEDED 100 people to lose weight NO. WILL POWER NEEDD. NEW, new patented, 100% natural, 100% guaranteed, Dr. recommended, (303) 787-3834
NOW HIRRING!! Part-time, full-time all alba
fri 11:30am to 5pm. 9am to 7pm.
1919 Eldon 1919 Eldon 1414 W. 6 and 1000 W. 2284
S. Glenwood St. 1919 Eldon 1414 W. 6 and 1000 W. 2284
Spring and summer employment position available for pool service technician. Must have work experience in a pool equipment operation and maintenance. Please call 843-6257 for an appointment.
Summer Jobs Outdoor, Over 7,000 Openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Resorts
Sullivan's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kailisip, MT 99019.
Summer Deals Available
Fred P. O'Tt's Bar & Grill on Country Club Plaza
Fred P. O'Tt's Bar & Grill on Country Club Plaza
a quality minded people to fill server, cook and barbeting positions Day or Night, and part time positions available. Experience
person after $p, m. at Fréd O. O'Till 470. J.C. Ulysse
after $p, m. on the Country Club Plaza. For more information:
http://www.fredootwill.com/
TEAM MARKETING* Salary plus commission;
evenings. Call 841-1289.
Tennis juniper-summer children's camp-northeast men and women junior tennis and play tennis in play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call Jen at (817) 396-2055 or (817) 396-2055. Wins Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N Y 10545
Waterfront Jobe-WS-SUM children's camp, north-east men and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterski (salmon) and water skiing, play pool and lake plays. Good salary, room & board travel allowance. Call me or write. Camp Wanda, i.e., 617-298-4300. 983. Women call Jemile Wheeler at 841-850-6883.
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Promo Photos and Headshots B&W Darkroom Fast Service. Firstlight Photography #661-4234
Fake ID & alcohol offences divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices
*Driver Education* > offered thru Midwest Driv
*Driver Education* > offered thru Midwest Driv
*Driver Education* > licensed, transportation providi-
*Driv*
**FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial
Invoice or income from ESMS To CSO Box 345, Box 345 New York**
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 834-4023
TEACHER WANTED to work w/autistic child
Prerequisites: 304 & 308 Experience in Behavior
Mgm’t child Development, & other developmental
disabilities pref. $10.40 or $84.60 for interview.
235 Typing Services
$1/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check,
rush iobs. Call Pa79 449-648.
- Transfer Woman Word Processing. Former editor
transfer Woman word processing into accurate pages of letter
type. M35-2903
AFFORDABLE TYING & EDITING Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24hrs.
a day. Tutoring芜湖. Near campus. Lowest rates in
town. 832-1296.
Expert typing by experienced secretary IBM Corp.
Expert typing by experienced secretary IBM Corp.
Laura Call, Matriia Mattila 8141-1219
Ford Perfect Word Processing Worrior Orchard Corner,
No calls AFTER 9:43, 843-8568
Resumes
- Professional Writing
- Cover Letters
- Laser Printing
Transcriptions 1012Mass 842-4619
PA RW Professional Association of Resumers Writers
word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tributions. For coursework, rush jobs available.
Masters Degree 841-6243. word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
books, articles. Call for admission at 841-9771 Whatever
experience. Call Farm at 841-9771 Whenever
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Acoustic Gibson Epiphone琴用 with hard case.
further used $ 500. Call 796-6768 Robo NOW
Aquaria for (1) 140 gallon includes base, top lights, power & undergravel filters 750 and 200 gallon includes stand, top, lights, undergravity filter. 2 power filters: @990 call 861 at 703-8173
Bianchi biancio cross $400; biancio road $96m,
bike. Calgary Lift 842mm; wheels $150m;
Bali Gate Lift 842mm; wheels $150m.
Computers: New and Use
P. C. Compatibles
P. C. Source 832-1126
Fernandes PA-15 Amplifier. Convenient size: 13" x
18". Available at $150 or best offer.
Call Bellamore K92-604A
Honda Ellis 80 1990 Model Low mileage, good campus access. Ask for KM or best offer for KM.
Ready to race Rock Hopper. Complete w/ bar-
des, computer XT thumbscrew, new rim, WXT
derailer, cassette & cables, plus many extras $75.
Call Paul @ 749-0233
Snowboard Burton 165 $125, skis 185 & pole $58
skates 10 to 1/2 $45, all. call Negi 842-5568
Specialized Rocklopper Sport, lock light $50,
JBL Speaks 100; Call 842-709
THE CHAPMAN
Food & Curious Goods
Travel to Sunny Texas!
THE CHAPMAN Goods Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
Buy · Sell · Trade
Bus seats for Spring Break trip to Texas. $225 for air and hotels Dallas, San Antonio, Austin, Kentucky. $199 for hotel in Atlanta.
14. 6dowr Newora 350 /38l. 135,000 ml. AC. good
trees. Runs Great Perfect for Student @ 900.0
bill.
340 Auto Sales
I-3 roommates four Rdrm. apt subtel May - Aug or sooner on free cable, walk to campus
A
1988 Mazda RX-7 SE, burpunqg/grey 5 speed
1989 Mazda RX-7 SE, PBR, cruise, power roof CALL
405 For Rent
8 Suharu DL, FWD, AT, PS, PB, AM/PM Class
Winter carer Winter call 642-8342 Leave
number
85 Ford tempo GL. A/C Automatic. Clean but slight front damage. G150 or negligible
*$member cooperative, near campus/downstreet,
has room avail. Greenhouse, off street parking,
free parking.*
1902 NAMISTH 3 & 4 B. 2 Bath. Lg. rooms,
micro, etc. Cable tv cable, coin operated laundry.
Wi-Fi Internet.
400s Real Estate
BEAT THE CROW! Everyone wants these apes for August, but if you can take one June, you can have a pair of them in buildings at West Hills Apts 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS: 831-8400 or 540
Available Now furnished Rms w/ shared kitchen & bath facilities | blood from KM w/ off-street
DUPLLEX for RENT Large three bedroom, 1.9 bath, attached garage 2009-11 University Call
For lease 4 BR Townhome, 2 bath, 2 car garage
700 per month or 800 with water & dryer. Avail-
able for lease on-site only.
HEY KU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apartments, 1205 N. Elm Street, Suite 304, Lili Ha Liang Rive Living, Limited Entry, H& Water paid, pool, sanum, jacuzi, & spa, garage from KU Medical Campus C. CKS 6163 Across from KU Medical Campus 831-933-8333
or rent for 2 brd. lease, no pets 843-4403.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Room 3 + BRD
on bus line. Basement, garage, CP. CA, WD
to room. Wheelchair, bike, motorbike,
negotiable. 843-7284 after Owner/Agent.
Mackenzie Place now leasing for Aug 3, 9% yr,
luxury laptops, close to campus. All 3 BR,
microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen app 2
decks or portables. Wall insulated, energy effi-
cency.
MUST SUB-lease starting April 1. Informed one,
a washie, macer, l. low, until $300/month.
841-255-3742
Boardwalk
Rapporters
1&2 Bedroom Apts. Now leasing for Summer
Now leasing for Summe & Fall Move-ins
& Fall Move-ins.
Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
New 3 bdr. town house lavail for next semester on bus line. Ideal for 4 people. Fireplace patio and kitchen. Wardrobe. Lighting $100/mon +/u' call Jeff at 86-392-72.
Nice, quiet. 3 BR duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A, Gas, ha '/ B, WA/D. Kitchen appliance. Gove. pets. Reference #450/mo. 843-288-
524 Frontier 842-4444
28 IBT from $95
- Jacuzzi in each apt
- Bat in KU bus room
- Pvt cable TV/TVMS
- Pvt cable TV/TVs
- On-site management
Outside & Inside 641-815-1815
5:15pm M-F 10-25 or
Or Call for Appointments
Naismith Place
*Rent/Less or n 3RH chair* *East Lawrence*
*Rent/Less or n 3RH chair* *East Lawrence*
*dog $175/hr. & up* *Noble Negotiations*
*dog $175/hr. & up* *Noble Negotiations*
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Mon-Pril for appt. 843-644-2106
Spacious 2 bd apt. summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity, Affordable rent & quiet rooms, pool, laundry facilities. Call enquiries 749-302-620
South Point Apartments
2166 W. 26 St. Apt. 3
- quiet location
• 1 bedroom
- 2 bedroom (1&1/2 baths)
- on-site management
tablelease 3 bedroom/2 bath. Furnished apct, close to campus, avail. May 15-Aug 10.
Phone: (866) 743-9100.
843-4754
ECOLOGICAL TREE LANDSCAPE
(call for appt.)
Each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas oven and air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
On KU bus route
1-bedroom $340, $465
2-bedroom $460, $475
3-bedroom $525, $845
4-bedroom $840
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Summer & Fall Leasing Pursued 1 & bdrm
Call: 854-732-6800 RU w/ off-street parking.
Call: 854-732-6800
FIRSTMGT.INC.
*NOWLEASING*
Mon. Wed. & Fri.: 12:00-2:00p.m.
Tues. & Thurs.: 6:00-8:00p.m.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
4TH & EDDINGHAM
Please call Kelly for appt.
843-1971
Hours:
No Appt Necessary
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!
West Hills APARTMENTS
*NOW LEASING*
•Bradford Square
•Chamberlin Court
•Carson Place
•Stadium View
•Oread Apartments
*1425 Kentucky*
call 749-1558 M-F2-5pm or
841-8468 M-F9-12 pm for an app
Now Leasing for June or August
Summer sublease studio apt at Traillarge. Available May 1. On Bursary $100/mo (until January 31).
Offering Luxury 2 br
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Professionally managed
and unfurnished
Spacious apts - furnished and unfurnished
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 permonth
- 2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft $375 to $450 per month
WATERCRAFTALENEWS 10
GREAT LOCATION Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed. Thurs.
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(rother times w/appt.)
This ad for original buildings only
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for
info or appt.
Super-huge 4 + bdm house near campus for summer sublease with option for fall. Wood floors, 2 kitchens, 3 porches, a/c/ & baths. $800/per month for summer. Call 892-4286.
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
S
Walmagement
•Graystone
•1-2-3bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
TRAILRIDGE APTS.
New signing leaves for summer & fail.
Call Sarah for your appointment at
849.7273
200
meadowbrook
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and
The Perfect Apartment!
NOW
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House. Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0849. Stop by 140 Tennessee Street.
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
is the time to rent for Fall,we
Two bdrm. furnished apt. New-Aug. 31, Call 84-8097 to 84-8238. price欠缺.
Two bedm sublease ASAP through Aug. Full size cabinets & free floor BQD $80 total; Call Dave or John E. Smith
9:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be in the cold!
OPENDAILY
MASTERCRAFT
On KU Bus Route with
--or classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
Some Washer/Dryer
Hookup
Hookups
Campus Place-841-1429
We are now acceptor classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
FORK
Studios,1,2,2+,3 & 4 bdrm
mapts ... designed with you in
mind!
HanoverPlace-841-1212
Park25
Regents Court-749-0445
1005 Moor
Orchard Corners-749-4226
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
10th & Arkansas
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Equal Housing Opportunity
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Quail Creek
Bird
2111 Kasold 843-4300
1 BR Hor. apt. available now. New paint + mini blinds 1 yr horse 843-4217
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
Ads phone in may be labeled to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**118 Shuttle Fuel**
Roommate Wanted NOW! $200 money, water, gas,
and cable paid. Cian Biat at 842-5323
I T to share open imac. 3 BR (towhouse in sum-
mature apartment). I have an alarm, now start in June, Jon.夏68, leave message.
Female, non-mobile, roommate wanted. Idrbm in
June, Jon.夏68, leave message.
trash, heat $20/mo & half electric. 832-840-
1. I roommate need to share a 2b, 1Ba, 2yr 4
i. App in scenic area. Must be a non-smoker, clean
and responsible, on bus route. Starts Aug. t.
$197.90 + M (+) will! Please call
Male or Female roommate need ASAP 179 /up+/tilt. No deposit req. On Bus Route 865-3500 NO LEASE $200 +/yutilit. Roommate to share house, large yard, washer, dryer 842-2096
Female Roommates Needed for summer or next winter
Roommate in aft. Dr. Kathleen at 865 2500
Waser /Dryer in appl at Kathleen at 865 2500
M/F roommate wanted to share a BR. Available now bika from campus: 183/mo & tails/Call us
(714) 935-3211
Female roommate wanted for 4 BR 2 BA duplex.
Lease begins June 1 for 12 mos. $156/mo +/ul
If you're near responsible, call Stacy at
865-3028
Quaint mature, female roostmate for 2 bdrn.
Bspan. Spanish Crest Apartments. Sublease from
April 1 - July 31. Rent $135 + utilities. Call 842-
4244
**Summer Subseries** 2: Females to share large 3
bdm apt $200 + w/ld W/D, patio 852-292
bdm apt $200 + w/ld W/D, patio 852-292
- y or m: You should fill in 'Lifetime', A2.42.6003.
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
3/16
© 1983 FurWorks, Inc. Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"And then wham! This thing just came right out of left field."
16
Tuesday,March 16,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
COME CELEBRATE
ST. PATRICK'S DAY
AT THE WHEEL!
KABUKI
SPECIALS
Bethany College, Lindsborg, KS is
Play in a Band?
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Corned Beef &
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Green Jello Shots
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Cans of beer
NOW Planning An Open Air Concert-Swede Stock'93 Friday April16,1993
We're seeking bands and will consider all music styles, for more information Call
Cindy Baldwin
913-227-3311 ext.161 Before 3/17
Co-sponsored by K-Rock 95.9FM
Being drunk is not a license to rape.
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
Sponsored by Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center The Office of Student Life
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1
FEATURES: News of the Weird, Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 102, NO. 122
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAST STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
(USPS 650-640)
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1993
Living without guarantees
NEWS: 864-4810
Alison
1. The image shows a close-up of a table with a white surface and black printed text on the tabletop. The text is too blurry to be read clearly, but it appears to be a list or a set of instructions.
Betty Visser has learned to live with schizophrenia, a mental disorder. She says that she constantly hears voices that tell her to die and that she occasionally sees things like monks in her room or blood on people's faces. But she is coping with the illness and functioning in society with the help of medication, family and friends.
painting and doing volunteer work at a library. She also struggles with demons that have been with her for 21 years.
By Vicki Bode
Kansan staff writer
B
jetty Visser chuckles as she lights another cigarette.
"Sometimes I think that if I smoke, it will kill me faster than the demons will." she says.
But the demons are no joke. For Visser, the demons are real.
The demons have veils covering their heads or wear monk's robes. They speak with the voice of a medieval chorus. Sometimes they speak to her from outside her window. Usually the voices clamor from within her head.
"One night I saw the demons coming for me and I knew I didn't have the energy to fight them off," she says. "I wanted to run. I've learned to turn off the demons most of the time. But sometimes I'm just in the world of demons."
Her delusions are the symptoms of a schizoaffective disorder that Visser, 41, has lived with for 21 years. Visser is a schizophrenic.
She has learned to cope with voices that constantly harass her and hallucinations of bloody figures. Visser fights the delusions. Unlike many who suffer with her disorder, she is able to live alone in a small, scarcely furnished apartment in Lawrence. She spends her time painting and as a volunteer at the Lawrence Public Library.
"Their voices all the time and they tell me that I am really terrible and I should quit making my paintings," Visser says. "The voices will say, 'God, that painting is sickening. Do you really think anybody would want to see that?' Sometimes it makes me
But every day is a struggle
The voices say, "Cold water. Visser's doctor told her to keep a radio turned on so she did not sit in silence. But that does not stop the hallucinations.
cry and other times it isn't so bad *
The voices say: 'Cut yourself and die.'
"I have monks that come and walk through my apartment and chant," Visser says. "They tell me that I am ugly and useless."
The one thing that allows Visser to hold on to reality is her medication, Clozaril, but there is no guarantee that the medication will always be available. Clozaril costs $10,000 a year.
Manuel Pardo, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said that without Clozaril Visser would be back in a hospital.
In October 1900, Visser challenged the state policy that instructed Kansas Medicaid not to cover the cost of Clozaril. Visser prevailed in a preliminary hearing and forced Medicaid to pay for the medication.
But Visser keeps her fingers crossed that the decision won't be reversed.
"If she was taken off of her medication, there's no question about it: She would absolutely be put in an institution," Pardo said.
"Betty would not be sitting here today if she wasn't strong-willed," her mother said. "She has strength and a will to survive. Betty is extraordinary."
Virginia Visser, Betty's mother, attributes Betty's ability to cope to her intelligence and determination to survive.
"Betty toughs through all of it. That has always been her personality."
With the medication, Visser can and does live a life that resembles normalcy.
"I wish more mentally ill people could do what Betty does," Pardo said.
As a teenager, Betty Visser was gifted and
highly intelligent. School was always easy. When she was 16 years old, she graduated from high school.
isser's first symptoms appeared at age 20
Sebphromia is a d
V
young, college-age adults. Seventy-five percent of people with schizophrenia develop symptoms between ages 16 and 25.
"It's so hard to accept the fact that someone that is so won-derful could have something wrong with her," her mother said. "I saw this bright person, and she was just struck down."
Schizophrenia is a disorder that usually strikes
Visser started eating only white foods, thinking that other foods were impure.
"Her first episode was in the 1960s when every teenager was acting bizarre," her mother said, adding that she and her husband probably just didn't recognize something was dreadful wrong.
Pardo explained that Visser's psychotic disorder included depression and schizophrenic symptoms.
but the disease is not completely understood. Every year, 100,000 people are diagnosed with schizophrenia. Every day, 600,000 people are treated for schizophrenia.
"There is still a lot of mystery surrounding schizophrenia."
Story continues, Page 9
Budig asks for faculty salary raise
Chancellor, Meyen defend KU, Regents budget requests
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Gene Budig urged state representatives yesterday not to override the Board of Regents recommended tuition increases, as the Senate did last week.
Budig called the Senate's action "disconcerting."
"I would respectfully request that the Legislature allow that to remain under the Board's jurisdiction," he said.
IUF
Budig and Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, traveled to Topeka yesterday to defend KU and the Regents budget requests before a House Appropriations subcommittee that considers University issues. Those issues include tuition and faculty salary increases and requested money for Dyche Hall and Allen Field House improvement projects.
Gene Budig
The Regents had asked that tuition for Fall 1993 be increased 8 percent for both in-state and out-of-state students at KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University. Last week, the Senate approved a bill that would increase tuition 8 percent for residents and 10 percent for out-of-state students.
The House committee is considering the Senate bill before it moves to the full House for final action.
The Regents have questioned the right of the Senate to change the Regents request for tuition increases. The Legislature typically votes to approve or not approve the requests but does not change them.
The chancellor also asked the committee to at least restore Gov. Joan Finney's recommendation for a 3 percent raise in faculty and student employees' salaries if it could not restore the Regents original request of 3.5 percent increases. The Senate passed increases of 2.5 percent.
Even if the governor's recommendations are restored, the institution will continue to lag behind in the national salary market," Budig said.
Meyen outlined reasons why the University was requesting $700,000 for Dyche and $1.9 million for the field house to bring the buildings into accordance with state fire codes.
According to a state fire marshal's report submitted last spring, the field house needs three new stair towers because upper balcony capacities exceeded the number of people that could exit the building safely in an emergency.
The Dyche request is for the construction of a storage facility for many of the animal specimens that are stored there in ethyl alcohol, a flammable liquid.
After the hearing, committee members said they were impressed with KU's presentation but could make no predictions about what actions the House would take on the Regents' requests.
State Rep. Melvin Minor, D-Stafford, said legislators were worrying about a shaky economic year following the announcement of massive layoffs at Sears and Boeing in Wichita and about the effects those layoffs might have on state income and sales tax revenues.
"Tight as they are, it'll be tough," Minor said. "I'd like to say otherwise, but with the budget constraints the way they are and the governor saying there will be no new taxes, we'll have to live within our means."
But Minor said there was good news as well. He said Kansas books were doing well, for instance.
Another committee member agreed that it was too early to say how the state's economic situation might affect the Regents budget.
regress base
"We're not in crisis," said State Rep. George Teagarden, D-LaCygne. "But we can't catch up with our peers very quickly, either."
The House may take action on the requests Friday or early next week.
INSIDE
NCAA Tournament at Allen Field House
Elections Commission to campaign for voter turnout
The Kansas women's basketball team will play California tonight in the first round of the NCAA tournament. The coaches and players want your support.
KU
Game time: 7:30 p.m.
Tickets: $3.50 students
$5 adults
See pre-game coverage. Page 11.
By Shan Schwartz Special to the Kansan
In the next few weeks, candidates seeking election to Student Senate will be campaigning to earn votes for themselves and their coalitions.
The Student Senate Elections Commission, a body independent from Senate which governs Senate elections, will be running a campaign of its own. Its goal is to get more students to vote.
The "Get Out and Vote" campaign, which will begin March 29, is intended to educate students about the candidates and encourage all students to vote in the April 14 and 15 election, said Kelli Zuel, elections commission member.
Zuel said the commission hoped to increase voter turnout by 10 percent from the 3.501 votes cast last year. In recent years, turnout has remained at about 15 or 20 percent of the
Lawrence campus.
The campaign will include bulletin boards in the Kansas Union and throughout campus that contain information about the candidates. Zuel said the campaign would target campus buildings that house specific schools and contain candidate information relevant to those schools.
The campaign will also use newspaper and radio announcements featuring Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams and high-profile students and administrators encouraging students to "Get Out and Vote."
vate to vote.
have vote to vote.
Low voter turnout largely is due to students' apathy and ignorance about Senate, Wright said.
Lance Wright, Student Senate vice president, said that candidates typically targeted organized living groups and large student organizations because that was the easiest way to reach a large number of students directly. Wright said that off-campus students, which make up the majority of students at KU, were difficult to reach and even more difficult to motiago the schools built.
"Everyone complains that the greeks run the elections," he said. "They mobilize themselves and vote."
"Students just don't know what Senate does," he said. "They just pay their tuition and fees and don't even realize that they pay an activity fee or that Student Senate is directly in control of it."
Wright said another complaint often heard from students was that greek living groups controlled the outcome of the election. That complaint does not make sense. Wright said, because greeks made up only a small percentage of the student body.
Apathy in Senate elections
The Elections Commission is not specifically responsible for recruiting student voter turnout, Zuel said, but it was in the best interests of Senate for more students to vote.
Apathy in Senate elections Despite efforts by the Elections Commission and individual Student Senate coalitions to increase voter turnout, the number of Student Senate votes cast in spring elections fails to increase, and has dropped since a peak in 1990.
Number of Student Senate ballots cast
6,000
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
0
1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
3,155 3,878 2,575 5,516 3,778 3,501
Source: Student Senate Elections Commission and Kranjan files
Dave Ganspit / KANBAR
2
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Enlargements Up To 12"X18" In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Beauty WAREHOUSE Salon & Supplies SORBIE MAGE 520 W. 23rd·841·5885 KMS JOICO NEX US Breast S FOCUS REDKEN frames PAUL MITCHELL
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staircase -Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan.66045.
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ON CAMPUS
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will hold a University Forum from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Jean Milstead, who heads the 2020 Committee, will give a speech titled "Lawrence and Horizon 2020." For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 843-6250 or Laura Harson at 842-6750.
Armchair Generals will meet at 6 p.m. today. For more information, call 864-7118.
KU ENIRONS will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7325.
Pre-Physical Therapy Club will meet at 7 tonight in the first floor conference room in Walkins Memorial Health Center. For more information, call Tanura Fifer at 841-7080.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will hold an eating disorders support group at 7 onight in the second floor conference room in Watkins. The topic of discussion will be "Emotions." For more information, call Chris Cameron at 841-0086.
Japan-America will hold a conversation group and brown bag lunch from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ben Tompkins at 855-0116.
Oread Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends will hold a meeting for worship at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel. For more
Yo!
We know you guys like to party a lot. But still, is anybody minding the store?
There was an important change in the test which students take to get into law school. The LSAT. Why haven't you changed your materials to reflect the change?
The question format that you call Triple True/False was not scored on the June 10, 1991; October 5, 1991; December 7, 1991; February 8, 1992 or June 15, 1992 LSAT.
Yet your materials still spend lots of time prepping your students to "crack" this question format.
That's wasted cracking, guys.
While we don't write the tests, we do analyze them so our students don't get sidetracked.
Princeton Review!
For information on Contemporary LSAT, MCAT, GMAT or GRE prep, call:
842-5442
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
KAPLAN The answer to the test question.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Iname. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1108.
African and African-American Studies will hold a seminar, "Ngoma: Discourse of Healing in Central and Southern Africa," from 3:30 to 5 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Linda Wiley at 864-3054.
information, call Kate Fawcett at 864-6299.
Amnesty International will hold a letter-writing meeting from 8 to 10 p.m. tomorrow at the Glass Onion.
■ KU Libertarians will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Aloe C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 841-1488.
Douglas County AIDS Project will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at St Lawrence Catholic Center. Anyone interested in volunteering is welcome. For more information, call Amy Bolling at 843-0040.
KU Students Against Hunger will meet to discuss War on Hunger Month at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at Parlor A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kishor Allada at 865-5747.
**Triathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Center Pool.**
Society of Professional Journalists will meet at 3:40 p.m. tomorrow at Room 204 in Stauffer-Flint Hall for more information, call Caron Van Waart at 832-8874.
Womyn's Concerns will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 68'/46'
Chicago: 28'/20'
Houston: 67'/49'
Miami: 77'/66'
Minneapolis: 24'/1'
Phoenix: 86'/56'
Salt Lake City: 60'/44'
Seattle: 54'/35'
Omaha: 29'/17'
LAWRENCE: 39'/25'
Kansas City: 37'/24'
St. Louis: 38'/28'
Wichita: 43'/31'
Tulsa: 54'/39'
Tomorrow Friday
St. Patrick's Day will be cloudy and cool with a slight chance for rain.
High: 39'
Cloudy and rainy
Mostly cloudy with a chance for rain.
High: 44'
Low: 34'
$$
\Rightarrow
$$
High: 41'
Low: 28'
Source: Pat Murphy, KU Weather Service: 864 3300
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
T-tops, a stereo, speakers and amplifiers, are equalizer and other items, valued together at $2,645, were taken Monday from a vehicle in the 600 block of Vernmont Street. Lawrence police reported.
thousand block of 135 acres $140,000
Damage estimated at $500 was done Friday to five exterior lights on the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, 1425 Tennessee St., Lawrence police reported.
b. damage estimated at $1,500 was done to a vehicle Sunday or Monday in the 100 block of Haskell Avenue. Law enforcement police reported
Two sets of golf clubs and their bags, valued together at $1,850, were taken March 8 from a golf cart at Alvamar Golf and Country Club, Lawrence police reported.
A story on the front page of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has staff members who are trained to work with rape victims, and its peer educators present programs on rape to organized living groups, said Sherrill Robinson, acting director of the center.
CORRECTION
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STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications for
OFFICE & WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for 1993-1994 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
Return NEW Applications to SUA Office by
DEADLINE
5:00 pm on MARCH 31, 1993
IUU
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ALEXANDER SHEVENEY
plnch
KU's comic and satire magazine, PINCH is now accepting submissions of fiction, original songwriting cartoons, playwriting, art. photography and bad poetry
Send work to:
Wendy Jane Bantam
c/o PINCH
1228 Louisiana #3
Lawrence, KS
805-0114
Deadline : March 28th,1993
8
CAMPUS/AREA
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Four Hashinger Hail resident arrested for selling marijuana
KU police arrested four students suspected of selling marijuana about 6 a.m. yesterday in their Hashinger Hall rooms.
Anthony Kitchen, Topeka freshman, Brian Reitmayer, Derby freshman, and Lee Farrell and Mike Wood, Highland Park, Ill., freshmen, were charged yesterday in Douglas County District Court with one count each of selling marjana. They were being held yesterday in the Douglas County jail. All were being held on $5,000 bond except for Wood, whose bond was set at $3,000.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the arrests were a result of a Douglas County drug unit investigation that began around Thanksgiving.
Mullens said that each student allegedly sold a small amount of marijuana to an undercover agent working with the drug unit.
The four students lived in two rooms at Hashinger. Mullens said that warrants had been issued against the students in the last couple of days.
Selling marijuana is a Class C felony punishable with a minimum term of 3 to 5 years in prison and a possible fine of up to $15,000.
House may take action soon on bill for qualified admissions
State representatives in the House Education Committee entertained the same qualified admissions arguments yesterday that state senators considered during the first half of the legislative session.
Qualified admissions advocates again stressed that the state can not afford to provide remedial education to students who come to the Regents universities unprepared for college curriculum.
Critics of the plan argued that it was a selective policy and that state taxpayers deserved to send their children to state universities.
- Earlier this month, the Senate passed a qualified admissions bill. It was the first time the measure had ever passed on a full floor vote in 10 years of existence.
The bill now must pass the House committee before moving to the House floor for final action, which may happen as early as next week.
Qualified admissions would require incoming students at the Regents universities to meet one of three requirements for admission: a 2.0 grade point average, an ACT composite score of 23, or a ranking in the top third of their graduating class.
Under current law, any high school graduate in the state is eligible for admission to a state university
Filing deadline for Senate candidates, coalitions today
Today is the final day to file for student senator candidacy for the 1993 Student Senate elections.
Those filing must turn in applications to Diane King, elections commissioner, by 5 p.m. today in the Office of Student Life in 300 Strong Hall.
today is also the final day for coalitions to file their coalition charters. The charters are the coalitions' reports on the number of senators who have filed to run under the coalition's name. These reports must also be filed in the Office of Student Life.
The Senate elections will be held April 14 and 15.
Students set to appear in court for allegedly damaging Templin
Three Temple Hall residents arrested early Friday by KU police were given notices to appear in Douglas County District Court today in connection with $1,100 in damage done in the lobby of Temple.
Two freshmen, one from Salina and the other from Springfield, Mo., and a Leavenworth sophomore were arrested about 5 a.m. Friday in Templin and taken to the Douglas County jail. All three posted bond and were released later that day.
KU police officer Burdel Welsh said that the incident began at 2:15 a.m. Friday and continued for one hour. Welsh said in that time, the students used a pool cue to cause $1,500 in damage to a big screen television in the lobby. Welsh also said that a fire extinguisher was discharged toward the television.
Welsh said the pool cue was also used to cause $200 in damage to one of the walls and that three windows were broken by the students' elbows.
Police received a call from a student in Templin at 4:16 a.m. alerting them to the incident.
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writers Mark Kiefer, Ben
Grove and Brett Riggs.
Senate looks into prospect of incorporation
By Brett Riggs Kansan staff writer
Student Senate is looking into the prospect of incorporating itself, with the intention of becoming more politically and fiscally independent from the state.
Student Body President Brad Garlinghouse said the change would allow Senate to deposit its funds in an interest-bearing account and would allow it to disburse the funds as it wished.
"It would let us do what we want to do with the student fee money," Garlinghouse said.
STUDENT
SENATE
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that it would be possible for Senate to incorporate but that it would have to collect the activity fee itself if it wanted full autonomy.
"If you receive public money, you can't use it as you wish," Amber said.
The money the University collects for Senate is held in a state account, and Amber said he would support a Senate vote to increase the liability of receiving the account's interest.
"I think they should explore this, but they need to decide if they really want to do this," Ambler said.
However, receiving the interest would require a change in state legislation, he said.
Garlinghouse and the Senate treasurer, Kevin Sigourney, met March 8 with administrative officials and officials from the comptroller's office to discuss this possibility.
Journey said Senate would not pursue the interest change immediately but would consider banding together with other Regents' schools next year on the issue.
"We need to get more lobbying going," Sigourney said. "I don't want to rush into this."
Sigourney said that he thought the chances for incorporation were slim. He said that Senate would have to register with the Kansas Corporation Division, which would require Senate to set up internal accounting and independent auditing
"Are not big enough to become it best position," said money said. "It wouldn't be effective."
Garlinghouse said he wanted Senate to operate like the Kansas University Athletic Corporation and the Kansas and Burge Unions, which are incorporated. The state collects funds for both corporations but allows them to put their money in local accounts and collect interest.
Garlinghouse said Kansas statutes only allow athletic funds, student union funds and student publications to operate in such a manner, but he said that Associated Students of Kansas would lobby the Legislature for a change in the law.
Museums to combine for efficiency
Aubner said that the Unions and the KUAC report to the chancellor.
Natural history will engulf three others, help them get funds
By Vicki Bode
Kansan staff writer
The University's Museum of Natural History will increase the number of specimens in its collection from one million to five million during the next academic year.
The four million new specimens will not come by making new acquisitions, but by combining three other museums on campus with the natural history museum, said Philip Humphrey, director of the Museum of Natural History.
KU officials approved the merger in November, he said. The Snow Entomological Museum, Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology and R.L.M Gregor Herbarium will merge under one administration with the Museum of Natural History by the summer of 1994.
From left, Ashley Stout, Fayetteville, Ark., sophomore, Sarah Sanderman, Englewood, Colo., sophomore, and Brannon Hertel, Crystal Lake, Ill., sophomore, on an assignment in the Museum of Natural History.
Mark Rowlands / KANSAN
"No physical change will take place in the museums," Humphrey said. "Each museum will stay in the same building it is in now."
The Snow Entomological Museum is in Snow Hall, the Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology is housed in Lindley Hall and R.L. McGregor Herbarium is in Bridwell Botany Research Lab on West Campus.
Humphrey said that each of the three museums will become equal divisions of the history museum. The Snow museum will be the division of entomology, the paleontology museum will be named the division of paleontology and the McGregor museum will become the division of
botany.
"All of the changes are positive ones," Humphrey said. "The three museums will become eligible for future government funds that aren't available to them now because they aren't open to the public for long hours like the history museum."
koger Kaesler, director of the Museum
of Invertebrate Paleontology, said that the change would make the history museum one of the strongest in the country.
The change will not eliminate any staff
"It will be more efficient," Kaesler said. "We are convinced that the merger will increase the interaction between workers."
members, he said. The directors of the three museums will become curators.
"We are hoping the merger will give the University more reasons to have a special museum on campus," Humphrey said. "Eventually we would like to have all three museums located in a building near Dyche Hall."
KU selection process typical
By Dan England
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
Although KU's selection process of its administrators has been criticized lately, it is no different from the system used by many of its peer institutions.
Several minority groups have criticized KU recently because only one of five finalists for the director of affirmative action is a minority.
Everett Wells, director of affirmative action at the University of Oregon, said that KU's selection process was typical of the systems used at many other universities.
When an administrative position opens, KU's guidelines are to form a search committee, recruit and advertise nationally, and then select final candidates. Once those have been selected, the committee conducts private interviews and recommends at least one candidate for the position. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, makes the final decision.
Oregon, the University of North Carolina and the University of Colorado all use the same system as KU, the directors of the universities' offices of affirmative action said.
involvement of the office of affirmative action in that process does vary within each university.
However, the interviewing process and the
Garnett Tatum, director of the office of affirmative action at Colorado, said that he or one of his staff acts as a non-voting member of each committee. The member's job is to make sure the finalists for the position are as diverse as possible.
Tatum said that after the finalists were selected, the committee tries to select the best person for the job. However, if a person is selected that does not fit one of the office's special classifications, the committee must fill out a form justifying the decision.
Tom Berger, acting director of KU's office of affirmative action, said that his office takes a look at the finalists, but does not have the final save in the selection.
Robert Cannon, officer of affirmative action at UNC, said that some interviews of the final candidates were conducted in public hearings.
"If any students are concerned about the process, we tell them to go the hearing and ask questions," he said.
At many of the universities, including KU, student groups are invited to interview the candidates, but no interviews are open to the public.
KU ticket allocation leaves few for students
Kansan staff write
By Will Lewis Kansan staff writer
Not many KU students will get a chance to cheer for their team in the first round of the NCAA men's basketball tournament this week at the Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Ill., a suburb of Chicago.
Only 22 students who submitted an application with the University of Kansas Athletic Department were selected.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, said the NCAA allocated 250 tickets to each school playing in the tournament. The bulk of KU's tickets went to the "official group," which included players parents, officials in the Kansas Athletic Corporation and 31 members of the basketball
band. Sixty-five percent of the remaining tickets were distributed to Williams Fund donors, 20 percent to students and 15 percent to faculty and staff members. Of those who applied for the first round in Chicago, 139 were students and 79 were faculty and staff members. Tickets were $75 for all games in Chicago.
Matt Irwin, Overland Park freshman, submitted his application, but was not one of the lucky 22 students who were selected.
"It's very disappointing that so few students are going to get a chance to follow their team after following their team all season," Irwin said. "They look forward to the NCAA tournament. Then the tournament comes around and look what happens."
KU Men's Soccer Club Spring Season Meeting
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Wednesday, March 17.1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Women's basketball deserves fan support
T tonight, for the first time since 1988, the Kansas women's basketball team will play host to an NCAA tournament game at Allen Field House.
NCAA tournament game at Allen Field House. The team deserves a big crowd for its game against California, which tips off at 7:30.
The Jayhawks are 21-8 after winning the Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament with victories against Missouri, No. 10 Colorado and No. 22 Nebraska. The team is hot, winning 10 of its last 11 games. The tournament championship and the team's late-season success earned the Jayhawks an automatic berth in the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship and a No. 24 national ranking.
During the regular season, few people attended women's basketball games despite numerous promotions and free admission for students.
But now KU fans have a chance to redeem themselves. A big crowd tonight could help the team move into the second round, where it would meet No. 1 Vanderbilt in Nashville, Tenn.
Student tickets are only $3.50.The price is not prohibitive, and the women's basketball team deserves your support.
CHRIS RONAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
RU 486 can be more than an abortion pill
E ever since it was developed in 1980, the drug RU 486 has generated controversy. In the past, it has been touted as a potential anti-cancer agent
and more recently as an extremely effective postcoital contraceptive. But it was its use as an abortion pill that prompted the Bush administration to impose a ban on its import in 1989. On his third day in office, President Clinton promised to lift the ban, and the drug is now under consideration by the Food and Drug Administration.
RU 486's use as an abortion inducement is not disputed. It is widely used in France, Britain, Sweden and China as a non-surgical method of abortion within the first nine weeks of pregnancy. But its ban was a knee-jerk reaction by the FDA as a result of pressure from anti-abortionists who refuse to look at the pill's other possibilities.
For example, researchers now are studying the drug's potential for treating breast cancer, brain tumors and endometriosis, a painful condition in which uterine tissue begins to grow outside the womb.
In October, the authoritative New England Journal of Medicine published a study conducted by the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. The study found that the drug would prevent implantation of a fertilized egg in a woman's womb if it was taken within 72 hours of unprotected sexual intercourse. Although anti-abortionists object to this use as another form of abortion, many doctors contend that pregnancy does not begin until implantation is established, and RU 486 has fewer side effects than other postcoital contraceptive methods.
Postcoital methods now consist of giving a "morning after pill," which is actually high doses of birth control pills. The drawback is that the patient tends to experience nausea, and if she vomits shortly after taking her pills, additional pills may have to be taken.
One reason why there is such a high number of abortions performed in the United States may be because there are not enough effective contraceptive choices. Who knows what other benefits remain to be discovered about RU 486. Opposition to its testing has never been medical or scientific; it is political. Its ban should be lifted as quickly as possible.
VAL HUBER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
CLINTON'S IS INCONSISTENT HIS PROMISES OF MORE AND HIGHER PAY.
AND I ALSO REALIZE THAT BY RAISEING TAXES THE ECONOMY will only LAG MORE AND MORE BEHIND... TAXES HAVE NEVER INCREASED CONSUMER SPENDING, SO WHY SHOULD THEY NOW?
But LIKE ALL OF THE OTHER ENVIRONMENTAL EXTREMISTS' THAT SURROUND THE PRESIDENT, I TOO SEE ECONOMIC GROWTH AS A THREAT TO NATURE. AND IN OUR QUEST TO SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT, JOBS ARE EXPENDABLE
TAPLEY 93
Kansans should appreciate many of its world-famous tourist spots
Kansas seems to be famous for one thing. Dorothy and the Land of Oz. When people found out that I was going to the University of Kansas, they would unleash the well-worn Toto jokes, titter something about liking wheat fields and then ask, "What is there to do in Kansas? It's flat isn't it?"
STAFF COLUMNIST
Personally, I can sympathize with Kansas' plight because back home I study at the University of Wales. And Wales, like the Midwest, is considered a bit of a joke. People who have never set foot outside their hometown and whose only exposure to Welsh culture is to listen to a Tom Jones record consider Wales to be full of phlegm-swilling, sheep-loving vokels.
FRANCESCA GLYN-JONES
Now I agree that there may be more sheep in Wales than there are people, and you need well-lubricated tomsils to get your tongue around the language. I mean how else would you sayw "Lianfairpwlwigynglwgogerych-wyrndroill-Wlantyllioogoch."
which incidentally is the name of a place, if you didn't have a pint of phlegm swishing around your mouth.
The Welsh have never started a war,
never invaded a lesser nation and
have given the world music, love and
romance. Indeed Wales is a beautiful
place. After all, a half million sheep
can't be wrong.
So it is with some sympathy that I can understand Kansas' predicament. Like Wales, Kansas is secretly a land of opportunity and treasure. It may not have the Eiffel Tower, the Egyptian pyramids or an ancient tomb or two, but it does boast the country's
largest prairie dog. Mock not! If you travel along I-70, you begin to discover that Kansas is a regular tourist trap. Admittedly, a huge hound is not the stuff that booming tourism is made of. But before you so flappantly dismiss it, have you seen the nation's largest prairie dog? It may not be up to Leaning-Tower-of-Pisa standards, but then every town has its fair share of quirky, historic buildings. How often do you see a place offering an outrageously large it as its star attraction? Then don't forget the infamous ball of twine, which is supposedly the second largest in the nation, if not the world. And it is right here in the heart of Kansas. Agree that there is only so long you can look at a ball of string.
So when you have exhausted that little gem, trip on over to Greensburg to climb down the deepest hand-dug well in the United States. Not only do you have the opportunity to break your neck on the narrow steps, but you also get a free badge for your $1
admission. A 109-foot hole in the ground might not be much to get excited about, but if you couple it with the 1000 pound meteorite that is proudly displayed in the souvenir shop next door, the prospect of visiting Greensburg might be a more tempting option.
Loads of people have visited the Statue of Liberty or gazed at the Eiffel Tower. But how many people can boast that they have seen the much-acclaimed stuffed horse in Lawrence that has rave reviews in the "Lets Go U.S.A" tour guides? Although you might ask yourself why you would want to see this, just remember that it's these little things that make life complete.
So next time someone mentions Toto and the Munchkins in connection with Kansas, tell them to get a life and inform them of the Midwest's little known tourist attractions.
Francesca Gyn-Jones is a Ludow, England,Junior majoring in American studies.
Limbaugh's controversy is all showbiz
There's still more to be said. That's the conclusion I've come to after reading numerous columns and letters. What it comes down to is Rush Limbaugh needs more press for the simple reason that people need to wise up and realize that this guy is not for real.
It's all in the name of entertainment. Ratings are what matter, and Limbaugh's show definitely is a night thing. Limbaugh uses his excellent speaking ability and friendishly clever wit to entertain, and he does this well.
This is a late night party made to be serious. Limbaugh would be the first to admit that his show is popular and that it receives high ratings. Furthermore, it's obvious that his aim is to maintain them.
STAFF COLUMNIST
ANDREW
GILMAN
To keep these ratings, he entertains,
and to entertain, he offends Hey. I’m not knocking the guy, this works, and to some it’s reason enough to watch.
Based on empirical evidence, it’s a
fact that offensiveness equals high-dollar entertainment. Although it may not be the most conventional form, it is effective. How did Morton Downey Jr. and Andrew "Dice" Clay become notable? By offensiveness of course. People like to hear things that are controversial or see something that might be shocking, thus Limbaugh thrives. But just like these giants of entertainment, Rush Limbaugh's fame also will die out.
What separates him from other talk show hosts is his ability to take news
and deliver it in an entertaining manner. Because of this it becomes difficult to take him seriously. White speaking of important problems such as homelessness, we see Limbaugh laughing. This desensitizes the public to think that it's not a problem. Part of entertainment and comedy is making painful things seem not so bad. Limbaugh does this, and he does this well, but what we need to realize is this guy is not for real, and it's entertainment and nothing more.
The media that disagree with him are "commies," the people who don't sympatize with him are "idots," and we are supposed to take this guy for real? To be taken earnestly, diction is important. By using foolish language, Limbaugh does not aim to inform, but instead to put on a show.
Still don't believe me? Watch the camera work on the show. Once Liam baughs into one of his monologues, the camera zooms in, so we
can understand that he's about to say something serious. When he finishes, the camera retreats and a joke is told, or a funny video clip is shown. Things like this are done for a purpose. It alters our perception of him and further increases the dramatics of the show, making us think this is real news. This is sensationalism. We know better than to think "A Current Affair" is news. This is no different—it's all in the name of ratings.
Entertainment for entertainment's sake is great, but when done with an anterior motive it's difficult to accept with a straight face. People who disagree with Limbaugh politically should not be angry with him, and those who think of him as a guru should think twice. It's all about showiz and nothing more.
Andrew Gilman is a Norman, Okla., sophomore majoring in English.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EDLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Editors
Asst. Managing ... Justin Knupp
News ... Monique Gualsin
Editorial ... David Mitchell
Campus ... Stephen Marloo
Sports ... KC Trauer
Photo ... David Mitchell
Features ... Matt Rowlands
Graphics ... Lynne McAdoo
Wire ... Tiffany Lasha Hurt
Assistant Editors
Assoc. Editorial ... Chris Moeser
Assoc. Campus ... Jasn Horde
Assoc. Campus ... Christine Lasue
Assoc. Sports ... Stacy Morford
Reporters
Vicki Bode ... Mark Button
Jess Doftaven ... David Dewey
Matt Doyle ... Dan England
Ben Grove ... Kaskler
Will Law ... Frank McCormick
Timmy McCormick ... Brady Praser
Jim Reece Brett Riggs
Todd Seifert Blake Seymour
Jerry Winters Zach Wolfe
Scott Anderson Copy Editors Shelly Solon
Heather Anderson Heather Anderson Almee Baker
J.R. Clarbome Almee Estrada
John Paul Fogel Kristi Foger
Kevin Furling Katie Greenwald
Karon Hadley Joe Harder
Tiffan Lushert Chrissiaune
Noelle Kastens Christian Lane
Allison Lippert Tim Marks
Stacy Morford MuneeRasser Nassar
Tracy Ritchie Corey Shoup
Vince Wardle
Andrew Amanne Jason Audl
Kim Buche Clint Chin
Richard Davinkel Katherine Davis
Douglas Hesse Jason Herman
Renée Knoeber Paul Kotz
Bernice Neumann Rachel Neumann
Dave Campbell Andrew Hodges
Katherine Mawlett Derek Nagel
Erin Fegarty
David Naylor
Julie Wesson
Katharine Manuelle
Keaton Teets
News Clerk
Stephanie Kimball
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
BILL THOMAS
Production
PAT BOYLE Accounting
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Brad Breon
Regional Sales mgr ... Wade Baxter
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
Co-op sales mgr ... Ashley Hassell
Production mgrs ... Amy Stumbu
Ashley Langford
Marketing director .. Angela Clovenger
Creative director .. Holly Perry
Ad Director .. Dave Halberg
Classified mgr .. Jill Torney
Special Sections .. Blythe Fucht
Promotion .. Mark Denholm
Classified Assistant .. Laura Guth
Zone Managers
Jennifer Bloney...Kim Brown
John Carlton...Amy Casey
Cole Cox
Retail Account Executives
Linda Boodeker ... Tricla Bumpu
Kate Burgesa ... Ken Cole
Jason Eberly ... Jennifer Evenson
Justin Garberg ... Stephane Greenwood
Josh Hahn ... Tamille Johnson
Allison Kaplan ... Sue Krautty
Robin Krting ... Jessica Lenaard
Shelley McConnell ... Chris Morrissale
Mike Murray ... Ker Rathboun
Ed Schager ... Judith Standlou
Virginia Wade
Rebecca Borrowen Kristy Entow
Melissa Jenkins Lauren Mankae
Rosalind Hunt
Regional Account Executive
Nicole Abbott Jennifer Laird
Cathy McWilliams Troy Tawter
Interns
Mendi Stauffer...
KULIFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
5
Lead story
In December, the nation's second patent for an animal was awarded to Ohio University for a mouse that carries a human gene. The mouse is to be used in lab studies. The human gene helps make it resistant to viral infections, which limit the utility of ordinary lab mice.
The litigious society
In October, Katherine Balog. 60, filed a lawsuit in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., against Bill Clinton and the Democratic Party to recover damages for the trauma caused by Clinton's candidacy. The fact that Clinton was then on the verge of becoming president, despite allegations that he was a draft dodger and a communist sympathizer, induced in her serious emotional and mental stress that was certain to create future medical expenses, she said.
William and Tonya Parker filed a $10,000 lawsuit in December
against the Holiday Inn of Midland, Mich., claiming that an employee walked into their room without warning on their wedding night while they were having sex. The couple said they now suffer post-traumatic stress syndrome and that their sex life has become dysfunctional. A Holiday Inn spokesperson said the intrusion was an accident, and the couple should have hung the "do not disturb" sign on their door.
■ In January, the New York Times reported that as many as 10 city prisoners over the past three years have had guns smuggled to them and have shot themselfs so they can file lawsuits against New York City for negligence in allowing guns in the cells. One lawsuit was for $8.5 million.
High school student Leigh Ann Fisher and her parents filed a $4.2 million lawsuit for emotional distress in August after she was replaced as captain of her high school cheerleading squad in
WEIRD
A Montgomery County, Maryland, judge in January warned litigant Michael Sindram that he would face contempt of court charges if he filed any more "frivolous" lawsuits. The Washington Times reported that Sindram had filed at least 350 lawsuits, losing all because of their nuisance value except two that were settled out of court, the judge said. Sindram is 0-for-42 at the U.S. Supreme Court.
■ Schenectady, N.Y., jail inmate Jose Rivera Martinez, 33, filed a $750,000 lawsuit in February against the county jail, alleging that he was permanently disfigured in 1990 by the warts he received from eating jail-issued hot dogs, to which he said he was allergic.
In January, former Northwestern University professor Olan Rand filed an employment discrimination complaint against the University, claiming
he had been wrongly fired the month before. Rand was fired after he pleaded guilty to theft of $33,000. He had continued to collect his mother's social security checks in their joint account for five years after she died in 1981. He claimed that the University should not have discriminated against him, since he suffered from the disability "extreme procrastination behavior."
Ella Bagwell filled a lawsuit against the owners of the Friendly Food Mart near Anderson, S.C., in February, claiming they had failed to pay off on a video poker game in the store. She claimed that the store's clerks, by custom, paid 25 cents for each replay earned on the machine, that she had won 999,999 free games in one day, and that she is entitled to $249,999.75. The store owners say the machine malfunctioned.
According to reports obtained by New York Newsday, New York City paid $30 million last year and has paid $320 million since 1978 in lawsuit damages to people who have tripped on sidewalks that were in disrepair. City law requires property owners, not the city, to maintain the sidewalks, but the city can be sued for failure to enforce the law.
Bentonville, Ark., inmate Ross Chadwell filed a lawsuit against Bentton County in February, claiming that Sheriff Andy Lee violated Chadwell's civil rights. Chadwell had tried to escape after being temporarily made a jail trustee, but was soon captured and punished. Chadwell said Lee acted recklessly by putting Chadwell in a place from which he could attempt to escape
In a 1992 medical journal, two doctors in Bristol, England, reported that a 53-year-old man had arrived at a hospital emergency room, alert and oriented, but with two holes in his skull — the result of a suicide attempt with an electric drill. The doctors' literature search of deliberate self harm by craniocerebral penetration produced reports of four incidents with nails, two with ice picks, five with keys, three with pencils and six with chopsticks.
Creme de la weird
Inexplicable
In February, Anthony Thomas, 23, who was facing a maximum of 12 years in prison for selling cocaine in Lake City, Fla., said he thought a long sentence would help him deal with his drug problem. He called a conference with the judge and requested a sentence of 30 years, which the judge granted.
At a wedding reception in Long Beach, Calif., in February, a man described as about 20 years old and upset about the seating arrangements, shot a 33-year-old man to death.
Life's diminishing value
JUDY SMITH
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CALL 864-SHOW CALL 864-SHOW THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
H. G. Lewis' Splatter Classic Color Me Blood Red
Jewish Film Festival
TUES., MAR. 16 AT 7:00 PM
Shoot and Cry
The Giving Tree
Thurs. March 18
Leaving Home: A Family In Transition
Rachel
Geflite Fish
cosponsored by
Wed. March 17
The Empty Chair
Roger Corman's Original LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS
WED., MAR.17 AT 7:00 PM
THURS., MAR.18 AT 7:00 PM
THURS., MAR.18 AT 9:30 PM
STEREO SALE
S O
All floor models,
19TH & 20TH
10AM-6PM
O
discontinued, and one-of-a-kind merchandise is clearance priced. A great opportunity for you to select from the largest selection of Audio/Video/CDs and Car Stereo components in the Midwest at DISCOUNT PRICES!
O O O O
-
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AUDIOVIDEO CDs&TAPES CIRKER STERO
913-842-1811 913-842-1544 913-842-1438
Maserati
IDEO
UDIO/VIDEO
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If George Doesn't Come Here Before Spring Break, George Burns.
3 tans $10
5 tans $15
7 tans $20
other sizes avail.
ask about
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3 months
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SINCE 1893
EUROPEAN
TAN. HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdahl-841-6232
(behind Arby's)
6
Wednesday, March 17. 1993
462 Mass 749
HALL 1912
Theatre 11 is accessible to all persons.
Nominated for AACT Awards including
Best Recruit
The Cycling Game (Rush)
Daisy Duncan 38
642
Mass. Hall
749-
1912
Theater it is accessible to all persons
Nominated for Academy Awards including:
Lee J. Burrows
The Crying Game (R)(Th.2)
Daily: (4:30) 7:00,9:30
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Camping Equipment Rental
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864-3545
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Sommersby PG15(1)/90 8/70 8/90 8/90
Shadow of the Wolf. PG15(1)/15/80 7/15/80 2/90
Ground Hog Day. PG15(1)/5/80 7/15/80
Fire in the Sky. PG15(3)/20/72 8/90 8/90
Swings Kids. PG15(3)/5/80 7/15/80 2/90
CBA R(2/5) 72/8/91
Times good Mon.-Thur only
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM - ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS • $3.00
VARSITY
925 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
Falling Down R 5:00, 7:30, 9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
Amos and Andrew PG-13 5:15, 7:15, 8:45
Mad Dog and Glory R 5:15, 7:30, 8:45
Homeward Bound G 5:00, 7:00, 8:00
Aladdin G 9:00, 7:00
Best of the Best R 8:30
A Far Off Place PC 5:00, 7:15, 8:30
CINEMA TWIN ALL STARS
3110 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25
A RiverRunsThroughIt PC 5.00,7.45
Scent of A Woman® 5.00,8.00
Bottleneck
841-5483
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
Boittleneck
841-5483
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
Wed. March 17
Too Much Joy
The Hidden
St. Pat's Bash Adv. Tix
Thurs. March 18
Millhous
Nixons
Fri. March 19
Common
Ground
Sat. March 20
MU 330
Blue Meanies
Conspiracy
Monday March 22
Open Mic
Dream Vacation or Nightmare?
Choose Spring Break Travel Plans Carefully.
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
SENATE
841-5499
MANE TAPER
HRISTMAS INN
864 trainers, Suite E. Insurance, ES 65484
Open Sat-Sat & by appointment.
Wear GREEN and get 10% off storewide!
today only with this coupon (3/17/93)
GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS
1906 MASS 843-8186
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
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ST. PATRICK'S DAY
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$2.00
Corned Beef &
Cabbage
$1.00
Green Jello Shots
$1.00
Cans of beer
ALL THE BEST STUFF IS CHEAPER AT CHECKERS!
Extra LOW PRICES!
BIRDS EYE CORN, PEAS OR MIXED VEGETABLES
78¢
16 OZ.
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OR BONELESS
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178
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LB.
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FRESH BAKED
APPLE PIE
26 OZ.
2 FOR 3
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PIZZA
350
EA.
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26 OZ.
$ 2 FOR $ 3
MOOSE BROTHERS
PIZZA
PEPPERONI
LARGE 12" SIZE
350 EA.
FRESH BAKED
GARLIC BREAD
1 LB LOAF
$ 88¢
IMPORTED FROM HOLLAND
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$ 99 LB.
MARCH 17 THRU 27
COLOR PRINT FILM—4x6 PRINTS
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WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Yeltsin defends reforms
World NEWS
Russian leader says Western aid needed
MOSCOW — Warning that Russia's democratic reforms are in grave danger, President Boris Yeltsin charged yesterday that the hard-line parliament was trying to restore Communism and appealed for greater Western aid.
The Associated Press
political crisis.
In his first public appearance since storming out of a humiliating session of Congress of People's Deputies on Friday, Yeltsin said he had not decided how to respond to the growing
"The results of the Congress give us serious grounds for alarm. The Congress did not solve, rather it deepened the constitutional crisis," Yeltsin said at a Kremlin news conference with French President Francois Mitterrand.
Mitterrand made a one-day visit to show Western support for Yeltsin after the 1,033-member Congress last
week moved to sharply curb the Russian president's power to carry out reforms.
Mittterrand's visit was the latest in a series of meetings with Western leaders concerned about Yeltsin's political survival. Last week, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl met with the Russian president in Moscow for 90 minutes. In two weeks, he will meet President Clinton in Vancouver, British Columbia, for a two-day summit.
Fear rules bombed Bombay
Indians blaming religious turmoil, organized crime
"I see a very serious danger posed to democracy and reform. I can see there is an attempt to restore the Communist regime of the Soviets," Yeltsin said.
The Associated Press
Though the bombers and their motives are not known, there is speculation that the bombings were
BOMBAY, India — In the wake of the bombings that killed 317 people, currents of rumor and fear are running through this bustling city of 10 million people, but there is also an air of defiance.
revenge attacks by Muslims, and police have arrested several Muslim gangsters.
The 13 bombs killed people at the market, in hotels and skyscrapers, in shops, buses and taxis.
A new bombing early today in Calcutta, in eastern India, wrecked two buildings, killing at least 25 people and injuring 100, police and news agencies reported.
Just as businessmen at the World Trade Center moved quickly to relocate after the Feb. 26 bombing in New York, Bombay's business community quickly relocated its damaged stock market.
With friends outside the building after trading Tuesday afternoon, Kotak brushed aside religious conflict and blamed the attacks on organized crime.
"Many of the reforms our government is using to open our economy are annoying India's underworld because it can't make as much money smuggling gold and stereos into India and trading rupees on the black market," Kotak said.
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Home City, town or post office, state, and ZIP c
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NATION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
7
Three convicted in rape of mentally retarded teen
The Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — A jury convicted three young men yesterday of raping a mentally retarded teen-ager, ruling she was incapable of giving informed consent to sex. A fourth defendant was convicted of a lesser charge.
After a five-month trial and eight days of tense deliberations, the jury found that Christopher Archer and fraternal twins Kevin and Kyle Scherzer sexually assaulted the girl, who has an IQ of 64 and the social skills of an 8-year-old.
The defendants had maintained that she instigated the sex acts.
The three inserted a broom, baseball bat and stick into the young woman's vagina.
The verdict creates ground rules for future cases involving the mentally retarded, said Deborah Denno, a law professor at Fordham University and specialist in rape law.
"This was a very difficult case and now it's on the books to be made clear that people who engage in sex with mentally defective people proceed at their peril," Denno said.
The incident occurred March 1, 1988, in the basement of the Scherzer home in the affluent New York suburb of Glen Ridge. The young woman was 17 then; the four defendants were high school football teammates.
Archer, 21, and the Scherzers, 22, were convicted of first-degree aggravated sexual assault involving force or coercion. The jury also convicted Archer and Kevin Scherzer of a second identical count, saying they should have known the woman was mentally defective.
The jury found Bryant Grober, 21, guilty only of a third-degree count of conspiracy, and acquitted him of eight other charges.
The panel acquitted Kyle Scherzer of three counts of aggravated sexual assault, and Archer and Kevin Scherzer on two of those counts.
Central to the case was the prosecution's claim that the young woman lacked the capacity to understand her actions. Defense attorneys contended that the young woman wasn't mentally retarded and that she consented to all of the sexual acts.
Senate might challenge plan to create jobs for economy
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Conservative Democrats pursued support for trimming President Clinton's jobs package yesterday as party leaders prepared to move the first parts of the White House's economic plan through Congress.
Similar House and Senate outlines for $500 billion in deficit reduction embodying Clinton's priorities seemed ready to win approval in both chambers. House passage was expected tomorrow with the Senate following late this week or next — despite solid Republican opposition.
"In terms of its focus, its dimensions, the spirit of the proposal, we are strongly, strongly in support of Clinton's budget plans," House Speaker Thomas Foley. D-Wash, told reporters.
But the administration's $16 billion job creation package — rushing money to public works projects, summer jobs for youths and other projects — seemed to be in some jeopardy, particularly in the Senate. Conservative Democrats were worried that the expenditure would upset voters believed to be more eager to shrink the
The administration stood by its $16 billion package, which the administration says would create 219,000 jobs for road workers and others this year alone.
federal deficit.
"The president believes the stimulus package is needed now, and the investment that's called for is needed and should be passed as quickly as possible by the Congress," White House spokesperson George Stephanopoulos said.
But in the Senate, John Brouax, D-La., and others said about 15 of the chamber's 57 Democrats are reluctant to support the full $16 billion without a chance to vote first on deficit reform. That package of tax increases and spending cuts will not be ready until at least May.
Breaux's vote count would spell trouble for Democratic leaders, who can afford to lose few Democrats and retain a majority in the 100-member Senate.
"I have a real concern that the whole thing could go down if we try to pass it now and do the cuts later," Breaux said in an interview.
BRIEFS
Sixth body found at World Trade Center
NEW YORK — Searchers in the rubble beneath the World Trade Center found the body of a hotel purchasing agent who was last seen in the parking area minutes before the bomb exploded. The death toll was raised to six.
The body of 37-year-old Wilfredo Mercado — the last missing victim — was found Monday, more than two weeks after the blast. The first five victims were found within hours of the explosion on Feb. 26 under the 110-story twin towers.
Cult leaders meet with FBI agent
WACO, Texas — Negotiators for the first time met face-to-face with leaders of the armed and barricaded Branch Davidian religious cult, the FBI said yesterday, the 17th day of the standoff.
Cult leader David Koresh did not participate in Monday's meeting, which centered on the health of some cult members, legal issues and messages, said FBI agent Dick Swensen.
Swensen said Steve Schneider, Koresh's top deputy, and cult member Wayne Martin, a Harvard educated lawyer, met for an hour outside the compound with an FBI negotiator and McLennan County Sheriff Jack Harwell.
WASHINGTON President Clinton yesterday approved emergency snow removal funds for eight more states hard hit by heavy snowfall.
Clinton OKs emergency snow aid
Connecticut, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island will now receive federal money to cover five days of snow removal.
In the matching assistance program administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the federal government contributes 75 percent of the snow removal costs and state and local governments must come up with the remaining 25 percent.
Fire kills 13 in Chicago residence hotel
CHICAGO — Fire ripped through a residence hotel yesterday, killing 13 people, including two who jumped to their deaths rather than face the flames and smoke. Other residents tied sheets together and climbed out upper floors.
When firefighters arrived, dozens of panicked residents were gathered at windows or dangled from them as wind-whipped flames rose 15 feet in the air above the roof and blazed out other windows.
Twenty people, including one firefighter, were brought to hospitals, and others were treated at the scene, authorities said.
Briefs compiled by the Associated Press.
Daily Re-affirmation When I cease thinking and talking about the past, I can live a more fulfilling life in the present, where spirit is. From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
KU Students Only
$1 OFF COUPON
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The key to a safe Spring Break is in your hands...
Remember:
If you drink, drink in moderation.
Never drink and drive; Use a designated driver.
/
Use sunscreen.
If you choose to be sexually active, use a condom.
Wear your seatbelt.
Have A Great Break from P.A.R.T.Y.!!
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF RANCHES
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CLARIES
MacWrite II
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MacWrite
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$85.00
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WordPerfect
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$125.00
Microsoft Word
$99.00
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-5697
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Some restrictions apply. Come into the Computer Store for details. Please add 5,9% sales tax.
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Wednesday, March 17, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The
Ete.
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928 Mass
Ray-Ban
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Do not spray paint on lenses.
The women of Kappa Delta would like to thank all those who participated in their annual twister tournament and would like to congratulate the champions: ΔTΔ.
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within theCollege. Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring,outstanding educator,and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office, 864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to one single-spaced page.
Send your nominations to Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 60045. Deadline is April 2, 1993
Plan will illuminate parking lots
Scholarship halls will benefit soon
By Christoph Fuhrmans Special to the Kansan
Aimee Wittman, Leawood sophomore, to be used of afraid of walking from the parking lot back to Douthart Scholarship Hall.
"It was very nerve-wracking walking in the dark," she said.
With the installation of 13 new street lamps beginning along the 1300 block of Louisiana Street, Alumni Place and the parking lot behind Spooner Hall, Wittman and other scholarship hall
Twenty-four more lights will be added around Watkins, Miller, Battenfeld and Sellards Scholarship Halls. All of the street lamps are expected to be installed by early spring, weather permitting, said Kami Thomas, assistant director of student housing.
residents will feel more comfortable walking home at night.
"It was safe before, but it's always nice when you can provide a little extra." Thomas said.
The new street lamps are part of Student Senate's campus lighting plan that was financed by a $2 student fee increase. The overall bill to Quality Electric, the company installing the street lamps, is worth about $40,000.
Wittman and other scholarship hall residents said they were looking forward to the new lighting
Teresa Hedges, Kippa graduate student, said, "It's great because I walk at night all the time. There are places on campus I won't walk at night."
Other residents were pleased with the improved lighting but had different reactions.
"It's about time," said Rebecca Harrington, Frankfort junior. "Why didn't they do this earlier?"
Quality Electric was supposed to begin late last year but was delayed because of the large amounts of rain and snow and the constant freezing and thawing that would have damaged new concrete.
"It was too wet to get up here and do some digging," said Mike Urban, Quality Electric employee.
The street lamps are not only new, but they are also better than the four lamps they will be replacing.
Quality Electric dug the holes, poured the concrete and set the bases for the street lamps yesterday. J.M. Willis Contractors soon will begin digging trenches, after which Quality Electric will lay pipes, wiring and conduits and then refill the trenches.
The street lamps will have three different amounts of wattage, 400, 250 and 175, he said.
Commission approves rezoning for mall
"Both the fixtures and the lamps are a lot more efficient," said Darrell Norris, owner of Quality Electric.
Rv Todd Selfert
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night approved a rezoning request and development plan that will allow the construction of a factory outlet mall in North Lawrence.
The land, west of North Third Street and south of the Kansas Turnpike's east Lawrence exit, will be developed by Stanley K. Tanger and Co., a New York real estate developer.
The mall will sit on about 12 acres of land and is expected to hold 35 stores on 94,000 square feet of floor space
Shirley Martin-Smith, a city commissioner, said one concern with allowing the project to proceed was that a new mall would hurt business in the existing Riverfront Plaza and detract shoppers from the downtown area.
Wint Winter, a representative for Tanger and former state senator from
Lawrence, said the new mall's developers shared Martin-Smith's concerns.
Dan Watkins, a representative for the Riverfront Plaza, said his group welcomed the competition.
"We do not believe that we are entitled to a monopoly," Watkins said. "We're not excited about about the distance between the two, though."
"We think this project will not hurt the existing mall," Winter said. "We all want to pull people off of the turn- nike."
Winter said he thought people coming off I-70 would not just shop at the new mall but would continue downtown and to the Riverfront Plaza.
The two outlet malls will be located about 1/2 miles from one another.
Rob Phillips, a representative from North Lawrence Business Improvement Inc., said the project would help develop North Lawrence.
"North Lawrence has lacked development for way too long." Phillips said.
Price Banks, who heads the city-county planning commission, warned the city commission of some potential problems with the mall project, especially of traffic between the mall and downtown.
The commission decided to approve the rezoning with seven conditions. Included in the conditions was a requirement that the city be allowed to retain control of the placement of a sign directing traffic to the downtown and the Riverfront Plaza so that shoppers would know that other shopping opportunities were located within a reasonable distance.
"I think there is the potential for a positive redevelopment," Banks said. "The potential danger is that we could create a potential 23rd Street on North Third Street."
Winter said construction could begin on the new mall in May.
Proposed mall site
The Lawrence City Commission just passed rezoning and development bills for a new mail in North Lawrence. Construction should begin in May and the address should open by Thanksgiving.
KANSAS RIVER N
I-70
Lawrence
New mall site
U.S. 59
6th St.
Riverfront Plaza
Source: Kansan staff research
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Alcohol may have played role in murder case
By Mark Klefer Kansan staff writer
The man charged with first-degree murder in the Nov. 22 shootings that left a Douglas County man dead drank heavily in a Lawrence bar hours before the incident, according to testimony yesterday in Douglas County District Court.
Yesterday was the first day of the trial for James Ludlow, charged with first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder and felony theft.
Both defense and prosecuting attorneys said yesterday before the 12
memberjury that Ludlow had drunk a "bunch of alcohol" on the night of Nov. 21.
Tracy Robbins was found dead by Douglas County sheriff's officers in his Oakwood Estates home south of Lawrence early Nov. 22.
Robbins' live-in girlfriend, Valerie Hartley, testified yesterday that she, Robbins and Ludlow went to the Pool Room, 925 Iowa St., on Nov. 21. Hartley said that Ludlow drank about 15 shots of Southern Comfort within about 90 minutes before vomiting and passing out in the bar.
Hartley said that Robbins drove
Ludlow was in his room in the base-ment when Robbins and Hartley returned home, she said
Ludlow, who was living at Robbins' home, back to his house while she cleaned up the vomit at the bar. She said Robbins returned to pick her up.
Hartley said that at about 12:30 a.m. she and Robbins were in the kitchen and that she noticed Ludlow sitting on the kitchen floor near the steps. As she turned on the garbage disposal, Hartley said she heard a gunshot and turned to see Robbins falling.
Hartley said that as she was running away, Ludlow shot and hit her in the
buttocks, causing her to fall. She said that Ludlow then stepped over her and went into her bedroom where she kept a box of money. The money later was found missing. Hartley said she went across the street to a neighbor's house and saw Ludlow leave the house with her car.
Ludlow's attorney, Harry Warren, said that Ludlow had no recollection of events from the time shortly before going to the bar to his going to see his girlfriend in Aberdeen, S.D. He said that Ludlow would testify in the trial.
The trial continues today.
ALL ROADS LEAD HOME TO THE HILL
MULTI-BETT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
JOBS
NEW CITIES
GRADUATE SCHOOL
ATTENTION, 1993 GRADUATES
Get ready for a SIX-MONTH FREE RIDE as an ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEMBER
■ Your membership trip begins with the SENIOR COOKOUT,
5:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 21, in the Adams Center parking lot.
Sponsored by your Student Alumni Association
Tour the Center and activate your FREE SIX-MONTH LEARNED CLUB MEMBERSHIP. The Club is the perfect place to dine before or after Commencement exercises, before KU football games and whenever you're on campus. Sponsored by the Alumni Association
Then go west for the JAYHAWK JOG. a 5- and 10-kilometer road race for students and alumni, or the HAWK WALK, an untimed campus walk, 8 a.m., Saturday, April 24, starting at Nichols Hall on Campus West. Call 864-4760 to sign up. Sponsored by SAA
- Last stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST, 8 a.m., Sunday, May 16, for graduates and their families (program begins at 8:30). Sponsored by SAA, the Alumni Association and the Board of Class Officers
■ As you graduate, don't forget to take along your JAYHAWK BANK CARD, the only VISA or MasterCard that lets you show your 'Hawk heritage wherever you go.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
9
Living with schizophrenia
Photos by Renee Knoeber
Bernadette
Visser works on her art in the evenings to pass the time and to fight off depression. Visser has a bachelor's degree in fine arts and a master's degree in library science.
Story continued from Page 1
rardo said. "Doctors think that it is a nuochemical problem in the brain."
He emphasized that schizophrenia was not caused by the environment or how a person was raised.
100
Medical professionals cannot explain the reason for the affliction's link to college-age people.
When Visser was a sophomore at the University of Denver, the symptoms developed slowly. She would appear normal one day and the next day did strange things.
Visser fights back frustration and depression as she works on her art.
"I can't remember everything that happened," she says as she frowns and stares blankly at the floor. "I remember thinking what was happening in ancient Greek to make fun of me."
Visser married before her major symptoms began. She and her husband moved to New York after she graduated. There the intense delusions began.
Visser's parents brought her home and the illness came and went. Visser was able to finish college. She spent a semester at the Art Institute of Chicago and received a bachelor's degree in fine arts from the University of Iowa when she was 20.
I heard glass crunch when people walked," she says. "I also started thinking I was Virginia Woolf reincarnated."
She says many therapists attributed her condition to environmental factors instead of realizing she needed to be on medication.
"My brain was misfiring; it had nothing to do with whether my mom toilet trained me correctly." Visser says.
After an incident when she cut up her arm with a razor blade, her family put her into a hospital.
"I don't understand why people didn't just lock me up," she says. "The slightest pressure and the voices would get louder and then everything went down hill."
Visser's husband had a difficult time dealing with the illness. They were divorced after seven years. Visser spent the following years in and out of hospitals.
N
ow Visser has lived alone for more than two years. She is not able to work. It creates too much stress and complains about it.
She survives on disability welfare from the state of Kansas while she works each day to live a normal life.
"I'm not just a schizophrenic sitting on her butt in her apartment and sucking her thumb, which is so much the image of what schizophrenics do," Visser says.
Visser rises early in the morning, puts on one of her many loose fitting house dresses, watches the morning news and either reads or paints. She spends time at the Lawrence Public Library, where she prices books that are for sale. She also has volunteered to spend time with an 81-year-old woman.
"It makes me feel like I have a normal working day," she says, nervously rocking back and forth. "I want so badly to be normal."
Although the volunteer work at the library is far from stressful, sometimes she cannot convince herself to go.
"Sometimes I get paranoid and think that everyone at the library knows that I am a failure," Visser says. "I can't convince myself that it isn't true. But someday I will be able to."
It is unusual for a person with schizophrenia to live alone, said David Holmes, professor of psychology at KU, but he believes Visser is capable of taking care of herself.
"She is a very bright lady." Holmes said. She knows who to call when she gets in trouble.
Despite the difficulties of living alone. Visser values her independence and privacy.
"Hospitals are sterile," she says. "There isn't a lot of warmth and caring."
"The only time I don't like it is when I am suicidal," she says. "I've hidden all of my knives because I am a slasher."
"Sometimes it is just so tempting. It takes a lot of will power." Visser says. "But if I just call someone up, I can calm down."
She made a promise to her parents that she would not try to kill herself. At times it is a difficult promise to keep.
Visser also signed a Med Center contract promising that she would not kill herself. She laughs about the contract.
“What are they going to do — stand over my corpse and say 'but she signed this?'” Visser says. “It’s pretty stupid.”
She does not think she could ever kill herself, she says. It would hurt her parents too much. But she would like to have an easy way to escape her illness.
"I if had cancer, I wouldn't take any medication," she says. "I'd rather just die."
Although it was difficult for her family to accept her illness in the beginning, Visser's parents now play a large role in her life and are strong supporters.
"It was a mess of misunderstandings in the beginning," Visser says. "My father thought it was something I could overcome by clean living — if I had been living in a sewer or something. At first it embarrassed my mother."
Virginia Visser agreed that she found it difficult to understand what was happening to her daughter when the illness started.
"It was a horrible feeling because I started thinking everybody was right — I really was making it up. I really was a sister." Visser says. "At first everybody refused to believe that he was on event just got burned out and they didn't want go through it anymore."
"The hardest part was thinking she could be cured. I kept thinking 'this will be the drug to cure her' and I still sometimes think that."
"At first I was in denial because I didn't want it to be true," her mother said. "I also was so afraid because I didn't know what I was dealing with.
Better Visser is the oldest of four daughters. Her sisters became frustrated with her when she became ill and thought she exaggerated her symptoms.
with her. One has disassociated herself from Visser.
Two of Visser's sisters still keep in touch
"I think she believes she could be next," Visser says. "If I could take back all of the horrible things my family has seen, I would do it in a minute."
V
isser started painting again six months ago and spends part of every day working on her art. She also enjoys reading books,
especially non-fiction. Currently, she's reading "Awakenings," a true story about a mentally ill man.
"I'm mad at the injustice, not only for me but for all people with mental illness." Visser says. "We are treated as less than human."
says, "I want to try to help people better understand us. How would you feel if you couldn't trust your brain, the thing that keeps you going?" I can't trust it because it plays tricks on me."
Visser has spoken to high school and college classes about her illness. It educates students, she says, and has helped her feel more worthwhile. Visser also spends time with her competer through the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center in Lawrence. A competer is a volunteer who befriends a mentally ill person.
Elizabeth Holiday, Visser's competer, said she thought Visser handled her illness better than many.
"Betty is high functioning and intelligent, but she is a little too hard on herself," Holiday said. "She is a survivor, and I really admire her courage."
Visser has improved since Holiday first met her two years ago.
"She has come a long way," Holiday said. "She was much more spaceed out then."
visset and monday help each other.
"I have learned a lot from her," Holiday said. "I've learned that the little problems I have are nothing compared to those that the mentally ill experience."
Visser wants to help the mentally ill regain some of their rights and make the government realize that mentally ill people need financial assistance. She has composed a letter to Gov. Joan Finney. It explains the problems of trying to pay for medicine.
V
isser takes her life one day at a time because tomorrow has no guarantees with it. She worries that her medication could be cut
Visser has had a reversal of her symptoms since she started taking Clozaril.
"She regained her self-esteem," Pardo said. "Before she didn't care about her appearance and sat in a corner all curled up. Today she even wears makeup. The contrast is unbelievable."
Visser agrees that she is handling the illness better since she began taking Clozari. But the daily threats caused by her delusions have not disappeared.
Visser says she still has suicidal thoughts.
"A couple times a week I will go for the razor blades," she says. "But the difference now is that I won't actually use them."
She wants to develop her artistic skills. But she may never reach her main goal.
"I would like to be normal, but I don't think I ever will," Sisser says. "I want to have friends. I want to be loved and be able to love. Really simple things."
In the future Visser hopes she can better cope with the drugs' side effects. Last year, Haldol, the drug she was taking, forced her to walk with a cane. Clozari's side effects, uncontrollable salivating and weight gain, are minimal.
Visser works with Ganis Pine, her case worker from support services at the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center in Lawrence, to fill out forms needed to get financial aid from the government. Pine meets weekly with Visser.
Visser's art is done in vivid watercolor, and she likes to use stencils to draw her images. This piece was done in January.
10
14
FC173CF 29-348-31 05:05
10/12 FL. OZ. CAN PACKS
Spending afternoons at the library, Visser volunteers her time pricing books in the basement. She does not work on a set schedule but comes in when work needs to be done.
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
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Lawrence businesses seeing green
Shops stock up for St. Patrick's Day
By James J. Reece
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence businesses were prepared yesterday for their version of today's green-laden St. Patrick's Day festivities.
Bars had the green food coloring ready by the beer keg, shops brought out the shamrock-shaped buttons, and one shop displayed a collection of the latest in St. Patrick's Day undergarments.
"We have boxer shorts for every occasion," said Jacquie Stineman, a retail assistant at The Etc. Shop, 928 Massachusetts St.
Suntean said boxer shorts covered with leprechauns and shamrocks were the hottest item this season in the shop. Other favorites, in order of popularity, are green hats, wigs, jewelry, face paint and lipstick, she said.
hive plant that is harmed. She said the "green season" was
good for business because the holiday was in the middle of the week this year, so shoppers came both early and late in the week, either to buy items for today or for weekend parties.
The shop also rents leprechaun,
Gumby and other green costumes and
sells green hats such as propeller-bean-
bows, bowlers and top hats.
"I'll probably buy a hat," said Karen Grdina, Naperville III, junior, as she shopped in downtown Lawrence. "I have a lot of green stuff I can wear."
Grdina, who is part Irish, said she would also partake of green beer tonight, if her studies allowed. But she said her ancestry did not make the occasion any different for her than most people.
"It's just a fun thing to do," she said.
Bowen's Hallmark Shop, 847 Mas sachusetts St., had items reflecting the color of the season. Green suspenders, hats, stickers, trolls and shamrock-shaped wind socks highlighted the store.
But manager Sharon Haupt said the
4
St. Patrick's Day is a national religious holiday in Ireland named after the nation's patron saint who lived from A.D. 389-461. The first U.S. celebration of the holiday took place in Ireland in 1720. It involved beer and beer were U.S. traditions, and until recently, such practices were uncommon in Ireland.
Origin of St. Pat's
According to the legend, St. Patrick:
- was abducted from Britain at age 16 by Irish outlaws and solid into slavery in Ireland;
- escaped slavery and later returned to Ireland as a bishop to convert Ireland to Christianity;
made the three-leafed shamrock a Saint Patrick's Day symbol by using it to teach the Christian doctrine of the trinity to the Irish;
chased all the snakes out of Ireland.
Squarece: 'The Foilick Office for World Highlands' and 'Foilick Office for American Canal Hydrants'
Source: "The Folklore Of World Holidays" and "Folklore of American Holidays"
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
season did not make a noticeable difference in receipts.
Among many bars planning to serve green beer for tonight is Johnny's Up
"They kind of all sell at the same"
she said. "The items that sell the best
are probably the trolls and buttons."
and Under, 403 N. Second St., which also will have corned beef and cabbage. Other green-beer bars include The Jazzhaus, 922% Massachusetts St., Louise's West, 1307 W. Seventh St., and the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St.
Paper or plastic? Both damage environment
By Jennie Zeiner
"Is plastic OK?"
Grocery baggers ask that question hundreds of times a day. In the last few years, environmentally conscious shoppers have asked themselves the same thing. Would I rather have a paper or plastic bags?
According to the 1992 Environmental Almanac, many different factors should be considered before this question is answered.
From environmental and economic standpoints, both paper and plastic are costly, the almanac says.
And neither is good for landfills, the almanac says.
The process used to make most paper bags involves cutting down trees, which encourages erosion. But plastic creates an environmental threat because of the oil leaks and spills by tankers carrying the oil needed to make plastic.
Plastic is less bulky than paper, so it takes less room in landfills, but it is
not easily biodegradable. Paper can decompose without the presence of oxygen, moisture or sunlight.
The possibility of biodegradable plastic is met with skepticism by researchers who note that some plastic has been buried for 30 to 40 years without decomposing.
"There might be plastics that will degrade, but the way I've heard it is that they break up into smaller pieces
Another advantage of paper is that it is easier to recycle, the almanac said. Stationery and paper towels can be made from recycled paper bags, but recycled plastics have fewer uses.
The Environmental Almanac suggests using the more readily recycled product, which in Lawrence may be paper.
but there is still plastic," said Gary Schott, Lawrence graduate student in environmental studies.
Barb Domonoske, the owner of Conservation Resources, a Lawrence recycling service at 3009 W. 28th St., said the service would take only paper bags.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
11
Hot'Hawks to open tournament at home
NCAA
Stephen Pingry / KANSAN
Coach Marian Washington, right, discusses the Jayhawks' preparations for the NCAA Tournament. Washington and sophomore forward Alana Slatter talked about tonight's game against California at a news conference yesterday. Tipoff is at 7:30 at Allen Field House.
Depth could help Kansas in first round
By Jay Williams
Kansan sportswriter
Tonight's matchup between the Kansas and California women's basketball teams will showcase two squads that both coaches say will mirror each other.
The two will clash at 7:30 tonight in Allen Field House in the first round of the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship. The teams expect a fast-paced game with the Jayhawks and the Golden Bears looking to run.
Both teams share another characteristic: few people expected to see either team in the NCAA Tournament. California was picked to finish eight in a preseason poll of Pacific 10 Conference coaches.
The Jayhawks were once 6-5 overall and 0-2 in the conference and looked like they were going nowhere. Late in the conference season, Kansas went on a roll, winning seven games in a row and 10 of its last 11.
The Kansas substitutes are averaging 26.3 points a game and 35 points a game during the team's current winning streak. The Kansas bench scored 44 when the Jayhawks upset then-No. 6 Colorado 81-78 in double overtime at the Big Eight Women's Basketball Tournament.
"It could be very important if it's an un-tempo game," she said.
Kite, sophomore forward Alana Slatter and freshman guard Charisse Sampson contribute the bulk of the Jayhawks' bench scoring. They combined to average 33.3 points a game at the conference tournament.
"We have the depth," senior guard Shannon Kite said. "We can go 10 dee if necessary."
But it's the differences that could make the difference tonight, and the Jayhawks think they may have the edge in one important area — more productive substitutes.
All five California starters average more than 28 minutes. California coach Gooch Foster said her team had been playing eight players for significant minutes. The California bench averages 12.3 points a game.
Despite their lack of depth, the Golden Bears plan to run with the Jayhawks. Foster said.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that her team's depth could be a critical factor in tonight's game.
"We don't know any other way," she said. "At this point of the season, you can't get tired."
Kansas and California feature players who are considered in the elite of their respective conferences
Senior guard Milica Vakadinovic leads the Golden Beans' charge. The All-Pac 10 performer, averaging 16.2 points, 5.2 rebounds and 6.1 assists a game, has been called by some West Coast coaches the female equivalent of Magic Johnson. The 6-foot-1 point guard said she tried to keep the comparisons at a distance.
Kansas answers with its scoring leader, first team all-conference forward Angela Aycock. Aycock earned Most Valuable Player honors at the conference tournament averaging 19.7 points and 9 rebounds during the tournament.
I just trying to focus on my game and how I want to play. "Ukadinovic said. "I'm not too worried about what other coaches and the media say."
It is difficult to stop a player of Aycock's quality, Foster said.
"You want to make them work for
everything and prevent them from having one of those special nights," she said.
Kansas senior guard Jo Ko Witherpoon, originally from Los Angeles, watched many Pac-10 games growing up in California. She said it would be different playing against a Pac-10 school because the Jayhawks had not faced a Pac-10 team since last January when they lost to Arizona State.
Washington said the way the officials called the game could be a factor in the final outcome.
"In the Pac-10, they are known to be very physical in their play," Wither-spoon said.
Tonight will be Kansas' first NCAA Tournament game at home since 1988, when the Jayhawks defeated Middle Tennessee State 81-75.
- The winning team will travel to Nashville, Tenn., and play No. 1 Vanderbilt in the second round.
"It's important to get a sense of how the officials call it early," she said.
Both teams appeared in last year's NCAA Tournament. Kansas lost in the first round to Southwest Missouri State 75-50 in Springfield, Mo.
California lost to Santa Clara in the first round 73-71 in Berkeley, Calif.
NOTES:
Kansas Jayhawks
Coach: Marian Washington
record: 21 - 8
game
30
California Golden
Bears
Coach: Gooch Foster
record: 18 - 9
Game time
7:30 tonight
Allen Field House
California's probable starters:
Guard
Milica Vukadinovic
6'1" - senior
Center
Ingrid Dixson
6'3" - junior
Guard
Kim Robinson
5'9" - junior
Guard
Jackie Lear
5'8" - sophomore
Kansas' probable starters:
Guard
24 Michelle Leathers
5' 6" - junior
Guard
10 Jo Jo Witherspoon
5' 8" - senior
Forward
12 Angela Aycock
6' 2" - sophomore
Center
55 Lisa Tate
6' 3" - junior
Forward
23 Caryn Shinn
5' 10" - sophomore
Coverage
radio: 1440 KMAJ,
90.7 KJHK
TV: Sunflower Cable 6
(tape delayed 10:30)
Source: Kansas and California sports information departments
PLAYER'S COLUMN
ALANASLATTER
The season came to an abrupt, yet exciting end. The win-loss records were tallied, and Colorado prevailed.
The Buffaloes were seeded first in the Big Eight Conference Tournament. The Lady dawhaskes were seeded second in the Oklahoma State third.
If you followed this past 1992.93 regular season, you would have noticed a strong conference with several top contenders. The season was full of glorious victories and unfortunate upsets. But as it has always been said, "It's all part of the game."
The Lady Jayhawks have experienced their share of expected and unexpected ups and downs. We opened our season with a loss to Minnesota, but we still managed the streak that was traumatized twaing lost streak in mid-season.
What exactly was the problem?
No leadership.
No leadership.
That major problem was soon solved. The entire team stepped up its play. This provided Kansas with much needed confidence, and it all came at the perfect moment — just in time for the Big Eight Tournament.
We came into the tournament fearless and confident. We knew we had nothing to lose because we were not expected to make it farther than the first round, much less capture the title.
However, we swept through the tournament defeating Missouri, then 6th-ranked Colorado, and then 20th-ranked Nebraska. It turned out to be one of the most exciting tournaments vet.
It also led to our second consecutive NCAA Tournament berth. None of this would have been accomplished without the support of coaches, friends, family, faculty and teammates.
Most importantly, a special thank you needs to be given to Jackie Martin, a former Lady Jayhawk and lifetime friend, who made the Jayhawks desire to succeed stronger.
Alana Slater is a Dallas sophomore major ing in business.
COACH'S LETTER
COACH'S LETTER
MARIAN WASHINGTON
We are thrilled to be playing host to California at 7:30 tonight in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. While we look at this as an opportunity to showcase our team, it also will serve as an opportunity for the University to show how it supports Kansas athletics.
We feel very honored to be one of only 14 teams to have both our men's and women's basketball teams invited to their respective NCAA Tournaments. We believe that this is a testament to the hard work put in by both teams and coaching staffs. Best of luck to Coach Williams and the team! We hope to see all of you tonight in Alley Field House.
Marian Washington Women's basketball coach
Kansas rewrites record books in 36-2 victory
By Brady Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
It was not football, but the record breaking 36 runs scored by the Kansas baseball team yesterday in its rout of Northwest Missouri resembled that sport.
The Bearcats managed just two runs.
Six touchdowns
Five Kansas single-game records were shattered and two were tied, including the record for most runs scored by a Kansas team in one game. The old record, one of the longest standing in the history of Kansas athletics, was set in 1899 when the Jayhawks scored 31 runs against Haskell.
"bamaus junior starting pitcher Chris Corn raised his record to 2-0, and the Jayhawks improved to 11-4. The game, originally scheduled for nine innings, was shortened to seven because of the score.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said his players were focused yesterday.
"They came to have a good time, and they did," Bingham said.
Beninghoff hit two doubles, a grand slam home run and a two-run home run en route to driving in nine runs, the new school record for single-game RBI. He broke senior catcher Jeff Niemeyer's record of 8 RBI set in 1991.
Junior designated hitter Joel Beninghoff might have had the best time of any Jayhawk.
This season Beninghoff is 11-for-19 with three doubles, two triples and five home runs, giving him a .578 batting average.
"It feels great," Benninghoff said about the record. "Niemier is a great guy to follow. I've been watching him since I got here."
As a team, Kansas broke single- game records for:
Runs batted in (34, breaking the
1991 record of 27).
Hits (33, breaking the 1991 record of 30).
Home runs (6, breaking the 1988 record of 5).
With six doubles in 55 at bats, the Jayhawks tied school records in both of those categories.
Senior right fielder Rory Tarquino said the explosive performance was gratifying because of Kansas' disappointing offensive output last week end against Iowa. In the second game of a doubleheader, Kansas lost 9-5 to the Hawkesey.
It was the Jayhawks' first home loss and snapped a seven-game winning streak.
"It was good to come out and hammer these guys," Tarquino said. "That was our objective, to beat them bad every inning."
Tarquinio was four-for-four at the plate, with three singles, a double, two RBI and five runs scored.
Bingham also said he was pleased by the way Kansas bounced back after the Iowa series.
"What I was most happy about was the way we went after them in the first inning," Bingham said. "Our plan was to get their starter out and into the bullpen."
The plan worked.
The parade
Northwest Missouri starting pitcher Jeffery Stein lasted just one-third of the first inning. The Jayhawks batted 20 times, scoring 16 runs on 12 hits in that inning.
The Bearcats used six different pitchers in the game, and 11 Kansas players had two or more hits.
needs the home runs hit by Benninghoff and Tarquinio, senior second baseman Jeff Berlinger, junior center fielder Darryl Monroe and senior first baseman John Wuycheck homered.
Kansas plays host to Emporia State at 3 p.m. today.
1
Irene Lanier / KANSAN
Kansas freshman second baseman Brian Turney makes a play against Northwest Missouri. The Jayhawks beat the Bearcats 36-2 yesterday.
12
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
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The Big Eight's sweet six
Last year the Big Eight placed six teams in the NCAA tournament, more than any other conference. This year, the Big Eight was tied for the Atlantic Coast Conference for the honor.
BIG 8
CONFERENCE
Oklahoma State's Sweet Sixteen appearance was made possible by a perfect performance in the NCAA Tournament last year.
6 teams,5 wins
Tomorrow's games
Team '92 NCAA record
Nebraska 0-1
Oklahoma 0-1
Iowa St. 1-1
Missouri 1-1
Oklahoma St. 2-1
(25-6)
No. 2, Midwest
vs.
Kansas
No.15 Ball State (26-7)
11:35 a.m.
Miss. kansas.
Inning, the winner
of BYU: SMU at
3:30 p.m. Saturday
Kansas St.
(19-10)
No. 6, Southeast
No. 11 Tulane (21-8) 3 p.m.
Missouri
Vs.
No. 7 Temple
(17-12)
9:35 p.m.
(19-13)
No. 10, West
vs.
TIPOFF TIMES
1993 NCAA
FINAL
FOUR
NEW ORLEANS
NEW ORLEANS
Friday's games
ORLE
Oklahoma St.
(19-8)
No. 5, Midwest
es
No. 12 Marquette (20.7)
11:20 a.m.
Nebraska
No.10, East
No. 7 New Mexico St.
(25-7)
6:35 p.m.
Iowa St.
Vs.
No. 9 UCLA
(21-10)
9:35 p.m.
(20-10)
No.8, West
Coach hopes 'Cats control tempo
Kansas State opens NCAA Tournament against Green Wave
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Tempo will be the key to tomorrow's first-round NCAA tournament game between Kansas State and Tulane, says Dana Altran, coach of the sixth-seeded Wildcats.
"It will be a matchup of their athleticism against our ability to, hopefully, control the tempo of the game," Altman said. "How we handle Tulane's pressure will determine how we do in the ball game."
The 19-10 Wildcats, making their first NCAA appearance in Altman's three seasons at Kansas State, will meet a 21.8 Tulane team that climbed as high as No. 16 in The Associated Press poll before losing four of its last five games. The teams meet at Orlando, Fla., in the opening round of the Southeast Regional.
"We're excited about going to Orlando, Altman said. "Being a sixth seed, that's a surprise. We were figuring anywhere from maybe an eighth
through a 10th, but I think our performance over the weekend really helped us."
At the Big Eight Conference Tournament in Kansas City, Ms. the Wildcats made it to the championship game, knocking off Nebraska 47-45 and Kansas 74-67 before losing to Missouri.
"It was a very good week," Altman said. "It may have helped us to have the selection committee watching our game against Kansas. We played pretty well, and the way the team handled itself may have helped us."
Tomorrow's game will be the third between Kansas State and 11th-seeded Tulane, and the first in 17 years. The series stands at 1-1. The only common opponent this season was Temple, which beat Tulane 79-57 and lost to Kansas State 86-63.
"The their style is quite a bit different from anybody we've played." Altman said of the Green Wave. "If there was one of our opponents that was similar it would be Oklahoma, because of their athleticism and their trapping defense. But they are more unpredictable in their traps and defensive schemes than Oklahoma. It's going to
be a tough game for us."
Tulane has forced opponents into an average of 20.8 turnovers a game.
With the smallest starting lineup in the Big Eight, Kansas State still has managed to outrebound 21 of 29 foes this season. Junior center Deryl Cunningham, the tallest starter at 6-foot-7, finished third in the conference in *rebounding with an average of 8.6*.
In their first game at the conference tournament, the Wildcats outrebounded the much taller Cornhuskers 38-26, with 6-foot-6 Aaron Collier grabbing 10 and Cunningham nine.
"Against Nebraska, we did what we had to do," Alman said. "We did not shoot the ball well. Offensively we hit it, but the players found a way to win."
Altman said Tulane's inside players are a concern, particularly 6-9 center Anthony Reed, the school's all-time leader scoring with 1,873 points. He leads the team in scoring with a 16 point average and 6.9 rebounds.
Junior guard Askia Jones is the only Wildcat with NCAA tournament experience, having started on the 1900 team that lost to Xavier in the first round.
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Wednesday, March 17, 1993
13
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NIT field boasts big-name teams
Conference upsets leave many schools out of NCAA pairings
The Associated Press
A. Coastal Carolina, Rider, Coppin State, Wright State, Delaware.
Coming off five years in Antarctica, out of touch with college basketball, you are asked which tournament is the NCAA and which is the National Invitational Tournament.
B. UNLV, Georgetown, Oklahoma,
Ohio State, Houston.
Say this for the NIT, which got the teams from Column B. It may not have the records, but it sure has the names, thanks to some upsets that led to such unexpected NCAA entrants as Missouri, Texas Tech and Evansville, surprise winners of conference tournaments.
Two of the 32 teams in the NIT field — UNLV and Georgetown — have won national championships in the past decade. Four more — Oklahoma, Georgia, Providence and Houston — also have made it to the Final Four during that period.
And half the NIT field has been to the NCAA Sweet 16 in the past 10
years.
"Given some of the teams in the tournament, it's taken on some credibility it hasn't seen in recent years," said Wisconsin coach Stu Jackson, whose Badgers made it at 14-13 and are one of four Big Ten teams in the field.
"You've got to think the NIT is jumping for joy."
In fact, so laden with names is the NIT field that Wisconsin-Milwaukee, whose 23-4 record was the best of any independent, is not going despite a win against Jackson's Badgers.
"If you look at all the teams in the NIT, because of what happened in the NCAA field, they've got very, very strong teams, very established teams that everybody knew," said Wisconsin-Milwaukee coach Steve Antrim.
"We played well enough to be in there, but we're not an established program," Antrim said. "When established teams are available to the NIT or the NCAA, I think they select those programs."
Like Georgetown. The Hoyas are one of four Big East teams in the NIT field, benefiting from a down year by a conference that normally gets five or six teams to the NCAA and drops its leavings in the NIT.
But with Syracuse on probation and
mediocrity in the middle, the Big East got only three NCAA bids, its fewest since 1981, leaving the Hoyas, along with Connecticut, Boston College and Providence to the NIT field.
"My job is to get as much experience for this team as I can." Thompson said. "They have to mature a lot."
"Iam not in a position to turn down anything" Georgetown coach John Thompson said when the Hoyas, 16-12, got their NIT bid after making 14 consecutive NCAA appearances and reaching the Final Four three times.
One thing the NIT is without is the local flavor it might have gotten had Manhattan not won the Metro Atlantic Conference title and made it to the NCAA for the first time since 1958. Two other New York-area teams, St. John's and Seton Hall of the Big East, are relatively high NCAA seeds and the other local teams were not good enough to quality.
That leaves Connecticut, about 100 miles from Madison Square Garden, as the closest thing to an area school that will draw fans to the Final Four
talk with drawers.
But there are georgeetowns, Ohio colleges, Providences, Boston Colleges and other schools with local alumni to give tournament officials hope for some decent crowds in the finals.
Sooners get another chance in NIT
Sooners ge Oklahoma's Tubbs says team could win 32-team tournament
The Associated Press
After a tough season and a lot of close calls, Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs looks at the National Invitational Tournament as a chance to have some success.
"Realistically, we might have a chance to win this thing." Tubbs said of the 32-team tournament that begins today.
The Sooners, 19-11, will be at home for a first-round encounter against Michigan State, 15-12, in the NIT.
In other games today, Florida, 16-11;
is at Minnesota, 17-10; Georgia, 15-13.
at West Virginia, 16-11; Miami of Ohio,
20-8; at Ohio State, 15-12; Rice, 17-9;
at Wisconsin, 14-13; and Southern Cal,
16-11; at UNLV, 21-7.
Tubbs was not pleased with being left out of the NCAA Basketball Championship, but said, "It epitomizes our season. We got beat by a lot of close calls."
Of the Sooners' 11 losses, six either came in overtime or by four points or fewer.
"Any time we have a chance to play, we're going to do it." Tubbs said. "We've had a tough season. This is a chance to get together and have some success."
Oklahoma, with only a 9-10 record since the first of the year, is in the NIT for the second time in three years. While he may be disappointed by being left out of the NCAA field, Tubbs knows his Sooners have a goal
With a victory against Michigan State, Oklahoma would have its 12th consecutive 20-victory season. The Sooners kept that string all years ago only by reaching the game of the NIT. They ended that year
Michigan State coach Jud Heathcote believes the Sooners are one of the top teams in the field.
"We think it's time to step up our level of play, and having to play Oklahoma is a challenge and one we can rise to," said Heathcote, who preferred to be playing at home.
The Spartans have a 6-7 road record. "Our record on the road is about like our record at home — kind of crumy," Heathcote said. "If we had our druthers, we certainly would rather play at home."
CAMP
Ware
of the Flinthills
Camp Wood YMCA Mission: To put Christian principles into practice through programs that build healthy body, mind, and spirit for all
SUMMERCAMPJOBS
This summer you could work at Camp Wood YMCA an American Camping Association accredited camp, nestled in the heart of the flint hills just 25 miles west of Emporia, KS' on HWY 50. Senior Counselors - Men and Women having completed at least one year of college. Live in cabins with your campers (ages 7-16), plan and direct programs. Lifeguard Training required. ($125-140/wk).
SUMMER PROGRAM DIRECTOR-Must be an experienced person motivated in leading with strong organizational skills. Responsible for scheduling and coordinating summer camp programs. College degree preferred; Interns accepted. ($175/wk)
AQUATICS DIRECTOR - Seeking person experienced in lakefront lifeguarding. Must have WSI or YSL, CPR and First Aid Certifications. Instructing experience helpful. Responsible for supervising lakefront and swimming instruction. Will also be responsible for evening program leadership. ($150/wk)
HORSEBACK RIDING DIRECTOR - Previous training or experience in directing a riding program preferred. Will be responsible for implementing a riding program to include instructionin grooming and care, terminology, western riding skills, developing lesson plans for different levels of skill, and training staff to assist in the program. Will also be responsible for evening program leadership. Must be 21 or older. ($150/wk)
TRAIL COUNSELOR- Seeking person experienced in outdoor skills especially backpacking and camping. Responsible for leading Colorado Whitewater Rafting/Backpacking/Rock/ Climbing Trip for high school students. Must be at least 21 years of age. Prior tripping experience helpful. ($135/wk).
WRANGLER - Must have previous riding experience. Will assist Horseback Riding Director in instruction. Will also be responsible for leading trail rides and horse care. Will also be responsible for evening program leadership. ($125/wk)
Work period May 22-August 7, 1993. All salaries include room and board. All applications will be considered for employment without regard to race, color, sex, religion, or national origin.
REQUIREMENTS:
1. Camstaff must be 19 years or older
For an application write or call:
Rick Burris/Director Of Operations Camp Wood YMCA;
Elmsdale,KS 66850
316/273-8641
3. All staff (except nurse) must have ARC Lifeguard Training Certification unless approved by director
4. All Staff Must Love To Work With Children And Be Ready For Challenging But Rewarding Work!
1. Camp staff must be by personal ID
2. All staff must have ARC Certification (or equivalent) in CPR and First Aid.
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14
Wednesday. March 17. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students bear cold showers
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
Many people rely on a hot cup of coffee to give them a perk in the morning.
Sinae Pitts does not need caffeine. All she has to do is take a shower on the eight floor of McColll Hall.
"There has been no consistent hot water for over a month," said Pitts, Kansas City, Mo., soophon. "It starts out tepid to kind of fool us until we have soap all over our hair, and then it turns cold."
Many of her neighbors go to friends' apartments to take advantage of warm showers, she said.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said the problem started about a year ago when old shower heads were replaced in residence and scholarship halls in an effort to conserve water.
"In a nutshell, the new technology is not compatible with existing equipment," Stoner said. "It doesn't mean there is no hot water in the buildings."
The new shower heads reduced the water flow, preventing the showers' temperature sensors from working correctly.
The department of student housing has replaced the new shower heads with the old ones, Stoner said, but some of the water-regulating valves already may have been ruined because of the reduced pressure.
George Kitchen, facilities maintenance supervisor for student housing, said the problem at McCollum began when the motor of a pressure pump broke. The pump keeps the water pressure steady in the showers' plumbing.
When the water was turned on after the pump had been repaired, sediment in the pipes loosened and clogged up the aerators in the shower heads, he said.
"The jets got full of dirt on the hot water valves," Kitchen said. "It's not a simple thing. That's why it has taken so long."
"By the time they get back from spring break, everything should be working properly," he said.
KU, Haskell matchup in exchange program
Raymond Pierotti, assistant professor of systems and ecology, teaches students from the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College.
Bv Frank McCleary
By Frank McCleary
Kansan staff writer
Pierotti presents Native and Western Views of Nature at Haskell to about twenty students as part of an exchange program between the two schools. Next semester, Don Bread, a Haskell instructor in business, will teach a class in federal Indian law and legislation at KU.
Angelina Felix, Haskell dean of instruction, said that KU and Haskell formalized the program last spring, but this spring was its first semester. Each school has had guest lecturers from the other school for several years, she said.
Dan Wildcat, Haskell professor in biology, said the exchange program is beneficial for both institutions.
"The idea is to take advantage of both schools being in proximity to each other," he said.
Both Pierotti and Wildcat said the program gives students a chance to take classes that are not offered at their schools.
American languages, contemporary Indian affairs and various history and cultural classes that are not offered at KU. Wildcat said.
"Essentially it offer students of each school a different perspective."
Pieroti said his class compares Native-American and European-American perspectives of wildlife and nature.
Enrollment is split evenly between students from both schools. The class would not be as effective without students from both institutions, Pierotti said.
"I can't speak for all Native-American or Western students," he said. "It needs a diversity of students to be effective."
M.C. Baldwin, Flagstaff, aiz
junior, is one of Pierer's KU
students. He said the program is a posi-
tive step in his career as the Native-American studies program.
"It helps Haskell students to exchange thoughts with KU students in a classroom environment," he said. Cecilia Flores, Livingston, Texas, sophomore, is a Haskell student who said she liked the exchange program.
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"I think it's a good idea," she said. "We get a chance to interact with KU students."
Holiday Plaza
Prices Effective March 17th to March 24th, 1993
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Coke, Sprite and Diets $488
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Ben & Jerry's Frozen Yogurt 2/$300
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Fatty PINK SALMON
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Libby's Salmon $149
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Minute Maid Orange Juice $299
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Brown or Cream Beachwear Package on beach start at $1 Perman/Per Person, Sunshade and Saida units starting at $4 Perman/Per Night Taxen Not included
www.campgrounds.com
Morning Star Pet Care
15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
local sports event marketing company is look
for motivational presentations in the studio.
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120 Announcements
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NOCOVER
you're the Matt I met outside of Wescoast last Nov. I'm looking for you. Hints, glasses, baseball cap, nursing student, sophomore, nurse, doctor. Send all to K49, c/o The University Daily Kanan.
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815 New Hampshire • 841-7286
1 or 2 people need ride down/back Padre. Call 841:
8469
Use Kansan classsthems.
Classified Directory
100s
1 Employment
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional
Roses are red, violets are blue
235 Typing Service
Dearest Mashib M. Wishing U a very happy birthday and a prosperous year! From the women who knew you
200s
209 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Services
The Kanman will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, age, sex, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kanman will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise on real estate based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis
Classified Policy
105 Personals
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellanea
370 Want to Buy
Douglas County AIDS Project all-volunteer meet-
ment for the 2013 meeting. Mar 18, 2013; Lawrence Catholic Ctr.
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
卫
Announcements
Thur, March 10, 2014. Lawrence Academic For
for anonymous info and support for AIDS conchildren's staff/cornerst top salary, rm/bd/laundry, travel allowance. Must have skill in basketball, lacrosse, football, basketball, bicycling, dance, drama, drums, fencing, field hockey, football, golf, guitar, juggling, karate, lacrosse, photography, piano, rocketry, rollerblading, ropes, sailboard, weights, wood support, kitchen steward, workers, bakers, cooks, bus driver, maintenance, tennis, wiener, Winadu, Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10543 (914) 381-8983, Women call Jennifer Wheelser at 841
100s
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405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
QUESTIONS? Call CiscoLabs, Gray and Lebanese
Telecoms. Call (811) 243-7960 or KU Info 864-
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864-4139.
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110 Bus. Personals
Obedience Classes - Lawrence Jayhawk Kemel Club. 9 weeks.ubs 53 dogs all 3 months or older well trained. 8 weeks.ubs 53 dogs not well trained. Guard Armory. Orientation 1pm. Call Bar Calls 842-4848, or Lee Boyd 315-571-470 For more info:
The Etc. Shop has new shipments of handmade
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200 Masc. 851-931
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Quality work,reasonably priced.
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Regular Clinic Hours
Mon - Fri 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11.30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon 11:30 a.m - 10 p.m
Mon 11:30 a.m - 10 p.m
Sun 8:30 a.m - 4 p.m
People with insulin-dependent diabetes:
Earn cash when participating in an exercise study
Call 864-4076 to inquire about the photos study.
130 Entertainment
Spring Break quad occupancy. Daytona Beach,
person only. Room 1029-1032, room limited.
Jayhawk CAFE
St. PATRICK'S DAY ALLDAYPARTY
75¢ DRAWS
NO COVER
Also at special Prices
• Boulevard Irish Ale
• Guinness Stout
• Shamrock Champagne
• Irish Whiskey
• Green Electric Jello
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO 843-9273 A Campus Tradition Since 1919
Live Comedy
National touring comedians performing routines seen on HBO and Showtime Wednesday March 17
AT
50 cent draws
140 Lost & Found
Lost in Robinson's Women's Locker rm-a. St Christoph's medal and a silver ring. The St Christopher's Medal and a bronze ring. Please deal to me. Please return, reward given if necessary. Amn 832-2094
Substantial Reward. Information leading to
involvement of Silver Bacch Strativurus Trumpet.
Model 5180-37 Serial #221086, Case1804. Call collect,
W Drake. (315) 321-2133
Men and Women
200s Employment
APPLY NOW
205 Help Wanted
NO EXPER NEC great resume builder. Scholarship avail | temp. pos. over Spring Break-partner position. Postgraduate. Artist/Graphic Designer needed to produce poster and program for late April concert. Large fee
CAMP COUNSELORS WERE for private Michigan girls' girls summer camps. Teach, swimming, canning, sailing, waterkeeping, hiking, camping, computers, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $1490 or more and plus 4k&b. Maree Scafer, 1768 Magnus, Nilf, IL.
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
help, nannies/neighboresses, maintenance people
Camp, Camp B1, 714.8052.6000 (800) 443-4057
CITY OF LAWRENCE SUMMER JOBS
The City is accepting applications for all summer part- and full-time positions. Positions are available at OUTDOOR DAY PROGRAM-SPECIALISTS SPORTS INSTRUCTORS PLAYGROUND MANICIPULA POOLEDUMINICIPULA POOL SPECIAL POPULATIONS PROGRAM CONSERVATION MAINTENANCE AND LABORER COMPLETE application at Administrative Serv., 2m
Complete application at administrative $650,
phone: (212) 873-4899, email: admin@sage.com
No phone calls on Deadline - Friday, April 21st
(10am - 6pm)
Cruise line entry level on board/landside positions available. Summer classes, great prize, group tours. 812-325-9547
- full-time. Home-based Therapist-to provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents and females. Requires Master's degree in Psychology or minimum of 2 yrs. exp. providing mental health services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents and females. Applicant must be Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, inc. 309 Missoula, Suite 202, Lawrence, KS 66805; Missouri Roc. Application deadline March 24, 1995.
Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience necessary, cattle and maintenance equipment. Partner's P.O. Box 1761. Lawrence KS 69044.
Help Wanted
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Girl Scouts Resident Camp has the following positions available. Health office, unit staff and life support. Contact Kwai Girl Scout Girl C O P 0 411 6434. Toeka KS 66004 127 391-300
**INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make $2,000**
**For students in English abroad Japan and Taiwan. Many provide room and board + other benefits. No previous job experience required. For program call 1-296-8124-1167 jp. J5765**
Line up your summer job you are currently hiring a crew for 1963 harvest, starting in May. Only drug-free, nonsmoking individuals need apply. Call 913-525-6256. Nagee Combine Inc.
Help Wanted: First Christian Church is looking for loving adult to provide childcare on Sunday morning. Call 516-389-4700 or m.p./$h. $r. Please send resume to First Christian Lawrence, KS 60045. *100 Kentuckia Lawrence, KS 60045.*
S1.000 AN HOUR!
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GREEKS & CLUBS
Each member of your frat sorority team, club etc pitches in to help the group can raise $1,000 in a just few days!
Models wanted for the "Girl of Kansas City" and
the "Kansas City Girl." Please contact Toni
at 816-756-4090 for ages.
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" & "The Girls of Kansas City" calendars. Please call Tonya at (816) 435-2750.
Motivated District Manager for property management company, full-time experience preferred. Send resume to P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 60044
Namis positions available nationwide including
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www.namis.com
NOW HIRING! Part-time, full-time all shifts.
Please apply in person at WHS Shops.
Please provide the correct Spring and summer employment position available for pool service technician. Must have working knowledge of water chemistry and or pool maintenance. Please call 843-6257 for an appointment.
Student monthly in the office of Systems Development. This is a 3/4 time appointment response to a System Requirements Ether talk network, and providing Macintosh hardware and software support in Student Affairs, Education and Educational Services. You will be able to live available at 37 Strong Hall. Salary: $633 3/4 month (50% assignment and 20 hours per week) with additional references to: Mr. David J. Ryan, Systems Specialist II. 37 Strong Hall. All materials must be received by 5 p.m. Friday, April 2, 1993.
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Cures, Resorts. Seed Stamps for Free Details.
Sullivan's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59901
P
Packer Plastics Incorporated
Part-time unskilled
factory work on weekends,starting Friday at midnight and endingSunday at midnight. Flex time possible.A student work team will be formed to cover
these hours. If
interested please call Packer Plastics at 842-3000, ext. 475 to
arrange for an interview.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
15
Models needed pro $175-300/day & TV/PH
extra $175-200/day. no exp required. 541-9099
JOBS IN
KC!!
The most productive way to find new opportunities quickly at hundreds of top Kansas City Employers.
Center.
Call ACCESS at 1-800-362-0681 or (in KC) 432-0700 or check with Career Center
Summer Positions Available
Fred P. O'Keeley & St Garrel or Plaza Plaza seeks a person in kitchen and bartending to help people to fill server, cook and barbeting positions Day or Night in hotel room. Help with preparation for help with ambulatory. Apply in person after 2p.m. at Fred P. Outa '4700 JC16 Parkway Plaza in Plaza Plaza. For more information call 813-753-2788.
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816 W 24th
NAB
TEAMMARKETING Salary plus commission:
evenings Call 841-1299
Tennis jumps summer children in camp-northeast men and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Women call Camp-Wheeler 144-6080. Men call Camp-Wheeler 144-6080. Manor, Maranahan, N.Y. 10543 (1041) 381-5983
225 Professional Services
Waterfront John WSJ-S summer children & camp-port-best men and women who can teach children to swim (alam) trick/brick/feeoof, sail. Inboard motors, beautiful pool and lakes. Good room, & library. Winsa. 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 10454 911-383-5883. Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 641
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
for free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial aid, scholarships & grants & win an income tax credit
Box 32441 Box 32441 Box 32441 Primo Photos & Headshots & B&W Darkroom Fast Service. Firstlight Photography #411-4243
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-BOYS
Fake id and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
TEACHER WANTED: to work w/adultic child Prerequisites: 304 & 308 Experience in Behavior Mgm t. Child Development, & other developmental abilities pref. 10.46 /hr 84-640 for interview.
SWDr.seeks M/F "Let's Talk About Sex"
Sexually confused? Let me straighten you out. Very discreet, honest and supportive. Into safe sex. Call me, Dr Janell Carroll at (816)576-7681, KCMO Radio 810, weeknights, 9-11 p.m.
2.35 Typing Services
32double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check
rush Jobs, Call Paul 749-4648
- **user:** Woman Word Processing. Former editor translates words into accurate pages of letter format.
FADDARABLE TYPING & EDITING. Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 hrs.
a day. Tutoring avail. Near campus. Lowest rates in
town. 832-1296.
expert typing by experience secretary IB Correcting expert typing by experience secretary EaP East Side Call Mrs. Matilien 841-270-3958
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
kustion research. Eduline R. Benson, rush-
ward.edu, 841-254-9244, 841-254-9244
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Center. No calls APTER 919-848-6300. Word processing, thesis writing, papers, design, legal law review and engineering experience. Call Pam at 814-197-1 Whenever
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
184-7290, ALCAN MTB FRAME, BB, HS, BP
749-2290, MTX COMPONENTS $-150
Dave 149-2290
Acoustic Gibson Epiphone Epiphone with hard case,
Buried used $500. Call 798-6766 BOOK NONE
ON SALE
*oura for sale (1) 140 gallon includes base, top lights, power & undergravel kits $790 and 200 units stand, top lights, undergravity, 2 power kits, $990. Inc. cell seat (A41-703) and leave a message.
Bianci. Bianchi cross 800, $1bn chair road 90cm
35m, 8ft x 20m, a/c wheels 90pc, all pr.
Call Leigh 842-5566
Computers: New and Used
P. C. Compatibles
P. C. Source 832-1126
- pernandez P-A15 Amplifier. Convenient size. 13" x
18". Call Nerlman at 843-040-300. $130 best offer.
Call Nerlman at 843-040-300. $130 best offer.
Ready to race Rock Hopper. Complete w/ bar ends, computer XT thumb shifters, new rim, NT rubber, cassette & cables, plus many extras $75. Call Paul @ 749-0233
Sailboat 16 ft Katarman with trailer $300 or bess
call: 1-811-9042, evenings at 6pm
nosebear Burton 165 $125, skis 185 & plies $150
skis 100 & boats 95, call Neg. Call 842-5566
Bus seat for Spring Break trip to Texas. $225 for bus and hotels. Dallas, San Antonio, Austin, Mexico. International Student Services. 4-3617
Waitress position available. Apply in person at Quinton & Bar & Del. 615 Mass.
Young green ligna, excellent condition, easy to
young ligna, long, come with set up. B4-864 make
it yourself.
340 Auto Sales
So Ford temp GL. A/C Automatic Clean but slight front damage $1500 or negotiable
Porsche 87 9245, silver, excellent one owner $15k
873231 1490, auto. best off $7,000
873231 1490
370 Want to Buy
Tickets to the Sat. Mar 21 session of the NCAA
Tourney in Calliress. Call 749-1066
图
400s Real Esta
405 For Rent
190 NAILSIM 3 & 4 BR. 2 Hour. Lg. rooms.
storage room, 6 ft. by 7 ft. laundry,
storage variable leaves. 15 ft. by 12 ft.
Available Now furnished Rms / w shared kitchen
available. Call Gali. Kill or w/street-
closed parking no pets. Gallon water
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Bird
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apes, for August, but if you can take one dime, you can own a few of them. Buildings at West Hills Apes 100; Emery Rd Great location near campus. NO PETS: 841-380 or 362
DUPLEX for RENT three bedroom,
1-bath; attendant garage; 209-11 University Call
For lease 4 BR Townhome, 2 baths, 3 car garage
$760 per month or weekly. Dwellings, Dry Avail.
4 bedrooms at 843-920-6822 or 843-920-6823.
House for rent 2 bd rm. lease, no pets 842-4403.
LUXURY TOWNHOME, 4 BR, 2'/2 bath,
micro dishware, microwave, fireplace, wet bar, 2 car
garage with open, full basement, near golf
course, 15th + Lawrence Avenue, near son
+ son, and deposit. 789-707
between and between 6:30 and 10:30 p.m.
on weekdays for appointment. Keep trying.
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
MACKENZIE APTS, now leasing for Aug 1. Newly constructed luxury apts, close to campus. All 3 BR, microwave, weather & dryer, all kitchen appliances. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1166
Boardwalk
AUDIT Sub-lease starting April 1, Unfirmed one
AUDIT洗涤机, mair. low. iucr $260/month.
AUDIT洗衣机, mair. low. iucr $260/month.
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience
EDDINGHAM PLACE
LEASE NOW FOR FALL Room 3 = BR duplex on bus line, basement, garage, FC, PA, W/D bookup. Notets Lease & refs, req $680; no margin: 843-773 after a., Owner/Agent.
- 2-BB from 9:395
- Jacuzzi in room
- to kUB to KU
- Toilet room/Patios
- Pd cable TV/TVIPs
- Pd cable TV/TVIPs
- On-site management
- On-site management
Doubsh & Stoll C84. 81-185 1
5:15pm M-F 10:25 F
Or Call For Appointments
Naismith Place
RAINBOW TOWER APTS
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
New bld, town house avail for next semester on bus line. ideal for 4 people. Fireplace, patio and tennis plus 1 car garage + 1/2 baths with skin lighters $800/mon, + 1/4 usl! Call Jeff at 865-3922
- Across from KU Med
- Studio, 1 & 2 bdmpts Apts
- Garage Parking
- Heated Pool, Sauna &
-
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
- Exercise Room & Clubroom
* Heat and Water Paid
Hey! KU Med Students.
Enter the Tower
Lifestyle...
Luxury...
Limited Entry...
Convenience...
ALVENATION
No Appt Necessary
want/Let rm or 3BR house. East Lawrence,
Kansas. Rent $195/mo + upbage $60/mo.
$719/mo + upbage $849/mo.
841-5444
24TH & EDDINGHAM
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
Now Pre-Leasing For Ft
3838 Rainbow Bldv.
831-9363
5 Min. from Downtown & Plaza
**ach apartments**
Washer and dryer
Microwave
Microwave air
Large bedrooms
Mini blinds
On KLR bus route
Carpets available
1-bedroom $325
2-bedroom $460
3-bedroom $525, $85
4-bedroom $840
Office 611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
Offering Luxury 2 br apartments at an Affordable Price!
cust. guest a 3 BR duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A, gas. heat. 1/2' BA/ WA/hookups, garage. No pets. References. $450/mo.
835-288.
Hours:
Mon. Wed. & Fri.: 12:00 - 2:00 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs.: 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Please call Kelly for appt
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
New listing for
West Hill APARTMENTS
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
(Next to Benchwarmers)
1 bedroom apts. 735 sqft
$305 to $365 per month
$375 to 499 per month
WATER PAID ON ALL APPLTS.
DETECTATION NO COMMISSION.
Now Leasing for June or August
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II - call for
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(or other times w/appt.)
June or August
Spacious apts.-turnished
room, with roving seating. 2 BR 1,8
at Aspen West. We have a covered
1,600 sq ft, pet water, on bus route 885-290
to Aspen West.
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
GREAT LOCATION-Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed. Thurs
FIRSTMGT.INC.
*NOWLEASING*
Graystone Apts.
- NOW LEASING *
Bradford Square
Chamberlin Court
Carson Place
Stadium View
Oread Apartments
1425 Kentucky
call 749-1556 M-F 2-5 pm
811.486.8700 M-F 2-5 pm
Swan
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
Swan Management
•Graystone
- 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
2512W.6th St
749-1288
2512W 6th St
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
1 BR Bur. apt. available now. New paint + min blinds
1 vr lease 843-4217
1-3 roommates 40 kbm apt sublet May - Aug
$177.90 max $45.25 free cable, walk to camp
$187.90 max $45.25
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
Two床隔 sublease ASAP through Aug. Poll size
Dave or John 843-149 101
Dave or John 843-149 101
---
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
New Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 1-5 Sat. 1-5
- Luxurious 2,3,&4
Bedroom TownHomes
*Garages; 2½ Baths
Bedroom Townhill
Cargos 2½ Baths
- Microwave Events
- Some with Fireplaces
- On KU Bus Rooms
- On KO Bus Route
• Swimming Pool and
Tennis Courts
841-8400
841-1287
or 7
Summer & Fall Leasing. Furnished 1 & berm
parking. Call 801-679-4253 or 801-fa-street parking, no.
Call 814-581-9070
TRAILRIDGE APTS.
THAIRIDGE APT5.
New signLEASE for summer & fall.
Call Sarah for your appointment at
449.7733
4200
meadowbrook
The Perfect Apartment!
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
NOW
Sublease for summer. Nice, clean. 3-4 bedroom
twoway housew/ pool. More info call 799-8284 ask for
phone number.
Southpoint Apartments
2166 W. 28th St. Apt 3
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing
Mon-Fri call for appt. 835-6446
Siblasaee 3 bedroom/2 bath Furnished apc, close to campus, avail. May 18-Aug 10
OPENDAILY
Southpointe Apartments
2010th Clt Apt 3
MASTERCRAFT
Volleyball Court
On KU Bus Route with
4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
Spacious 2 bedm apt. Summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable & rentless living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3625
Hookups
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
Volleyball Court
---
Campus Place-841-1429
*2 Pools
FURNISHED
Campus Place-341-1425
1145 Louisiana
Studios,1,2,2+3&4 bdrm apts...designed with you in mind!
HanoverPlace-841-1212 14th&Mass.
10th & Arkansas
7th & Florida
Park25
Regents Court-749-0445
1002 Mass
Tanglewood-749-2415
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
Orchard Corners-749-4226 15th & Kasold
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
tivy living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Offer. Offering
livestock-friendly fantasies rate. Call 749-871-0141
Two bdrm. furnished now. App. Aug 31. Call 864-
202-8588.
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
843-4754 (call for appt.)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER SPECIALS
• 1, 2, & 3 bedroom units
• 3 month leases
• avail.end of May
430 Roommate Wanted
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
Female Roommates Needed for summer or year new. New College HI University. Close to campuses. Rooftop terrace. NO LEASE $200 + 5% utilities Roommate to share house, large yard, washer and dryer: 842-2069
Roommate Wanted NOW! $200/mo, water, gas, and cable paid Ciaran Bhatri at 843-3231
I to share open imapim 3 BR townhouse in valley, VALN. LJ $225/mi + 1/3 meals. Plan start in June. Jun. J65-549 leave message female, non-smk room, LEAVE AC, AC free water, cable, trash, heat $220/mi & half electric 823-8540 Female roommate wanted for 4 BR DA BLAU Lease begins June I for 12 mios $166/mi ++ /uil If you're outgoing and responsible, slide at Caity at
1. roommate need to share a 2 Br; Ia, 2yr l. apt. in scenic area. Must be a non-mason, clean and responsible, on bus route. Starts Aug. 1, *197.50/M + o/ui!*. Please call
and case palettes.
The variable `patience` is *Females to share large* 36292
bbm run = *1000 + u.i. W/D*, patio = 36292
$patio = 1000 + u.i. W/D;
patio = 36292
- by phone: 604-543-2170
* aids in phone may be required to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**Beezef Free:**
- in person * 1198 Flaster Flint
Stop by the Kianoff office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on Marvin's card
Classified Information and order form
Calculating Rates:
By Mail: 1191 Stairwater Lane, Fairfield, KS 46802 You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas district. Or you may choose to have it shipped to your MasterCard or Vaccan. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Calculating names:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Blind Box Numbers:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
**Refunds:** When a classified act that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser a account will be credited for the unused days. Returned on cancelled accounts that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available the day after.
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Num. of Insertions:
deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Classifications
148 lust a friend 305 for sale
225 help wanted 404 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 twine services
105 personal
118 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Cost per line per day
1x 2X 3X 4X 6X 14X 15-29X 30-X
1.95 1.50 1.00 0.90 0.78 0.65
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.80 0.80 0.40
1.78 1.00 0.70 0.90 0.55 0.35
1.67 1.00 0.60 0.90 0.50 0.35
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
(please go to) Phone
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper
Address:
**ADDRESS:**
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □
(Please make checks payable to the University Dalkans Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Master Card
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Staffer Flihi Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Harvard, Inc. (020)468-7450 by Jannene Pring Specialist
"It's time we face reality, my friends... We're not exactly rocket scientists."
16
Wednesday, March 17, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Step Ahead
WASHBURN
UNIVERSITY
SUMMER SESSION '93
C
SUMMER SESSION '93
Summer Session 1993 provides you the opportunity to:
- make important progress toward your degree
- take those classes you missed this year because they were closed
- discover some fascinating courses that are offered only in the summer
Courses are offered at a variety of convenient times, both day and evening, in eight week, five week or short term formats. If you'll be working this summer, there are numerous class choices to fit your work schedule.
To get a copy of the class schedule, call the Washburn University Academic Affairs Office at (913) 231-1010 ext. 1108.
Give us a call, and find out how Summer Session 1993 can help you get a step ahead.
Washburn University
IN HER ALIEN NIGGLES
1708 College
Opens at 500
(913) 231-1030
The two men are working together on a computer. One man is typing while the other looks at the screen. They appear to be discussing or checking something on the keyboard.
WASHINGTON GARDEN
1700 College Topeka, KS 66621
(913) 231-1030
Certificate of
Signature
图21 董玲玲
Jenny Zhan, China graduate student, third from left, discusses her experience of growing up in China and the events that brought her to KU.
Panel marks end of history month
By Cathleen Slechta Special to the Kansan
of three moderators.
A panel of eight women gathered last night at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union to discuss topics as diverse as their nationalities.
"Discovering a New World: KU through the Eyes of International Women Students," sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and the Office of International Student Services, was the last program on the agenda for Women's History Month.
Five international students described how they came to the University. Most of the women were part of one of the University's exchange programs.
"One of the advantages of having a large number of international students is that it gives us an opportunity to see our world from a different perspective," said Daphne Johnston, one
The women said they experienced discrimination when they came to KU.
"When I first met my roommate, she asked where I was from," said Rita Corro, Panama senior. "But she did not know where Panama was. So I showed it to her and her friends on the map."
She said her roommate laughed and mocked her, asking if there were cars in Panama.
The students also spoke of discrimination in the classroom. They complained of professors who behaved so sensitively that they seemed patronizing.
"I feel like I have to prove myself," said Jenny Zhan, China graduate student. She said she sometimes is treated like a child when she knows exactly what a professor is talking about.
However, the women said they appreciated some of the differences between the United States and their home countries.
"In my country, we are not encouraged to pursue what we are interested in," said Ade Ow, Singapore junior. Zhan also appreciates the freedom
Zhan also appreciates the freedom in the United States.
"I feel happy to know more than what the government wants me to know, like in China," she said.
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
lfc
University of Kansas
Interfraternity Council
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
lfc
University of Kansas
would like to remind everyone to have a Spring Break to remember.
Drinking, driving, drugs don't mix.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
...
PLACE AN AD FREE!
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
19 year old SWM - Hey Ledes! I'm looking for a girl to spoil with my lovin'. I'm a纵性好员 here at camp Kansas University and am working on spying my girl. Call #10328
www.swim.org
2 good-looking, in room SMW looks for a good look. 3 excellent, in room SMW looks for a partying, & stayup until all hours of the day.
You'reold PH.D. student here for 3 years. Like to meet slim, attractive female who's sensitive, open-minded and affective. Age unimparticular. Serious commitment possible. Call box #10322
Attractive SWM dark hair & eyes. $2.95 18x. sees honest, emotionally mature, and lcious woman w/ desire to meet a clean oil spill. Car wash and man w/d w/ traditional oil. Call box #10325
Authority questioning reality, hacker w/ a passion for Cyberpunk and an intensive collection of Camel buckets, needs a date w/ substance. Looking for someone who is also compatible imperfections. Must enjoy dancing, partying, candlelight pencils, & video games. Rush Limbaugh fans & upbrings need not amply.
He bristle Drill Black hair - a bad knee. I tend to clear my throat a lot. I only have one shirt and sometimes my voice cracks but I can make people laugh. If interested in taking a chance, call a box.
Kimset! If that gets your attention then keep reading. SWM is for the semi-brown, green eyes, in good shape. SWM has a white face, a white female, who is attractive and open-minded, but sometimes feels like a fish out of water. Call
the world is already full of wanna-be's Natural is beautiful. I'm looking for someone of sound mind with enough backbone to be true to themselves before others. My interest is in a business that requires me. I don't drink because it impairs my 'high'. All calls will be responded in: Call box #10116
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
SWM, 62", 190 lbs. give someone to run with i log 4 16 mins each time a 3 times the distance you are approaching. Keep an eye on your fitness program, give me call at box i01221. SWM, Smart, mature, honest, open, gentle,机敏, confident, caring, minded, down to earth girl for friendship or dating. Do you like Paul Simon? A manifestation of humor of all ages? Did you ever thought you'd never answer a personal ad; call me! I never thought I'd place one! Call Box i01221.
SWM. very slightly neurotic, seeks similarly to the student for quality time in the quiet room. Call box.
Q
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
"If you like pina colada and getting caught in the rain, if you're not into yoga and have a half brain. Then, we're the women you're looking for; call us for your business. But, if I'd just as get your calls. Call 2914 for fun!"
2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town. Friends since birth, both boys. They like to meet wm w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down on earth. Like friends who can find any scam to get us rich. Call box
Single Hispanic female 18 years old cute pette, long brown hair recent ears, small black eyes, white Male behind the ages of 18-23 who enjoys walking, jogging, weight lifting, dancing and calling; box cat
&
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
Common abbreviations
JAM 24 hard worker, studies a lot, also makes me to go on. Enjoys stargazing, walks on a noonlit night and stimulating conversation tiffen with tainted jar glasses, conservatory, non-traditional rGrad student, Very discreet. Non-smoker, social trunker. 69063
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
white male seeks flings and possible relation-
ship with men who make all interesting calls. Req's: Bachelor's degree, 30+ years of experience. All interested calls. Requires
calls replied Call voice box x 69
GWM. It hard to understand why so many other
guys are out there looking to find someone to share
things with and do a lot of diff. things.
They're always nice, and so beautiful weather, so get out of the winter blues! Put a big smile on your face to make us feel alive! I love you!
No one member, right drunker and have a sense
of humour. If you're down, give me a call. B00464
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You *place an and in the Jaytak Network section of the Kansan* (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for you. The system will respond. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan,
you call a free 800-number to listen
to the messages people leave for
you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-one phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voicemaps will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
1
CAMPUS: Schools of law and medicine rank in U.S. News and World Report, Page 3.
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102.NO.123
THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS650-640)
KU students may pay by the hour
Committee sanctions tuition plan
By Dan England Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A proposal that would have KU students pay their tuition by the credit hour passed a Board of Regents committee yesterday.
The Tuition and Fee Committee passed the proposal, which would charge all students who are Kansas residents by the credit hour in the 1994-95 academic year. Currently, only undergraduate students who take between one and six credit hours are charged a $52 per-hour fee. Part-time graduate students are charged $66 per hour.
Students taking seven hours or more are charged full tuition, $728 a
Tuition is charged to students with the assumption that each one of those students is taking 15 hours a semester. However, the average number of credit hours a KU student takes is 14. Eakim said.
"We think that someone who is taking 21 hours ought to be paying more than someone who is taking 10," he said.
But some students must average 15 hours in order to graduate in four years either because the student does not have enough money to pay for an extra semester or because the student attends a professional school that requires a lot of hours, Eakin said.
"We recognize the problem that some students face," he said.
The proposal would affect Regents institutions in different ways. Students from Kansas State University also would be charged by the credit
hour. Those from Fort Hays State University and Wichita State University only would pay by the hour if they were taking less than 15 hours. Pittsburgh State and Emporia State universities would not charge by the credit hour.
KU does not want a cutoff of 15 hours because of students who abuse the add-drop system, Eakin said. Those students who are charged for extra hours may think twice about taking 18 hours and then dropping a class each semester, he said.
inose students are blocking access to classes that other students
Jennifer Hanlon, student body president of Emporia State, and Jim Allen, student body president of Pittsburgh State, said their student bodies were against the proposal.
students who can't afford to take more than 12 hours because of the fee may have to take an extra semester," Hanlon said.
The proposal must be approved by the full Board of Regents.
Tuition proposal would mean give and take
If the Board of Regents approves the tuition by the credit-hour system, in-state students who take more than 14 credit hours would face tuition increases while those who take between seven and 14 credit hours would pay less. Tuition would stay the same for students who take six hours or fewer.
1 hour 6 hours 7 hours 14 hours 15 hours 18 hours
current tuition system
proposed tuition system
In other business, Chancellor Gene
Source: Kansan staff research
Budig spoke to ask the Regents to use a reasonable portion of the 1994-95 academic year tuition increase, which has not yet been determined, for increases in faculty salaries.
NEWS:864-4810
at a peer institution, Bung said, he said he thought that students would support an increase every year for several years to bring the salaries back up to 100 percent.
A faculty member earns, on average,
89 percent of the salary of a colleague
"I believe students are willing to invest in faculty," he said.
Women's team draws 2,650 to field house
Largest crowd of season turns up for NCAA game
By Todd Seifert
Kansan staff writer
The KU women's basketball team received a pleasant surprise when it entered the court for its pregame warm-ups before playing California at Allen Field House last night.
The Jayhawks, who lost to California 62-47 in the first round of the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship, were greeted with the cheers of 2,650 fans.
The Jayhawks averaged about 900 fans a game this season.
"Everybody on the team was wondering how big the crowd would be," said KU guard Jo Wittspoon, who played in front of her ever played in front of her at home.
The crowd ranked as the fourth largest to see a women's game in field house history. The record was set Jan. 1, 1981, when 3,750 fans watched the Jayhawks play Kansas State.
The largest attendance of the season before last night was Feb. 28, when KU defeated K-State 77-45. Attendance at that game was 2,100.
"We needed them tonight," she said.
"It's good experience for players,
especially the younger ones, to play in
front of good crowds like this."
Kansas coach Marian Washington said she wanted to thank the fans for their support.
California coach Gooch Foster said her team was used to playing in front of large crowds.
California had an average attendance of 1,159 this season. A California record of 4,208 people watched the Golden Bears defeat Stanford Feb. 12.
Sean Larsen, a Lawrence graduate student at the game, said he decided to attend because of the tournament game's importance.
"Let's face it," he said. "You don't get a chance to see an NCAA tournament game very often, especially at home."
arger-than-usual attendance, more than 13,000 seats in the field house were empty.
Kelly Fults, St. Louis junior, who regularly attends KU women's games, said the large number of empty seats for such an important game was discouraging.
"It looks like a pretty good crowd, but I'm kind of upset," Fults said. "This is the NCAA tournament. It's a great accomplishment for the team. They worked really hard all season and only a few fans showed up."
Shawn Brose, Easton junior, another regular attender, said some people thought women's basketball was not as exciting as the men's game.
Despite the game's importance and
A lot of people think the women play scared and the game isn't as fast as the men's game." Brose said. "That's not the case. The women's game is really faster than the men's game because of the 30-second clock."
Witherspoon, a senior, said she was pleased with the size of the crowd for her last game as a Jayhawk.
Women's intercollegiate basketball uses a 30-second shot clock. Men's intercollegiate basketball use a 45-second shot clock.
THE BALLCENTER
"I hope a lot of fans come out to the regular season games next year and cheer the team on," she said.
Above left: Senior guard Jo Jo Witherspoon mourns the imminent loss to California in the last minutes of the first round game of the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship. Above: An estimated crowd of 2,650 fans cheer on the Jayhawks. The crowd was the largest this season and the fourth largest in the program's history. The Jayhawks lost last night 62-47.
See related story, Page 9.
Students ask to split Senate Graduate legislators want own council
By Frank McCleary Kanean staff writer
The Graduate Student Council unanimously passed a proposal Tuesday to formally separate from Student Senate.
According to the council's proposal, it would have the authority to make all appointments of graduate students to University governance positions. Student Senate makes the appointments now. The proposal also requests that the Office of Student Affairs channel graduate student fees directly to the Graduate Senate.
A designated percentage then would be shared with Student Senate for issues of joint concern, such as student health care and transportation. If the legislation passes Senate, it then would be sent to University Council for approval.
Legislation to formally establish an independent Graduate Student Senate will be proposed this semester to Student Senate.
Chris O'Brien, executive coordinator of Graduate Student Council, said the independent senate could be established as early as next semester.
"It's a question of autonomy and representing graduate student interests," O'Brien said. "There is a feeling among graduate students that they are not being represented well enough by Student Senate."
"There is no reason to believe that it won't happen by the end of the 1993 calendar year," he said.
The proposal listed increased responsibility and better representation for graduate students as two reasons for creating the separate legislative body.
The time commitment required for Student Senate activities makes it difficult for graduate students to participate in Student Senate meetings, he said.
"We do about as well as other groups," he said.
Arnust Lange, who heads the Student Senate Executive Committee, said the proposal was a good idea.
"The two senates together could function more effectively," she said.
Senate will discuss the issue at its next two meetings, March 31 and April 14.
We need to have some discussion on how it will affect the Senate." she said.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said how students organize their representation was up to them.
"It's perfectly legitimate for students to have discussion and debate as to how they organize their representation," he said. "The administration is interested in having an effective means for the students to express their concerns to the University."
INSIDE
Computer talk line
IS
Computer bulletin boards are the newest way to chat with people in Lawrence and around the world. With these systems, making new friends is as easy as sitting in front of the computer.
See story, Page 7.
KU microbiology may lose AIDS researcher
By Carlos Tejada
Special to the Kansan
A KU professor who has brought almost $1.3 million to KU over seven years for his AIDS research may be the fifth professor to leave the department of microbiology in four years.
Charles Wood, professor of microbiology, still is employed by KU but has been on leave since Fall 1992 to do research at the University of Miami, where he is looking for ajob. He said he had interview appointments at the university.
"There's always a possibility down here," he said.
Wood's lab in Haworth Hall, which used to run 24 hours a day and seven days a week and employed five graduate students, now only uses two graduate students. The other three work with Wood in Miami. The lab now closes occasionally.
Bruce Atkinson, Topeka graduate student and lab assistant for Wood, said he
expected that the lab would move to Miami before the beginning of fall semester
wood said he was researching at Miami because of its high number of AIDS patients and the large Hispanic population, the at-risk group he is studying.
But he also cited a lack of state support for KU's department of microbiology as a reason to seek employment elsewhere.
"The University in general is underfunded by the state, as far as research goes," he said.
Wood's research at KU has involved both HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and BIV, a similar virus in cattle. Because of its similarity to HIV, he said, BIV could unlock important information about AIDS.
His research has won Wood and KU $1.28 million in grants from government agencies and pharmaceutical companies since 1986.
It's hard for me to maintain an effective
He said the lack of state funding impeded his research.
program," he said. "It's very frustrating."
"It hasn't been able to in the past several years because of the support of the state," he said.
Most laboratory research is financed by private or federal grants, Wood said. However, a lack of state support may weaken the ability of laborers to win grants difficult for the department to win grants.
Wood said that the situation had driven away faculty members in the past.
"The primary reason is inadequate state support," he said.
"Microbiology has been one of the major victims of the ability to recruit and maintain faculty," he said.
Del Shankel, professor of biochemistry and former acting executive vice chancellor, agreed with Wood about the faculty situation.
Now, the department suffers from the lack of a "critical mass of individuals" because of four empty faculty positions, he said.
Undergraduates in microbiology still are getting a good education, he said. However, a lack of professors has taken time away from research, a development that has hurt graduate students.
"We're all doing a lot of teaching." Shankel said. "It's all very busy. We're not able to offer the graduate opportunities that we want to."
However, Clarence Buller, professor of microbiology and acting head of the department, said state funding was not the reason for a lack of grant money.
"In general, federal funding is very hard to get," he said. "That's not here, that's all over."
He said the lack of grant money was not limited to the department of microbiology.
"That's true for the university as a whole, although there are some departments that do not."
State support shouldn't be a valid reason for Wood to leave, Buller said. "I would be astounded if that is the reason," he said.
2
Thursday, March 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas Classifieds Work
SPRING BREAK
SPECIAL!
All KU T-Shirts...$6.99
KU Sweatshirts...$22.99
-now until Spring Break
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COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College. Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator, and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office,
eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division Office,
864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to
one single-spaced page.
Send your nominations to Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall University of Kansas, Lawrence 60045. Deadline is April 2, 1993
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Order during Spring Break Week!
Japan-America will hold a conversation group and lunch from 9:30 to 11:30 am today at Alcove C at the Ben Tomlinson Building, call Bent Tomlinson at 865-0118.
Oread Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends will hold a meeting for the first time today at Danforth Chapel; For information, call Kate Fawcett at 842-6299.
African and African-American Studies will hold a seminar, "Ngoma: Discourse of Healing in Central and Southern Africa," from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For information, call Linda Wiley at 864-3054.
Society of Professional Journalists will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For information, call Caron Waert at 832-8874.
841-6222
KU Students Against Hunger will meet to discuss War on Hunger Month at 5:30 p.m. today at Parlor A in the City, where you can call Kishor Aballah at 865-5747.
2620 Iowa
Womyn's Concerns will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
Douglas County AIDS Project will meet at 7 tonight at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. Anyone interested in volunteering is welcome. For information, call Amy Bolig at 843-0400.
KU Libertarians will meet at 7 tonight at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For information, call 841-1488.
Tritition and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7 tonight at Robinson Center Pool. For information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 ontight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For information, call John Dale at 864-1108.
Amnesty International will hold a meeting from 8 to 10 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 29°/17°
LAWRENCE: 41°/28°
Kansas City: 37°/24°
St. Louis: 38°/28°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 68°/46°
Chicago: 28°/20°
Houston: 67°/49°
Miami: 77°/66°
Minneapolis: 24°/1°
Phoenix: 86°/56°
Salt Lake City: 60°/44°
Seattle: 54°/35°
Wichita: 43°/31°
Tulsa: 54°/39°
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Cloudy and rainy.
Cloudy.
High: 44'
Low: 24'
High: 46'
Low: 30'
High: 41*
Low: 28*
State rests case in murder trial
By Mark Klefer
Kansan staff writer
State prosecutors rested their case yesterday in the first-degree murder trial of a Douglas County man accused of shooting to death his landlord and wounding the man's girlfriend.
Valerie Hartley testified that she was shot in the buttocks shortly after midnight Nov. 22 as she ran from James Lidlow after he shot and killed her live-in boyfriend, 32-year-old Tracy Robbins, in his home.
Hartley said that after being shot, she ran to a neighbor's house for help. She said Ludlow, who had been living in the house for about one month, left in her car.
Three employees of The Pool Room, 925 Iowa St., testified that Ludlow, Robbins and Hartley had been in the bar the night of the shooting. They testified that Ludlow had drunk as many as 18 shots of Southern Comfort during a 90-minute period that night.
12:45 a.m., followed by a woman's screams.
The neighbor. Eve Tolefree, said she heard three successive gunshots at
Robbins' younger brother, Bradley Robbins, identified the rifle used in the shooting as his brother's.
After Ludlow left the house, he traveled to the Aberdeen, S.D., hotel where his girlfriend, Macee Nelson, was staying.
Daily Re-affirmation
Nelson said Ludlow told her he did not know if he had killed Robbins.
Ludlow, who also is charged with attempted first-degree murder and felony theft, is expected to testify today.
---
I ask for and receive a forgiving heart. The more this frees me from anger and resentment, the more peace settles over me.
From Unity and K-Unity. 416 Lincoln
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Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 68045
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
BRIEFS
Student to pay fine for fake licenses
An Oliver Hall resident charged with making fake driver's licenses entered a diversion agreement yesterday in Douglas County District Court.
Under terms of the agreement, Robert Martin,
West Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, must pay a fine of
$1,003.50 by Sept. 1, complete a minimum of 100
hours of community service by Oct. 1 and allow KU
puice to copy all the information he used in his公
puter to make the licenses. After allowing police to
copy the information, Martin must allow the in
formation to be erased from his computer.
KU police arrested Martin Feb. 24 after they received an anonymous call on the KU CrimeStoppers hot line.
Prosecution of the charge of dealing in false identification, a Class E felony, will be suspended, pending Martin's completion of the agreement's terms.
Student faces criminal charges
A Templin Hall resident was charged yesterday in Douglas County District Court with causing $1,900 in damage to the lobby at Templin.
Damian Donlon, Leavenworth sophomore, was charged with one count of felony criminal damage and one count of misdemeanor criminal damage.
KU police officer Burdel Welsh said that about 2:15 a.m. Friday, three students entered the lobby and began hitting a large-screen television with a pool cue. Damage to the television was estimated at $1,500.
Welsh said the cue was used to cause $200 in damage to a lobby wall. He said three windows were broken when the students hit them with their elbows.
KU police arrested the three students about 5 a.m. Friday after they received a phone call from a student in Templin. No charges were filed against the two other students.
SenEx names advising task force
Representatives from the student body and faculty from various schools at the University of Kansas were appointed to a task force on academic advising yesterday in a closed session of the Senate Executive Committee.
The names should be released today or tomorrow, said Jason McIntosh, a SenEx member.
The task force will work with the Office of Academic Affairs on a survey that would allow students to voice their concerns about the advising system and suggest improvements.
An addition to the original draft, which was proposed two weeks ago, requests that the task force explore the advising system as it pertains to transfer students.
"One of the complaints from one of the members the other day was that a student wanted us to make a judgment of whether something would transfer," said Nancy Dahl, who heads SenEx. "It's very difficult to give them adequate advice."
Student receives Mellon fellowship
Munro Richardson, Kansas City, Mo. senior, is one of 80 students nationwide who will receive a 1993 Mellon fellowship to encourage teaching careers in the humanities.
Richardson is one of 18 KU students who have received the Andrew W. Mellon Fellowships in Humanistic Studies since the program was established in 1982. The fellowship provides a $12,500 cash stipend and covers tuition and fees for one year of graduate study at any accredited graduate school. Richardson is the first American student from VT to receive a Mellon fellowship.
Richardson is the first African-American student from KU to receive a Mellon fellowship.
"Never in my wildest dreams did I think I could compete on the national level for the fellowship," he said. "It really means a lot to me. It's a reward for my hard work at KU."
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writers Mark Klefer, Will Lewis and Frank McCleary.
Bill could revamp Regents budgets
Proposal would give more control of funds to state universities
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — State legislators have been searching for alternatives for financing the Regents universities, and the head of the House Appropriations Committee thinks she has an answer.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, said yesterday that she planned to introduce tomorrow a "revolutionary" bill. It would create a base budget for the universities and guarantee them a 1 percent increase from the state general fund each year for three years, beginning Fall 1994.
Chronister said that a 1 percent annual increase was just an example and that the Appropriations Committee would consider higher percentages.
Regents budgets typically are formulated based on enrollment adjustments.
The bill also would allow KU and the other Regents universities to request their own tuition increases, which would have to be approved by the Board of Regents, instead of the Regents setting a systemwide increase as it does now.
Each of the universities then would retain 80 percent of its tuition increases.
"The bill would probably benefit KU the
most because it attracts more out-of-state students, and, of course, they pay higher tuition," Chronister said.
Twenty percent of the tuition increases would go into a Regents-controlled fund for faculty salary increases. Chronister said that the fund would be used each year to raise Regents universities' faculty salaries to 95 percent of their peer institutions. Faculty salaries are now at 87.9 percent of peer institutions.
The Board of Regents collects systemwide tuition increases and uses the money to increase the Regents budget as a whole.
Chronister said the plan would eliminate the need for the Regents to make separate requests of the Legislature for campus improvements and salary increases.
"It increases flexibility tremendously," Chronister said. "We say, 'Here your pot of money, you figure out what needs to be done and where the money should go."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, who is a member of the Appropriations Committee, said that the concept of giving the universities more of their own tuition increases was a good one but that a 1 percent annual increase would not be enough. She said students could face even higher tuition increases if 1 percent was all the universities received.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said KU administrators were in favor of having more control over tuition increases and more direct access to the revenues they generated. He, too, said 1 percent would not be enough.
The bill would not affect the current Regents budget now making its way through the Legislature for the 1993-1994 school year.
KU would receive $105.2 million from the state general fund for the 1944-1955 school year, $106.3 million for 1995-1996 and $107.4 million for 1996-1997.
strg
Grundy thes
Andrew Arnone / KANSAN
Orchestral maneuvers
Egmar Meyer, a professional double bassist and University of Kansas Swarthout Society resident artist, plays for Central Junior High School's orchestra. Meyer, a Nashville, Tenn., resident, plays in styles ranging from classical to rock and will perform today with orchestras from Lawrence High School, South Junior High School and Schweiger Elementary School.
Medicine,law schools get national rankings
By Brady Prauser Kansan staff writer
Two KU professional schools received exclusive rankings in the most recent edition of U.S. News and World Report, which chronicles the nation's top graduate schools.
The School of Medicine and the School of Law were ranked in the magazine's fourth-annual edition of "America's Best Graduate Schools," which contains surveys of graduate programs in business, law, engineering, medicine, science and health.
The school of medicine was ranked 17th among the 60 schools receiving the least research money from the National Institutes of Health.
The magazine divided the nation's 126 medical schools into two categories: those that are oriented toward research and those that are oriented toward training primary-care doctors.
The 66 schools receiving the most research money from the NIH were placed in the first category and the rest, including KU, were in the second.
The survey used in the rankings of the research-oriented schools was determined by:
■ the schools' student selectivity,
based on undergraduate grade point
average and Medical College Admission
Test scores;
research activity;
faculty-to-student ratio;
**reputation, based on a survey of medical school faculty and of deans and directors of intern-residency programs.**
Scores in the above categories were converted into percentiles to determine overall rank. Thomas Jefferson University was ranked first among research-oriented medical schools.
reputation, based on a survey of national law deans and senior faculty and of practicing lawyers, hiring partners and senior judges.
faculty resources, based on the school's total expenditures per student:
Robert Jerry, dean of law, said that he was pleased to be recognized by U.S. News but that he did not like the methodology used to determine the rankings.
Jerry said the survey was unrepresentative of the law school's faculty productivity because that productivity was not taken into account by the magazine.
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Among the nation's 176 law schools, KU's law school ranked 71st. For the third consecutive year, Yale University was ranked as the nation's top law school.
"The critical issue is how much weight the applicants to medical school place in it." Price said. "Many of them mention it. The students applying to medical school evidently give it a lot of credence, and that's the important thing."
placement success, based on the percentage of the 1992 class employed at graduation;
the schools' student selectivity, based on undergraduate grade point average and on Law School Admissions Test scores;
"It underestimates our quality," Jerry said. "Anyone thinking about law school ought to look behind the methodology, so I would be careful in assuming we're only a second quartile law school. Actually, we're better."
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Applications are being taken for summer and fall staffs now through April 9, in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
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OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
IN OUR OPINION
Racial quotas have no place in jury selection
On Feb.18, members of the Congressional Black Caucus entered the United States attorney general's office to lobby on behalf of Rep. Harold Ford. Rep. Ford is an African-American congressman from the Memphis, Tenn., area. In 1990, he was indicted on charges of bank fraud totaling $1.5 million. The trial ended in a hung jury divided along racial lines. White jurors voted for conviction, African-American jurors voted for acquittal. Following the trial, the prosecutors were allowed to move the retrial to Jackson, Tenn., in order to find a more impartial jury.
After the selection of a jury consisting of 11 whites and one African American, Rep. Ford and the Congressional Black Caucus took action. They argued for moving the trial back to Memphis. This would put more African Americans on the jury and allow Ford to be judged by his own constituents. Stuart Gerson, the acting attorney general, was persuaded by the Black Caucus and overruled his own prosecutors. He sided with the defense by telling his prosecutors to move that the jury be dismissed and the trial be moved back to Memphis. The U.S. attorney in Memphis and two of his prosecutors working on the case were so outraged that they resigned.
This case represents a dangerous trend in reinterpreting the idea of trial by a jury of one's peers. What constitutes one's peers? Traditionally a peer has been interpreted in legal circles as an equal before the law. The action taken by the attorney general's office questions the traditional interpretation and puts forward a new interpretation based on race. Ford claims that, "The issue here is that I am not being tried by a jury of my peers." This statement assumes that race is the primary factor in determining the verdict and that whites will not give Ford a fair trial. To argue that Ford should be judged by a jury made up of only African Americans is as ludicrous as claiming that the defendants in the Rodney King trial should be judged only by whites.
Blacks have struggled for many years in pursuit of a colorblind legal system. A trend toward putting racial quotas on juries may represent a step backwards in the fight for equality. The federal judge presiding over the case, Jerome Turner, summed up the situation by saying, "It's a sad day, in my opinion, when an acting attorney general of the United States gives in to a demand that a jury must be selected by race."
CAROL PFAFF AND DAVID OLSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Science can help police fight threat of terrorism
The arrest of a man living in New Jersey has marked the first break in the investigation of the bombing of the World Trade Center in New York City.
Coming less than a week after the explosion, that development reveals encouraging things about modern law enforcement and teaches somber lessons about the persistence of terrorism.
(The) arrest of Mohammed Salameh was a tribute to the hard work and expertise of the local police and federal agents who have been working on the case since the bombing ...
Thanks to their exploitation of modern forensic science, the truck used in the bombing was found.
Police said they were led to Salameh through that truck and
other evidence.
Science, teaming up with oldfashioned police work, provides a measure of hope that a truly effective antidote to terrorism may be found.
Some of these same techniques were used in the successful investigation of the bombing of Pam Am Flight 103 in 1988.
But terrorism remains a threat, even though many Americans thought it had subsided with the release of journalist Terry Anderson and the end of the Middle East hostage crisis.
The bombing shatters that complicacy.
The Journal Milwaukee
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UNIVERSAL ARCHIVE SYND
DE 1997 THE BAROQUE AVEW
Roll Call!
Student senators rejected a motion for a referendum on February 24th that would have allowed students to vote on a $3 increase in the student activity fee. The referendum would have been held in conjunction with the Student Senate elections April 14-15.
Student
Senate
The senators voting "no" on the motion for a referendum voted to let Senate determine the fate of the fee increase. Senators whose names are marked in BOLD type and are undergoing re-election
Yes
Student Senate
Julie Chadwell
Patrick Eagleman
Jeff Fale
Jonathan Folland
Travis Harrod
Chander Jayaraman
Jason McIntosh
No
Marisol Romero
Marcie Rosenbaum
Liz Shanker
Daron Sinkler
Jeff Bottenberg
Tara Calhoun
Ken Martin
Ed Austin Jill Bechtel Peter Braithwaite
Tim Dawson
Doug Deady
Patrick Dilley
Scott Espinosa
Kristen Evilsizer
Jason Frahm
Natalie Greenstreet
Amy Hizer
Kevin Jennings
Leslie Lancaster
Kristin Lange
Kristin Lange
Kara Laricks
Courtlandt McQuire
Eric Medill
Nikki Millard Shannon Newton
Ben Schwartz
John Schwartz
John Shoemaker
Marian Taylor
Robert Thompson
Not Voting:
Alan Tikwart
Shanda Vangas
Mohammed Wahab
Chairman
Shelly Witt
Source: Student Senate
Steve Yates
Ajay Kumar
Colin Fernandes
Pat Thelen
Kristy Abel
Brad Bermthal
Phil Freker
Wendy Hills
Mary Male
Munish Malik
Jennifer McFarlane
Brent Reder
Chad Seymour
Jean Winter
Jennifer Zuco
National pastime nothing more than simple economics
The Kansan editorial board left behind its knowledge of rudimentary economic principles when they condemned the "greedy owners and players" of baseball. Baseball players, like everyone else, have to make a living too. It would therefore seem natural that they take the highest
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
The market takes care of such things on its own. If a team is paying its players too much money, that team will soon be bankrupt. If a player has a skill that others are willing to pay him for, why should his compensation be artificially kept lower than his worth to the team.
salary offer, even if that salary seems ridiculously high.
The Kansan also condemns the teams for charging inflated ticket prices. Do they not know how supply and demand works? If the ticket
prices were too high, people would stop going. Then the team's profits would fall and they would have to lower their prices in order to entice more fans.
My advice for the editorial board:
Take an introductory class in economics. Until then, stop commenting on subjects where your knowledge is so obvious limited.
Scot Hill Andover junior
STEPHEN
MARTIN
Senate fails the students by rejecting referendum
Student Senate campaigns are already under way, and there should not be any coalitions or candidates giving the same song and dance about working for the student's best interest. — especially if they were part of the disgraceful vote against student empowerment a few weeks ago.
Like the federal government, Senate is partial to spending more money than it has. But Senate cannot run a deficit. Thus the two alternatives are either cutting spending or raising student fees. Student senators abhor the former and find the latter too easy.
The budget process worked its way through the Senate bureaucracy. Finance Committee leveled its recommendations to Senate which included few notable cost cuts with the exception of Legal Services. Its budget was wrought with spending increases, some of them justified, such as Saferade, an extremely successful Senate operation.
But the Senate budget is also full of pork. Groups like KU Forensics were unable to quantify how much of their money goes to support programs which the entire student body can participate in. Instead, most of the forensics budget is spent paying travel expenses for 20 to 25 students. If KU Forensics is so important to the academic mission of this University then let the administration, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or the communications department pay for it, not students.
Senate does have an obligation to provide certain services for the fees that it collects. The Kansan has editorialized in the past about the effectiveness of organizations such as Legal Services, Saferide and campus transportation. However, Senate doesn't always seem to be getting the bang for the buck. Instead, money is spent on special interest groups which fail to serve or even offer service to the majority of students.
It soon became obvious to many people involved in Senate that if they were going to keep their spending ways up, they were going to have to raise fees. A nameless bill — apparently no one had the courage to take responsibility for their idea — was generated by the Finance Committee. The bill was presented in Senate and immediately a motion was made for a student referendum.
This referendum would have been held at the same time as the Senate general elections in April. The referendum would be a fitting idea for senators who base so much of their credibility on "reaching out to students."
The referendum idea was easily shot down by Senate, which later that same evening passed the bill to increase the student activity fee. Senators offered arguments like "students don't know what they will be voting on" and "it's our job, not the students."
It is this ignorant mentality that Senate thrives on. As long as students are left in the dark, Senate will be able to keep increasing student fees and justifying them as wise judgments.
KANSAN STAFF
It is time for a corporate effort to improve Senate/student communication. Students need to become more informed about the events that affect them and Senate needs to give students a forum for their voice.
Editorial Editor Stephen Martino is an Olathe senior majoring in political science.
GREG FARMER
Editor
STEVE PERRY
Business manage
GAYLE OSTERBERG
EDITORIAL EDITOR
MELISSATERLIP Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET. Technology coordinator
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
East Managing ... Justin Knip
News ... Monique Guislain
... David Mitchell
Editorial ... Stephen Martino
Campus ... KC Trauner
Sports ... David Mitchell
Photo ... Mike Fontaine
Features ... Lynne McAdoo
... Dan Schauer
TOMEBLEN
Managing editor
MELISSATERLIP
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Campus sales manager Brad Broom
Regional sales manager Wade Baxter
National sales mgr Jennifer Perrier
Co-op sales mgr Ahsley Hessel
Production mgrs Ashley Longford
Marketing director Angela Clvester
Creative director Holly Perry
Jim Carey
Art Director Dave Halz伯
Business Staff
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kauai must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
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The kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newsroom, 111 Safertie Plant Hall.
Mystery Strip
THE BEST ADVICE YOU'D EVER GET
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don't play tennis without a net
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 18, 1993
5
Committee revises budget
Plan includes funds added from increase in student activity fee
By Driott Riggs
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate finance committee last night passed a revised revenue code budget which included money that would be added from an activity fee increase planned for next fall.
Student body president Brad Garlinghouse said he vetoed the original budget Mar. 4 because it did not include revenue from a proposed $3 activity fee increase. The excess revenue, about $183,350, would bring the budget to $1,291,300.
The fee increase must be approved by the Board of Regents before the University can implement it.
Many organizations would receive additional funds under the new budget. The Chamber and Concert Music Series would see the greatest increase, from $63,142 originally budgeted by Senate to $34,558 proposed by the finance committee last night.
Chad Browning, finance committee member, said that the music series
was a high-quality program and that it was Senate's responsibility to meet its needs.
"It is essential for us to fund them at the current level," Browning said. "To do otherwise would send the message that there is something wrong with the program."
Senate's proposed budget for Legal Services for Students, a legal consulting service free to KU students, was cut by $4,479 to $194,000.
The finance committee recommended that Legal Services compensate for the loss by reducing the amount of money it spends on its library. Legal Services planned to spend $6,000 on the library next year.
Jo Hardesty, director of Legal Services, said the library contained books on state laws, federal laws and issues pertinent to students.
"It allows attorneys to keep current on cases," Hardesty said. "Without the funding , the library becomes obsolete."
The proposed budget allotted $156,000 for the Student Organizations Fund, $26,000 more than Senate's original budget. The fund is divided among student organizations that do not receive money directly from Senate's budget.
Catherine Bubb, finance committee
co-chairperson, said student organizations needed the extra money to finance SafeRide, KU's nighttime taxicab service.
The finance committee also proposed putting $66,521 into the unallocated account, the account used to finance groups' requests during the year. The original Senate budget allotted $234 for the account.
Kevin Sigourney, Senate treasurer, said additional funds were added to the unallocated account this year because Senate had overspent its budget.
In an effort to get a share of the additional revenue, Hilltop, a Senate-sponsored child-care service for students, requested an additional $52,000. Senate's original budget granted $18,441 to the service.
The finance committee did not guarantee the additional funds, but it did pass for the Fall 1993 semester a resolution to establish a student fee to raise money for Hilltop.
Joan Reiber, director of Hilltop, said a 282-child waiting list was forcing the service to expand.
Lance Wright, student body vice president, said the creation of the fee would be overseen by a committee of senators and would have to be approved by the Board of Regents.
Senate draws 150 candidates
Coalitions report difficulty in filling all graduate seats
By Brett Riggs Kansan staff writer
the coilations A.C.T.L.O.N.!. FOCUS and Unite scrambled for last-minute recruits yesterday to fill their Student Senate coalition charters for the Spring 1993 Senate elections.
One hundred fifty candidates filed for seats on the 64-member Senate, Elections Commissioner Diane King said.
The senators represent students in each school in the University, students in living groups on- and off-campus, underclassmen not yet enrolled in schools and graduate students.
STUDENT
SENATE
the ACTION!! coalition, led by presidential candidate Jason McIntosh. Tulsa, Okla. senior, and vice-presidential candidate Marisol
Romero, Topekaajunior, had 57 candidates file for Senate seats on their charter — the largest number of candidates among the three coalitions.
"Our charter is very diverse." McIntosh said. "It is because of the dedication and enthusiasm of the people on our coalition."
Unite, led by presidential candidate John Shoemaker and vice-presidential candidate Tim Dawson, both Topeka juniors, had 47 candidates file.
Shoemaker said his coalition had some difficulty filling graduate, pharmacy and fine arts seats, but it planned to promote some write-in candidates.
"We had trouble getting together with some candidates before the
deadline." Shoemaker said. "It is tough to find enough individuals who have the time."
Forty-six candidates filed with the FOCUS coalition, led by presidential candidate Ed Austin and vice-presidential candidate Jeff Russell, both Olathe juniors.
Austin also said his coalition had trouble filling the seats reserved for graduate students.
No students filed senate seats as independent candidates.
Independent presidential candidate Bernard Cox, Palatine, Ill., junior, and vice-presidential candidate Charles Frey, Brockport, N.Y., junior, said they were not surprised by the absence of independent candidates.
"It is a huge undertaking to go independent," Cox said.
As independent candidates, Cox and Frey did not have to file charters, and Cox said they did not actively petition for independent senatorial candidates to join them.
Senate elections are April 14 and 15.
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Computer Conversations
PROCADDR PLUS TO METROPOLIS
METROPOLIS
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansan staff writer
T
trying to have a conversation can be such a chore. Am I making a bad impression? Is my fly unzipped? Do I have to get
cleaned up and go out of the house to meet people?
people?
1010101010
Now, it's as easy as sitting in front of a com-
puter.
Having conversations via computer is growing more popular and useful. It is done with computer bulletin board systems — a computer system set up to bring computer users together.
Photo illustration by Andrew Arone / KANSAN
There are about 17 bulletin boards in Lawrence. The number is hard to track because the systems are so easily set up that many of them come and so like a bullet train.
Lawrence's largest system is a commercial system called "Metropolis." A commercial system requires that a user pay for using it. Most of Lawrence's systems are noncommercial.
Metropolis can handle many callers at once, which gives users the ability to communicate just as they would talk, but with a computer. One person types and the other reads the sentence immediately. It provides one of the system's most popular features, "chatting," a free-flowing exchange of ideas, complaints and compliments.
"If you want to tell someone about the crummy day you've had in school, but don't want to complain to someone's face, just type it in," said Chris Rand, president of the KU Bulletin Board Society, a 20-member group that reformed this year.
caters operate under relative anonymity, so there are fewer inhibitions about talking about sensitive subjects. Only the system's operator has to know the users' name. It is up to the user to give it out to others.
"You don't have to show your face," said Michael Foulston, Wichita senior. "For some people that can be an advantage."
Foulston said that talking to someone via keyboard was a unique experience. A user can't tell anything about the other user because users are unseen. There is no judging of social class, age or sex.
Foulston said the ability to leave messages could help people who are looking for advice on a particular subject or problem.
"All you know about them is what they they tell you," he said.
"Electric Dreams," a noncommercial board that focuses on discussing ideas, had an ongoing thread about neckties.
What you need
How to log on to a computer bulletin board
A computer
Ary kind of computer can log on to a bulletin board.
The faster the modem, the faster you can communicate and load files onto your computer.
Some free programs are available on bulletin boards, but you can also buy copyrighted commercial programs.
Computer bulletin boards in Lawrence
How to log on
Set your communications software to 8 data bits, no parity and 1 stop bit. The baud speed of your modem needs to be set to its fastest setting. Then disable call waiting if you have it. From a campus phone dial 113, the number is 5046. From a campus phone dial 1170 or 1170, then the number. Next dial the number of the bulletin board you want and follow the directions given.
Atec info Systems 832-2350
Beginner's BBS 843-4438
Big Banger Burger Bar II 749-1743
Carniegh Hall BBS 832-1011
Castle RavenLoft 832-2888
Central Data BBS 842-8300
Eagle's Nest 843-4448
Electric Dreams 832-2246
Lawrence Online 841-2757
MacRoCosm 841-9446
Metropolis 830-0041
Myth and Magick BBS 842-4210
Rock Chalk BBS 841-6147
The Crypt BCS 832-8928
The Dark Tower 841-1700
The Data Bank BBS 842-7444
The Wastelands 542-3771
Continued on Page 8.
Katherine Manweiler / KANSAN
Source: KANSAN staff research
A voice given to the hearing impaired
By Ezra Wolfe
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff write
For the hearing impaired, computer bulletin board systems are an extra blessing.
They can provide faster communication with more people than any other method of communication, said Ann Edwards, community relations specialist with Telecommunications for the Deaf Inc.
"Computers are to deaf people what wheelchair ramps are to wheelchair-bound people," she said. "Computers will help us in many ways because we're in the link now. Many phases of history have been missed by deaf people because they can't communicate."
Edwards said that bulletin boards were very useful because 40 boards nationwide allowed users to communicate with their Telecommunication Device for the Deaf machines.
TDD are machines that convert typewritten messages into signals that can be sent through phone lines.
Deb Packard, Lawrence resident,
uses computer bulletin boards for
about 20 hours a week. She is deaf and
finds the boards very useful.
"A BBS puts me on the same level as other users," she said. "If I want to communicate, we are all typing, not talking on the phone. The only difference is typing speed."
phone.
Packard, who writes a column for a newspaper for the deaf, said typing was her only contact through the
The relay system is a service mandated by the Americans with Disabilities Act that allows a deaf or speech-impaired person to call anybody and communicate via a human translator or by TDD machines.
"Bulletin boards can open up a whole new area of communication for the deaf," she said. "For the most part, people are not going to call a relay system, but most have a computer and modem."
Packard, who is unemployed, said she had found some job leads using bulletin boards systems.
"I am looking out of state, and I have met people through chat link that have information on several of the areas I are looking in," she said.
Chat link is a connection of bulletin boards nationwide that allows people to converse in real-time which is just like talking normally but with computers.
Packard sad she also used the bulletin board's deaf-related issues forum to get information for the newspaper columns she wrote.
But bulletin boards are more than just practical, they offer entertainment in the form of games and social interaction, said Packard.
I cannot imagine not having one to use," she said. "If I did not have something available, I would be back to using relay services and the mail system, United States Postal Service-style."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MARCH 18, 1993 PAGE 7
KULife
Your guide to Entertainment in the Lawrence Area.
calendar
Nightlife
Benchwarmers Sports Bar
♣ ♌
1601 W. 23rd St.
The Fuzz Box, Thursday
Mountain Clyde, Friday
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
The Milhous Nixons, Thursday
Common Ground, Friday
Blue Meanies and Conspiracy opening for
NU330, 18 and over show, Saturday
The Crawl Tatty opening for Agent Orange,
Wednesday
The Crossing
Harmony Hall
12th and Oread
Cocktail Wiens, Friday
Dracomagnet, Saturday
10. E. Ninth St.
St. Patrick's Day Celebration with Newgrange Consort, 8 p.m., Friday, $8 at the door
Hashinger Hall theater
HashingHail "Spring Break Hash Bash"
featuring Self Evident, Suddenly Amish, Easy
Reader and Hey Ruth, 8 p.m. to 12 a.m.
Thursday, $2
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
The Bon Ton Soul Accordion Band, Thursday
The Which Doctors?, Friday
Bamburners, Saturday
Acoustic open mike, Sunday
Johnny's Tavern
Johnny's Tavern 401. N. Second St.
The Which Doctors?, Wednesday
The Kansas Young Democrats
will be meeting TONIGHT
Continued on Page8.
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KU LIFE
Thursday, March 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Continued from Page 7.
Valentine, Friday, Saturday
Jayhawk Cafe
1340 Ohio St.
Crossroads, Friday
The Jazzhaus
JZH2Uzs
9261/2 Massachusetts St Clybourn Carrier and the Bayou Swamp Band. Thursday
Chubby Smith and his Orchestra, Friday, Saturday
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
KU Symphony Orchestra presents "Bleeding Chunks from the Masterworks," 8 p.m.
Thursday, $6 adults, $3 students and senior citizens
Computers help break ice
Continued from Page 7.
Someone left this message. "A tie is a way of identifying those who kiss but in order to be promoted."
One reply read, "Not necessarily. Papa Snurf wears a tie to work, and when he ever listened seriously to another person's opinion?"
not messages also cover more serious topics such as terrorism, sexism and many others.
Metropolis started in January, 1991, and has yet to make a profit, but the operators soon expect to be in the black.
Mary Ann Martin, co-owner of the Metropolis board, which costs 20 cents a minute to use, said chatting was the most popular feature of the board.
"Lots of friendships evolve from chatting, courtships, occasional flights." Martin said.
Many local friendships have evolved, but long-distance friend
says "FidoNet" is a system that allows bulletin boards to contact each other and exchange messages and computer files, Rand said. It has about 20,000 member systems all over the world.
ships have also evolved.
Rand said he recently spoke to people in Germany, China, Russia, as well as Denver, Alaska and Cleveland, all via his computer.
"You can talk to any other computer in the world," he said. Rand said the only cost involved was that of the BBS and the local calls.
But using the systems can have some, well, rather undesirable side effects.
"You've heard about some people not having lives," Foulston said. "Well, there are some people that literally fits."
"It a bit adductive to use them," said Leo Mauler, vice president of KUBBS and co-operator of Rock Chalk bulletin board.
But Mauler said the addictive nature
of the boards stemmed from social interaction with diverse users and helpful discussions. For instance, Electric Dreams offers users advice and discussion about their love lives, Mauler said.
Even more risque, said Mauler, were some GF files, or picture files.
"A lot of boards carry X-rated GIFs," he said.
Sending sexually explicit photos and text through phone lines isn't illegal, said John Bork of the state attorney general's office. Bork said the state's criminal statutes concerning computer transmission of sex material was still hazy, and one statute dealing with minors and sex materials could come into play.
So, people who think using computers is dull and boring should try plugging into the bulletin board scene.
"They have a great entertainment value." Mauler said, "It's a 24-hour discussion group."
Originality lifts 'Fire' above most UFO films
By Brian Whitburn
Kansas staff reviewer
UFOs, aliens. Many believe they do not exist. But some do. Travis Walton is one of those believers.
"Fire in the Sky," directed by Robert Lleberman, is based on Walton's book "The Walton Experiences." He tells his allege encounter with aliens.
But the movie does not focus on just the aliens. It also shows how the Arizona townpeople deal with Walton's disappearance.
D. B. Sweeney ("The Cutting Edge") does a good job portraying the confused, kdnapped human.
Robert Patrick ("Terminator 2") who plays Walton's best friend Mike Rogers, does a great job as a frustrated eyewitness. He spends most of the movie trying to convince the townspeople that he and his friends
are not crazy.
Rogers and his friends are accused of murdering Walton when they tell people that he was kidnapped by aliens. Rogers struggles to persuade the townpeople that he and his friends are telling the truth.
The movie's plot is a little thin at times. Several times during the movie, the characters seemed to just wait for Walton to come back
But at least this is a movie with some aliens that don't act like E.T. and a spaceship that doesn't look like a silver platter. The scenes inside the ship are the best ones in the film. Whether or not the aliens really exist, they are some of the most original ones I've seen.
Safe Ride
I'd recommend "Fire in the Sky." The movie will make you wonder. Is there something out there?
will ride the nights of the 19th and 20th
"Fire in the Sky" gets a B.
BUT will not operate UNTIL March28th
Remember: Safe Ride Hours are 11pm-3am
Have a Safe Spring Break
The Kansas Transportation Board
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA MOVIES MOVIES CALL 864-SHOW CALL 864-SHOW • THIS WEEK'S SUA MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN •
H. G. Lewis' Splatter Classic Color Me Blood Red
SUA
100
Jewish Film Festival
IUES., MAR. 16 AT 7:00 PM
The Giving Tree
Wed. March 17
Shoot and Cry
Thurs. March 18
Geflite Fish
cosponsored by
Leaving Homes: A Family in Transition
Hillel
The Empty Chair
WED., MAR.17 AT 7:00 PM
THURS., MAR.18 AT 7:00 PM
Roger Corman's Original LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS
WED., MAR.17 AT 7:00 PM THURS., MAR.18 AT 7:00 PM THURS., MAR.18 AT 9:30 PM
FUJIYA
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM MIDNIGHT SHOWS $3 • ALL OTHER SHOWS $2.50
SAA
MUSITUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
ALL ROADS LEAD HOME TO THE HILL
MISTUDENT AWARDS ASSOCIATION
JOBS
NEW CITIES
GRADUATE SCHOOL
Get ready for a SIX-MONTH FREE RIDE as an ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEMBER
- Your membership trip begins with the SENIOR COOKOUT,
5:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 21, in the Adams Center parking lot.
Sponsored by your Student Alumni Association
■ Tour the Center and activate your FREE SIX-MONTH LEARNED CLUB MEMBERSHIP. The Club is the perfect place to dine before or after Commencement exercises, before KU football games and whenever you're on campus. Sponsored by the Alumni Association
Last stop is the COMMENCEMENT BREAKFAST.8 a.m. Sunday, May 16, for graduates and their families (program begins at 8:30). Sponsored by SAA, the Alumni Association and the Board of Class Officers
We will follow you with Alumni Association benefits, but be sure to LEAVE US YOUR NEW ADDRESS.
■ As you graduate, don't forget to take along your JAYHAWK BANK CARD, the only VISA or MasterCard that lets you show your 'Hawk heritage wherever you go.
Then go west for the JAYHAWK JOG, a 5- and 10-kilometer road race for students and alumni, or the HAWK WALK, an untimed campus walk, 8 a.m., Saturday, April 24, starting at Nichols Hall on Campus West. Call 864-4760 to sign up. Sponsored by SAA
Remember, wherever your new life takes you all roads lead home to the Hill. As an Alumni Association member you'll never be far away!
FIRST BANK CARD CENTER
KANSAS DUFF 2395 8100 CV
VISA
KANASALUMNI
KANASALUMNI
KANASALUMNI
FIRST BANK CARD CENTER
TANK HULLE 2195 EAST 5TH ST.
CINEMAS 430-722-6161
VISA
KANSAS ALUMNI
KANSAS ALUMNI
Watch for our brochure in the mail. For more information about the Jayhawk Bank Card call the First Bank Card Center at 1-800-222-7458.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday
1.0
Shooting woes plague nervous Jayhawks
Women lose to California in first round
Kansan sportswriter
By Jay Williams
The Kansas women's basketball team picked the worst possible night to set one of the worst possible records.
The Jayhawks shot a dismal 23 percent from the field, the worst in the history of the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship, and lost to California 62-47 last night in Allen Field House in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas finished its season at 21-9
California, 19-9, will advance to the
second round and play Saturday
against No. 1 Vanderbilt in Nashville.
Tenn.
Defensively, Kansas did the things it needed to do to win. It held All-Pacific 10 guard Milica Vukadinovic, averaging 16.6 points a game, to 12 points on three-of-20 shooting from the field. The entire California team shot 33 percent from the field for the game.
"Our kids really pressed and I tried to tell them to relax, but their only fault tonight was wanting this win too badly," she said.
Kansas took care of the ball better than it had in nine games, committing 15 turnovers, eight less than its season average.
The Jayhawks got the shots they wanted, but made only 14 of 61 for the game. The 14 field goals tied an NCAA Tournament record for fewest field goals made in a game.
Kansas coach Marian Washington attributed her team's shooting woes to nervousness.
But the Golden Bears made shots when it needed to. Kansas did not.
Kansas missed every type of shot, layups, short jump shots and three-pointers. The Jayhawks, one of the best in the Big Eight Conference in three-point shooting, only made two of 14 attempts from long range.
"Everyone wanted our shots to go down," senior guard Jo Witherpoon said. "I was aggressive and my shots were going in and out."
California coach Gooch Foster said the Golden Bears' defense helped hold Kansas to its poor shooting percentage.
"I thought we did a good job of knowing what they would do," she said.
California 62, Kansas 47
KANSAS (21-9)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Shinn 1-3 1-2 3
Aycock 5-12 3-4 13
Tate 2-8 1-1 5
Witherspoon 0-4 1-2 1
Leathers 2-11 2-2 7
Kite 1-8 1-8 3
Kite 2-6 2-2 6
Holmes 2-0 3-4 3
Sampson 1-9 4-6 4
Totals 14-61 17-23 47
The Jayhawks led 26-25 at the half
California (19-9)
Martin 4-8 5-7 13
Robinson 4-12 4-4 12
Dixon 4-11 4-12 9
Vukadinovic 3-20 5-2 12
Vukadinovic 2-6 2-2 6
Voiland Siem 2-6 0-2 6
Tatum 2-5 0-0 4
Totals 22-67 17-23 62
Halftime Kansas 26, Californians 25-3
point goals Kansas 21, Leavens 1, 3-
1, Kissman 15, Sampamu 0-6; California 1.1
(Robinson 0.3, VanKukkun 0.3; Rebecca
10, Ricketts 9, Cawker 9; Californians
16, Martin 14) Assists Kansas 9
(Aycock 2, Leathers 7) Uvakdunov 6)
Uvakdunov 6) Total four Kansas 17
California 19 Attendance 2.650
but California took control midway through the second half as the Golden Bears went on a 23-7 run and took a 50-38 lead.
California senior forward Kesha Martin scored seven of the Golden Bears first nine points in the second half as California took the lead for good. Martin finished with 13 points to lead California.
Kansas had its chances to chip away at the California lead, but every shot that would have given the Jayhawks new life bounced off the rim or missed the rim completely.
It was the exact opposite of the Big Eight Conference Women's Tournament, when Kansas made the shots it needed to qualify for the NCAA Tournament.
Even after the outcome was academic, Kansas still could not find the basket. In a microcosm of the entire evening, freshman guard Charisse Sampson had her three-point attempt bounce in and out as the buzzer sounded.
'we got the shots we wanted,' Washington said. 'They just didn't fall for us.'
Sophomore forward Angela Aycock led the Jayhawks with 13 points and nine rebounds. No other Kansas player scored in double figures.
Kansas, despite going 10 minutes without a field goal, led at halftime, using its defense and 10-of-13 shooting at the free-throw line.
FUANLA 5 RODS 2 KS 3
Freshman forward Amelia Holmes shoots through California's Kim Robinson, right, and Sophie von Saldern, during the first round of the NCAA Women's Championship Tournament. Robinson had seven rebounds and 12 points against the Javahaws last night in California's 62-47 victory.
Strong inside play of Bears key to victory
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswrite
"She told us to get the ball inside in the second half," said California forward Kesha Martin.
California women's basketball coach Gooch Foster had a simple message for her team at halftime of last night's NCAI Midwest Regional first round contest against Kansas.
Foster's play was heard and executed during the final 20 minutes as the play of Martin and center ingerd Dixon proved to be too much for Kansas in California's 82-47 victory last night at Allen Field House.
California trailed the Jayhawks 26-25 at the half, then 28-25 after Angela Aycock's short bank shot 27 seconds into the second half.
Then, Martin took over for the Bears. Her three-point play at 19:01 tied the game at 28, and a short bank shot at 15:50 gave the Bears the lead for good at 34-33
"I just happened to get good position inside, and our guards did a good job of getting the ball to me." Martin said.
Martin scored 11 of her team-high 13 points in the second half, including seven of Cal's first nine second-half points.
Foster said that Martin was a bit modest in evaluating her performance.
"Kesha did a great job of putting herself into position to get the ball." Foster said. "It wasn't like she was just standing there, and the ball magically ended up in her hands and later in the basket."
Dixon hurt the Jayhawks by stepping out away from the basket and hitting four foul-line jump shots on her way to nine points and 10 rebounds.
"We didn't anticipate her ability to hit the shot out top," said Kansas coach Marian Washington. "She's a big woman that we didn't get around much."
Washington knew entering the game that Kansas would have to stop the inside game of California to be successful.
"We got hurt inside at times, and they got inside pretty easily," she said. "It was definitely one of the keys to the game."
Twelve of California's 22 field goals came from within 10 feet of the basket. The Bears out rebounded the Jayhawks 53-46.
Coaches cautious about game
Kansas, Ball State open tournament wary of each other
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
nall State men's basketball coach Dick Hunsaker has guided the Cardinals to a 26-7 overall record and a co-championship season in the Mid-American Conference.
But regardless of those credentials, Hunsaker said he did not feel confident about adding to them at 11:35 a.m. today, when the Cardinals meet the Jayhawks in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
"One we get going, we're going to have to get a feel for their talent level." Hunsaker said. "I just think there's too much of a discrepancy in talent
Ninth-ranked Kansas is the No. 2 seed in the Midwest Region. Ball State is No.15.
between us. Kansas definitely looks like a Final Four team.
"We're not gearing up for the NCAAs. Our goal was to win the MAC, and we've accomplished that goal."
Hunsaker said he had not followed the Jayhawks closely, but knew of their early, second-round exit last season. The University of Texas-El Paso upset Kansas 66-60.
"I really don't believe in the history of the tournament or that history repeats himself," Hunsaker said.
Neither does Kansas coach Roy Williams.
Two years ago, the Jayhawks lost in the semifinals of the Big Eight Conference Tournament, then went on to the Final Four in Indianapolis. This season, the Jayhawks lost in the semifinals of the conference tournament, but Williams refused to look past any opponent.
Shortly after the pairings were revealed on Sunday, Williams said he did not know much about Ball State with the exception of its coach.
Williams said. "Many years ago, he came to work North Carolina's camp when I was an assistant. I have a lot of respect for him.
"Dick Hunsaker is a friend of mine."
I know it's human nature to look at those other 15 seeds and say that they're easier, but I believe that a majority of coaches would feel that way."
Although the Jayhawks are 13-point favorites, Hunsaker said he was pleased with the way his team had been playing. And just as Williams has praised his team's bench throughout the season, the Cardinals also get high production from their reserves.
Two of the Cardinals' leading scorers, junior forward Jealemal Sylvester and senior guard Jamie Matthews come off the bench. Sylvester leads the team averaging 14 points a game. Matthews is third contributing 11.4
Kansas junior forward Steve Woodberry, the Jayhawks' sixth man, is fifth on the team in scoring. third in assists and third in three-pointers.
Ball State and Kansas both shoot about 38 percent from three-point
range.
Kansas senior guard Adonis Jordan, who aggravated the stress fracture in his left leg on Saturday during the Big Eight tournament semifinal loss to Kansas State, practiced and ran the court well early this week but struggled at times when playing defense.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that he was concerned about the injury, which should not keep Jordan from the starting lineup.
The rest of the Jayhawks, aside from senior center Eric Pauley, suffer from the normal bumps and bruises of the season. Pauley, who has had tendinitis in his left knee this season, finished Monday's practice and left Allen Field House with a slight limp.
Pauley practiced with the team yesterday in Rosemont, III., and his status is questionable for today's game.
Kansas junior forward Patrick Richey, who along with Jordan, Woodberry and junior forward Richard Scott, played on the 1991 Final Four team, said that the Jay-
Kansas
Jayhawks
record:
25-6. 11-3
Probable Starters:
head coach:
Roy Williams
**Probable starters**
Rex Watters
G Sr. 6-10 11.9 pp
Adamiel Jordan
G Sr. 5-11 11.7 pp
Richard Scott
F Jr. 6-10 15.5
Darin Hancock
F Jr. 6-7 7.7
Era Pauley
C Sr. 6-10 11.9 pp
Men's basketball
game
1
Men's basketball
game
1
Thursday,
March 18
11:35 a.m.
Rosemont Horizon
Rosemont, ill.
Radio: KLZR-FM 105.9
TV: CBS
Thursday,
March 18
11:35 a.m.
Rosemont Horizon
Rosemont, III.
Radio: NLXR-FM 105.5
TV: CBS
Ball State Cardinals
record:
26-7, 14-4
head coach:
Dick Hunsaker
Probable Starters:
■ Steve Payne
F So. 6-7 12.5 ppg
■ David Hall
F Sr. 6-5 7.2 ppg
■ Bill Gillis
C Sr. 6-7 10.1 ppg
■ Markeek James
G Jr. 6-0 4.2 ppg
■ Mark Hardwick
G Jr. 6-2 6.8 ppg
Source: Kansas Sports Information
hawks needed to pull together like they did two years ago.
Katherine Manweller / KANSAN
"Last year we entered the tournament a little bit complacent." Richey said. "My freshman year, we just all came together and put aside all of the individual stuff. Everybody did their part. That's what we're trying to do this year."
Richey, like Williams, admitted to
not knowing much about the Cardinals.
"I know they're from Muncie, Indiana," Richey said. "Obviously they're a good team because they made it to the tournament."
If the Jayhawks advance, they will play the winner of the Brigham Young-Southern Methodist game on Saturday.
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For Delivery call 841-PAPA (7272)
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1804 W6th (East of Iowa)
749-1919
10
Thursday, March 18, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU Crew heading south to practice
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
For many Kansas students, spring break presents a week of rest and relaxation. For the KU Crew, spring break means a week of vigorous training.
The KU Crew, which has 65 members, will spend its week away from classes in Natchitoches, La. There, on the Cane River, the team will hold its first training practices of the 1993 season.
Normally, by this time of the year, the club would have had a few weeks of practice. However, because of this spring's weather conditions, the Kansas River level has been too high to practice.
After a wee of practice, the team will have its first regatta against Tulsa
on March 27.
KU Crew coach Rob Catloth said although he wanted his team to win the regatta against Tulsa, he considered it a warm-up or preseason competition.
"Hopefully we'll do well," Catloth said. "And it will set the tone for a winning season."
On April 3, the team has what Catloth considers its first real test — the Sunflower State Championships. The regatta will take place on the Kansas River. Kansas will play host to Kansas State, Wichita State and Washburn at Burcham Park in north Lawrence.
A crew regatta consists of many different races. There are four- and eight-person races in men's and women's novice and varsity. Also, there is a lightweight category for each: 160 pounds and less for the men
and 130 pounds and less for the women.
Catloth calls crew the ultimate in team sports because each member in the boat must do the exact same thing for the team to be successful.
"There's no room for a star," Catloth said. "Everyone must row together to win."
In addition to the four or eight rowers, there is the coxwain in the rear of each boat. This is the member who is responsible for steering, and keeping the stroke rate consistent. Also, the coxswain is the only person who faces forward, creating another responsibility — watching the opponents.
Last year's Sunflower State Championships was the first year for the governor's trophy, the award given to the school with the most team points.
Kansas is the defending champion of the governor's trophy.
"I think we're stronger than the other teams," Amick said. "We should win the governor's trophy again."
Junior crew veteran Michael Amick, member of the men's varsity eight team, expects to equal last year's success.
The women's varsity eight team has been victorious in its race at the Sunflower State Championships for 10 consecutive years.
Later this season, the KU Crew has the Great Plains Rowing Champions on April 10 in Topeka. This regatta features more than 20 schools from as far away as Texas and Minnesota.
The women's varsity eight had claimed victories there in each year except 1988 and 1990, since the competition began in 1985.
KANSAS BRIEFS
Tennis teams prepare for spring break meets
The Kansas women's tennis team ranked 19th in the nation, will travel west next week for four matches. Three of the four teams are ranked in the Top 25.
Kansas has two singles players ranked in the Top 100. Sophomore Rebecca Jensen is ranked 8th, and sophomore Nora Koves is 62nd.
The men's team will play today and tomorrow against Wichita State and Indiana State in Wichita.
The Jayhawks will then spend their break in Arizona. Kansas will face Arizona, Arizona State and Northern Arizona Tuesday through Thursday.
The Kansas men's swimming team will send five team members to the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships Tuesday through Thursday in Indianapolis.
Seniors Ed Riddle and Zhawn Stevens, juniors Curtis Taylor and Scott Townsend, and sophomore Marc Bontrager will represent the Jayhawks at the national championships.
Stevens will swim the 200-yard breaststroke, 200 individual medley and 400 individual medley at the NCAA championships. Stevens won all three events at the Big Eight Championships earlier this month.
The other two swimmers qualified in the 50 freestyle. Bontrager will also participate in the 100 freestyle and 100 backstroke.
Baseball team to play despite cold weather
Although Kansas' baseball game yesterday with Emporia State was canceled because of cold weather, the Jayhawks will play host to Washburn at 3 p.m. today. No makeup game with Emporia State has been scheduled.
The Jayhawks, 11-4, crushed Northwest Missouri 36-2 on Monday. Kansas tied or broke eight school single-game offensive records, led by junior designated hitter Joel Benningshoff #8 RBL.
Senior catcher Jeff Niemeyer broke the Kansas career record for doubles, breaking former outfielder Brian Graz's record of 47.
The Jayhawks play a three-game home series with Chicago State beginning tomorrow.
Two Kansas softball players earned Big Eight Conference Player of the Week honors for their contributions in the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational last weekend.
Softball players earn
Player of the Week honors
Junior Stephani Williams was the Pitcher of the Week, posting a 5-1 record for the tournament.
She shut out Texas A&M and Sam Houston State in the semifinals, and Illinois State in the championship game. Williams has pitched 24 % consecutive scoreless innings.
Sophomore Lora Richardson was the Player of the Week. She batted .357, pounding out 10 hits in 28 at-bats. She also had six RBI and stole four bases on four attempts.
Production of your ads.
The University Daily Kansan gives you the opportunity to work with the most advanced equipment and software, to produce your ads.
PETE
Applications are being taken for summer and fall staffs now through April 9, in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
An informational meeting will be held Mon. April 12, in rm 100 Stauffer Flint Hall. Interview sign-up will begin April 12, at 8:00 a.m.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Sale Prices Exoire 3 / 31 / 93
hastings We're Entertainment!
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
Southwest Plaza · 91st St. & Fairlawn
841-5499
MANE TAMER
HRR STYLING
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Landmark
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846 Illinois, Suite E • Lawrence, KS 65449
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Temporary Employment Spring & Summer Break in Johnson County
Clerical Positions
File Clients
Typists
Word Processors
Data Entry
Receptionists
File Clerks
Call Ann (913)491-0944
Bossler Hix
Light Industrial
Packers
Assembly
Warehouse
General Labor
Lawn Maintenance
CallJoanne (913) 384-6161
Light Industrial
NO FEES
11015 Metcalf Overland Park, KS
TEMPORARY SERVICE
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional
Classified Directory
200s Fmelovo
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
300s Marshar
235 Typing Services
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
110 Bus. Personals
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care 841.2345 1419 Mass We're always open
100s Amount
Bausch & Lamb Ray-Ban and Viarnet-France
Sunglasses
The Ete. Shop
290 658 6011
Watkins Health Center
Need a Little Sunshine
The ELe. Shop has new shipments of handmade
stones. Assorted Bee fetishes.
B26548
Assorted Bear fetishes.
B26549
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108 Personal
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon - Fri 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11.30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon - Fri 4.30 p.m - 10 p.m
Sat 11.30 a.m - 4.30 p.m
Sun 8 a.m - 4.30 p.m
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
People with insulin-dependent diabetes:
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zookeep up to 30 lbs, in 20 days for $80, 100% Guaranite,
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Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call-841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
Attention Students
Call 864-4076 to inquire about the diabetes study
130 Entertainment
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Party with the Best!
Hotels or Condos with Party Activity! Package of beach chair and Sun Screen. Night Sun, chauffeured Sada units starting at $4 per Person. Night Taxes Not Included
SKIColorado
Discount Lift Tickets
Ski area Classic
Douglas County AIDS Project all-volunteer meet-
ing Thursday at St. Lorenzo's School for Spring 2014, Mar 14
QUESTIONS* Call Bissauel, Gay, and Lechau Peer Counseling, Free, confidential referrals through Headquarters (614 2345) or KU Info (864-3306) Calls returned
for anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns. cal) 841-245. Headquarters
Trailrunner residents. We appreciate you. The win
ning numbers are 0107, 0102, 0101, 0086 and 0152
Winter Park 36 26
Ski area Classic
400s Real Fct
Breckenridge 538 28
Keystone 38 28
Lewis Mountain 37 28
living in Wichita area.
Spirit Spot is just for you. We have a variety of KU merchandise as well as a large line of Greek items. Stop in and see us over Spring Break and receive a 15% discount with your student I.D.
Copper Mountain 37 28
Winter Park 36 26
Spirit Spot
6100E21
(next to Subway)
689-8870
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
The Kansas will not knowingly accept any安
permission for housing or employment that de-
monts against any person or group of persons based on
nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas
will not knowingly accept advertising that in
violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Winter Park 36
*Cell to order lift tickets*
Can to order int tickets
tickets can be delivered
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
Call to order lift tickets
- lift tickets are fully refundable
- lift tickets must be ordered in advance to ensure Availability
Classic
Travel & Tours
(913) 537-7546
卫
Classified Policy
- tickets can be delivered
* lift tickets are fully refund
CORNELIA
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any pre-fee, commission-based real estate, color, religion, sex, handicap, facial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination.
Announcements
ALB- What is the statute of limitations against a heart attack in compliance?
Weary Pugtive seksuation or execution
Roses are red. Violets are blue
If you've the M. Matt I met outside of Wesco last
night, I'm looking for you. Hints, baseball cap,
curing student, sophomore, wore of Tepeaca,
or known to Kansan, like ex-Colo, c/o the University
daily Kansan.
105 Personals
AT
BENCHWARMERS
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Thursday March 18
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On-campus location in the Burge Union and 831 Massachusetts.
749-0700
Maupintour
140 Lost & Found
Lost in Robinson's women's Locker rm. a St Losthin's metal and a silver ring. The St Christopher's Medal is from a decoated relative and means a great deal to me. Please return, reward if necessary. Amts 825-2049 Substantial Reward Information leading to Trumpet Model 918-37 Serial 222901 Case 1848. Call collect W Drake 351 321 25133
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NO EXPER NEC great resource builder Scholar-
ship avail; temp, pos. over Spring break part-
ners. Send resume to NEC HR Department.
CAMP COUNSELERS want for private Michigan boys' girls summer camps. Teach, swim, cavorting, hiking, waterskiing, gymnastics, archery, swimming. Camp, playgrounds, camp crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $100 more per plus. 485-762-9388, Seeger, 718 Maple, Nid., IL.
Artist/Graphic Designer needed to produce poster and program for late April concert. Large fee
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
bus drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
hands, housekeeper, maintenance person
Camp Box 711, Boulder. BC 83036 (932) 445-457
CITY OF LAWRENCE SUMMER JOBS
The City is accepting applications for all summer, part- and full-time positions. Positions are available OUTDOOR DAY PROGRAM-SPECIALISTS SPORTS INSTRUCTORS PLAYING CROSS COURSE MANICIPAL POOL SPECIALIST AND PROGRAM CONCESSION MAINTENANCE AND LABORER Complete application at Administrative Serv., 2nd floor; City Hall, 4 East 6th St., Lawrence, KS 60044. No phone calls please. Deadline: Friday, April 21
*child-fairen's camps/no-heast-top salary, rm beun-boundary, allowance. Must have been a teacher in allowance. Must have been a basketball, bicycling, crafts, dance, drama, drums, tencing, fencing, golf guitar, drumset, horseback riding, horseshoe juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, piano, rollerblading,帆船 boardwalk, weightlifting, wood support staff-kitchen steward/workers, backpack, cook, food drivers maintenance, sports equipment, weights, wood. S
Cruise line entry level on board/landside positions
with 680-725 km/h, great payment
transported paid (813-729-5478)
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
*earm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience necessary, cattle and maintenance equipment required. P.O. Box 1701, Lawrence KS 60444
Full-time, home-based therapist to provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children in a master's degree with reimbursable credentials, minimum of 2 yrs. exp. providing mental health services to severely emotionally disturbed childREN orphanage client. To be Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 202; Lawrence, KS, 38517; Patricia Roch, Application Deadline Mar. 24, 2019.
Girl Scouts Resident Camp has the following positions available: Health unit, office unit and life service. Contact Kaw Valley Girl Scout Co P.O. Box 4114 Toeka Toske (6963) .913-8230. (714) 582-2507
Help Wanted: First Christian Church is looking for loving adult to provide children on Sunday morning in need of a home, child care, p.m. & m.f., Please send resume to First Christian Church, Attn: Jert Powers, 100 Kentucky, Cincinnati, OH 45239.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT-Make $2,000
per month teaching in a foreign country.
Meet with Marian. Many provide
room and board + other benefit. No previous
training or training certificate required. For provision
Lire up your summer job now. We are currently hiring a crew for 1900 harvest and other needs. Call 813-253-6252. Nagle Combining Inc. Models needed $175,000 and TV/Film ($24,000) per month. Call 813-253-6252.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 18, 1993
11
GREEKS & CLUBS
$1,000 AN HOUR!
Each member of your trait
sorority team, club, etc.
pitches the ball. Each member
of our group can raise
$1,000 in a tea day!
Plus a chance to earn
$1,000 for yourself!
No cost: No obligation
1-800-932-0528. ext. 65
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" &
"The Men of Kansas City" calendars. Please call
Models wanted for "Girls in Kansas City" and
others. Please call Terry at 817-595-0988 for app.
Motivated District Manager for property management
and relocation of client residences.
Send resume to P. Box 105, Lawrence KS
JOBS IN KC!!
The most productive way to find new opportunities quickly at hundreds of top Kansas City Employers.
Call ACCESS at 1-800-362-0681 or (in KC) 432-0700 or checkwith Career
CCESS
LINKING CAREERS AND COMPANIES
Nancy positions available nationwide including
national / state / year / round Great pay
free travel. 1204-635-7890.
NOW HIRRING! Part-time, full-time all-shifts
1952 E. 1019 Haskell, 4144 W. and 1000 W.
B.M. 1020 Haskell, 4144 W. and 1000 W.
Spring and summer employment position available for pool service technician. Must have work knowledge of pool water chemistry and/or pool maintenance. Please call 843-6527 for an appointment
Student monthly in the office of Systems Development. This is a 1/3 time appointment responsible for assisting in maintaining the AppleTalk; providing hardware and software support in Student Affairs, Student Life and Educational Services. Must be a graduate degree in computer science description available at 37 Strong Hall. Salary $18,000. Apply online by July 9th week. Letter of recommendation, resume, and 3 professional references to: Mr. David J. Ryan, Systems Specialist II. 37 Strong Hall. All materials must be received by 3 p.m. Friday, April 2, 1998/OA/AA
Packer Plastics Incorporated
Q
interested please call Packer Plastics at 842-3000, ext. 475 to arrange for an
interview
factory work on weekends,starting Friday at midnight and ending Sunday at midnight. Flex time possible.A student work team will be formed to cover these hours.If
Part-time unskilled factory work on
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Resorts.
Sand Dump Plots for Free Details
Sullivan's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59901
Position Available
Fred P. Ott's Bar & Grill on Country Club Plaza seeks personal, quality minded people to fill servant positions in our retail and part time positions available. Experience 'below' but not mandatory. Apply in.
person after 24 m, at f. Pried F. OH's 479 J.C. person after 24 m, at Country Club Plaza. For more information call 800-634-7561.
TELEMARKETING: Salary plus commission;
evenings. Call 841-1289.
Teens juniper summer children in camp-northeast high school. Teenagers can teach children to play tennis. Good salary, good location. Call: 614-840-3722 or www.windmillnca.com/nca. Named winner! #641-8800. Call me or write: CampWinnell. @ 514 Glam Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10544
Waterfront Job-WSJ-SUMmer children in the camp-theatmeant and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team and teach motors, beautiful pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Mail call or write. Camp Windia, 5016 N. Lake Blvd., Dayton, OH 45920. 883 women Call Jennifer Wheelner at 841-6500.
225 Professional Services
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School; serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
FREE MONEY for school avail include School Aid, scholarship grants. No GPA or income reqeom to BS or MD. Welcome to Priority Service and Headbands B'AW Dairy Room Fast Service. First Light Photography #411-6254
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
TRAFFIC-DUTS
Fake ID & alcoholoffenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G Strobe Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
TEACHER WANTED: to work w/autistic child Prerequisites: 304 & 308 Experience in Behavior Mgm'1, Child Development, & other developmental dis abilities prof. $10.40 or h84-6400 for interview.
235 Typing Services
$1/Double-spaced page, laser printer, spell check rush jobs. Call Paul 749-4648
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters.
**FORDABLE TYPING & EDITING** Honors
English Grad, will type & edit any paper 24 hours.
Tutoring wav. Near campus. Lowest rates in town.
832.1296
Export typing by experienced secretary. IBM Corp.
of New York. Mail: matti1241 - 1218
Lawrence Call, Matttie Mattius 1218
Word Perfect Word Processing New Orchard Corners.
No calls AFTER 9pm. 843-8568
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
signs, presentations, job searches, job
job availability. Masters Degree 841-0254
Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
graphics, bibliography and review and engineer-
case. Call Amy Kempner at 718-694-2320.
www.kempner.com
X
300s
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
'92 18" ALU, CANN MTB FRAME, BB, HS, SP
STEM, FD, $235 .20" MTB, XT Components = $250
Dave 749 2569
Acoustic Gibson Epiphone Epiphone with hard case
and $500 `Call` 798-6766 RobbINO
CHECKS
Aquaria for (1) 140 gallon includes base, top lights, power & undergravel kits $750 and (2) 200 gallon includes stand, top lights, undergravel kit power & undergravity kit $999 call Suzie at 843-701-7244 and leave a message.
Computers: New and Used
P. C. Compatibles
P. C. Source 832-1126
Fax machine 8609 bsp plus auto voice/fax switch box and cleaning kit $175. MIDDLE interface plus cable and Mastersoft software for MSDOS $50, call Archee at 865-350 before 6 p.m.
Fernandes PA15 Amplifier Convenient size 13" x 18"
Calibration price $150 or best offer
Call Brian at 864-0940
VIRGINIA
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
Buy · Sell · Trade
Ready to race Rock Hopper. Complete w/ bar
ends, computer XT thumb switches, new rim, XT
deraler, cassette & cables, plus many extras $575.
Call # 749-0233
Bus seats for Spring Break trip to Texas. $225 for bus and hotels Dallas, San Antonio, Austin. Must be 18 or older.
Unframed KU pride prints. Limited plates of 300
Same as one in Allen Field馆. Lists destroyed.
Certificate of Authenticity small quantity still
available. Call (913) 631-6978
Watitness position available. Apply in person at Quinton a Bark & Bar Dei. 615 Mass.
Young green liguana, excellent condition, easy to handle. 17 long, come with set up. 864-862 make
340 Auto Sales
85 Nissan Sentra AM/FM/FC, AC $150 or negotiable. Call Mark 823-8541
85 Ford tempo GL A/C Automatic Clean but
light front damage G150 or negligible
370 Want to Buy
Parche 87294 97.95, excellent, one owner, 5kW svc tree, all opt. aft. Best offer over $7,000
Tickets to the Sat. Mar 21 session of the NCAA Tourney in Callie Shaller 749-1069.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
BEAT THE CROWN! Everyone wants these apes. For August but if you can take one June, I can have you come to buildings at West Hills Apes 1006 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS 841-380 or 760-842
2-8B from 9:30
Jazzy Suites on bus route
Private balconies/Palaces
P-Del椅 TV/Phones
On-site management
Ouida & Sons Bldg. C4: 811-451-0511
Office hours
5-11am to 10am or 2-1st
Or call for appointments
Naismith Place
661 Arkansas, good location. 2 bdmr apt upstairs,
furnished, modern convenience, central heat & air,
protected parking. Sublease immediately with
their own security. Rental retains the difference
*84-215 or 841-649*.
Available Now furnished Rms w/ shared kitchen &
bath facilities 1 sheet from KKw u/w off-street
Hey KU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apartments is now leaving St. & Bedroom apartments for fall 2015. Room size includes Water paid, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage parking. Please call KU RS 6186 Areas
or for lease a BTE Tournamen 2 baths, 18' x 9' or
10' x 6' or 10' x 5' or 10' x 4' or 10' x 3' or 10' x 2'
or 10' x 1'. For rent use the 12' x 12' or 12' x 10' or
12' x 8' or 12' x 6' or 12' x 4' or 12' x 2' or
12' x 1'.
2 roommates four Hdrm. apt sublet. May-Aug.
1 sooner. Free pets, walk to campus
900 NISMITH 3 X 4 R, B2 B,洗 Lg. rooms
nicro . Ecable tv cable paid coin operated laundry
device.
FIRST MGT. INC.
*NOW LEASING*
•Bradford Square
•Chamberlin Court
•Carson Place
•Stadium View
•Oread Apartments
•1425 Kentucky
call 749-1556 M-F2-5 pm or 841-8468 M-F9-12 pm for an appt.
BR Bur, fur. available now. New paint + mini
linds tvr lease 843-4217.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
SUMMER SPECIALS
*1.2 and 3 bedroom units
*3 month leases
*email and Mailing
LUXURY TOWNHOME, 4 BR, 2½ bath,
microphone, dishwashers, fireplace, wet bar, 2 car
garage with owner,开桶尔大厦, near golf
course. $1h + Lawn Avenue, $20.50 per day
or up to $30.50 per weekdays and between 6:30 and 10:30 p.m.
weekdays for appointment. Keep trying.
843-4754 (call for appt.)
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summe
Boardwalk
Seven Mile
Quail Creek
1200
meadowbrook
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
MACKENZIE APTS, now leasing for Aug 1. Newly constructed luxury apts, close to campus. All MR, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appliances. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1866.
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it here and
The Perfect Apartment!
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
NOW
3 new bdr town house wash for next semester on bus line 1deal for 4 people. Fireplace patio and kitchen. Rent $700/mo +/u'tail Call杰 at 86-3922 Nice, quiet. 3 BR plurk in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A, gas, Hea/1 BA, W/D garage. No pets. References: 450/o. 843-288
ALLEY LIFE CARE
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
accompaniment features
- Washer and dryer
- Gas heat, central air
Large bedrooms
Mini blinds
Carsports available
Carpets available
1 bedroom $340; $165
2 bedroom $460; $170
3 bedroom $525; $185
4 bedroom $480; $190
office
Rent/Las Vegas rm or 3 BR house. East Lawn, close to RU on bus route, recently renovated, dog-friendly. 201-855-7694. www.rustleavetown.com
mon. Wed. & Fr. 12:00-2:00p.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 6:00-8:00p.m.
843-1971
Please call Kelly for appt.
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 1-5
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee'
- Luxurious 2,3,&4
Bedroom TownHomes
841-8400 841-128
*Some with Fireplaces On Kill Book Boats
- Microwave Ovens
- Garages;2 1/2 Baths
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
a bird
EDDINGHAM PLACE
House for rent 2 bd rm, lease, no pets 842-4403.
24th & EDDINGHAM
*Garages;2 1/2 Baths
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
2111 Kasold843-4300
Offering Luxury 2 br
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
841-5444
Graystone Apts.
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
S
Swan Management
• Graystone
• 1-2-3bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
Spacious 2 bedm apt. Summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3262
Sublease 3 bedroom/2 bath Furnished ap, close to campus avail May 15-Aug 10
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts.-furnished and unfurnished
*1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
@0054e @065 permonth
GREAT LOCATION Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Wed. Thurs.
- 2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
Summer sublease studio apt at Traillarge Availability $149/mo $500/mo included. w/ 802.452.3627
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
$375 to $450 per month
WATERPAIDONALLAPTS.
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for info or apot
Sublease for summer. Nice, clean. 3-4 bedroom
townhouse w/ pool. More info call 749-5284 ask for
Summer & Fall Leasing. Furnished 1 & 2 birmir
from KU / on off-street parking, no
park. Call 841-584-3950
info or appt.
OPENDAILY
9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
FURNISHED
---
On KU Bus Route with 4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
Sonny Dresser/Driver
TRAILRIDGE APTS.
New signing leases for summer & fall.
Call Sarah for your appointment at
843-2733
*2 Pools
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
Studios,1,2,2+,3&4bdrm apts...designed with you in mind!
Campus Place-841-1429 1445 Louisiana
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House. Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantasticates. Call 749-0871 or 814-0418. Stop by 146 Tennessee.
Part25
Hanover Place-841-1212
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1&2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Regents Court-749-0445 1005 Mass
Orchard Corners-749-4226
15th & Kasold
844-3855
Sundance-841-5235
7th & Florida
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
842-4455
10th & Arkansas
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
•Spacious 2 bedroom
•Laundry facility
•Swimming Pool
•Waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Two bdrm. furnished apt. Now - Aug 31 Call 864-809
or 864-2583. Price negotiable.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
8079 or 864-2538. Price negotiable.
Two bedrm sublease ASAP through Aug. Full size
washer/dryer, blower & free BBQ $900 total Call
Dave or John 843-1414
430 Roommate Wanted
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
1 F roommate needs to be a 2hr, IbA, 2yr old, in scent area. Must be a non-mosquito, clean and responsible, on bus route. Start Aug. 1, at 9am. Please call 1-855-1348 or 1-855-1378.
1) To share open intime 3 BR townhouse in num-
ber 7, click on **Home** > **Settings** > **Share** > **Start in June**. Jon, 865-969, leave message.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
- female, N/S hostroom wanted for fall 1 HH in hbr AP on bus route pool, AAC free water, tree service, lawn care
NO LEASE $200 + 1/8 utilities Roommate to share house, large yard,洗衣er + dresser 842-2069
Summer Sublease 2 + Female to share large 3 bdmnt anr. 2 + Tumult W/D, W/path. 852-292
Female roommate wanted for a 1HR BA Aptu
are required. Respond to this ad by calling Stacy at
If you're outgoing and responsible, call Stacy at
Blind Box Numbers
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kranish office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charge on MasterCard or Visa.
Calculating names:
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5-7 lines
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Rates
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Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior
publication.
148 lost & found 366 for sale
205 hired wanted 440 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 prides services
105 personal
110 business personalis
124 announcements
130 entertainment
370 want to buy
495 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
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The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Fowkes, Inc. All Rights Reserved by Universal Press Syndicate
Yippy-I-yo-mama!
3-16
O
Thursday, March 18, 1993
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1
What to use when your term paper's still not finished but your printer is.
With Visa* you'll be accepted at more than 10 million places, nearly three times more than American Express. And that's not a misprint.
VISA
000 123 456 789 010
123456789010
VISA
Visa. It's Everywhere You Want To Be."
© Visa U.S.A. Inc 1993
NOW PLAYING IN FULL COLOR
Pretty in Pink (& Red & Blue & Green...)
Starring Macintosh PowerBook 165c
Macintosh PowerBook 165c
HP
Macintosh PowerBook 165c 4/80 with StyleWriter II $3244^{00}
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
ADMIT ONE
KU Bookstores Computer Store
Burge Union • Level Two
864-5697
APPLE
Mother Cigar
Madness builds at tournament time
BURST BUBBLE: Oklahoma, a quality team on paper, couldn't manage enough victories to convince the NCAA selection committee that the Sooners deserved a tournament berth. Maybe now Billy boy can "guarantee" some more victories in the NIT, where the sub-par Sooners belong.
MARCH MADNESS: The Big Dance today as the nation's smaller schools will try to prove that they can waltz with the big boys. Look for the defending champion Dukies to get a first-round scare from a tough Southern Illinois team.
GENDER EQUITY: In my constant quest for equality and political correctness, I wonder if Chancellor Gene Budig would also be willing to cancel a day of classes if the Lady Jayhawks ever win the NCAA Championship.
When J.R Ryder said a tutor had helped him write "part" of a paper, what does that mean? The body? And to think I actually felt sorry for UNLV when it did not receive an NCAA Tournament berth.
NEWMAN'S NOTES
STUDY BREAK:
A WASTE OF TIME: Colorado head coach Joe Harrington, how much did you lose last Friday? Buffalo fans who had money on the game
Dave NEWMAN
might have been pleased when you called two meaningless timeouts in the final 30 seconds. Too bad you still couldn't cover the 15-point spread.
WHERE IS PAULEY? Is it purely coincidence that I haven't seen Eric Pauley on campus this week? That is all right, Eric. I would be lying low too after bricking the stupidest shot thrown up all season in the Big Eight Tournament. Actually, Pauley is experiencing more knee problems.
TOURNAMENT TIME: Well fellas, now the time to put up or shut up. I don't care about all the negativity on campus this week, or the fact that some experts predict Kansas to be the first major upset. Woodbury, Walters and the rest of the crew can still take it all. I will see you guys in New Orleans.
Dave Newman is an Englewood, Colo.
sophomore made in Journalism.
Jayhawk Bookstore
843-3826
"At the top of Naismith Hill!" Hrs: 8-5 M-F, 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun
DUI or OUI? Court Evaluations Walking Distance to KU CrossBridge 749-2626
HAIL 749-1912
accessible to all persons
Crown Cinema
642 Mass
HALL 749-
1912
Theatre 13 is accessible to all persons
Nominated for 6 Academy Awards including:
Best Picture!
Best Picture
The Crying Game(R)(Th.2)
Daily: (*4*:30) 7:00:9:30
BEFORE 6 PM: ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Dickinson
Dickinson
Away...PG(13) (5:00) 7/10.89.00
Shadow of the Wolf (P13) (5:10) 7/10.89.00
Ground Hog Day...PG(13) (5:00) 7/10.89.10
Fire in the Sky...PG(13) (5:20) 7/20.89.10
Swim Kids...PG(13) (5:20) 7/10.89.10
CBA...R (12) 7/20.91.15
Times good Mon...Thr only
Minor doubled his career high by scoring 22 points and sending the Sooners, 20-11, to a second-round game next week against Minnesota.
Times good Mon.-Thur. only
Falling Down $ ^{R} $
Freshman Ryan Minor scored 10 points as the Sooners outscoed Michigan State 15-6 in the final four minutes last night to win 88-86 in the first round of the NIT.
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
Michigan State, 15-13, lost for the sixth time in seven games.
HILLCREST
Sooners sneak past Spartans in NIT action
925 IOWA
Amos and Andrew PG-13 5:15,7:15,8:45
NORMAN, Okla. - On a night when Oklahoma had to scratch and claw just to stay with Michigan State, one of the Sooners' hardest workers kept them alive in the National Invitation Tournament.
Med Don and Glory R 5:15,7:30,8:45
53 Prime Ermer Show (.): Senior Citizen Anytime
Homeward Bound G 5.00,7.00,8.00
Homeward Bound
Aladdin G 5:00,7:00
The Sooners scored eight straight points in a one-minute snan to take an 81-80 lead.
Bryatt Vann had 20 points and Jeff Webster 16 for the Sooners. The victory gave Oklahoma its 12th straight 20-victory season. Oklahoma played without guard Angelo Hamilton, who was suspended Tuesday by Coach Billy Tubbs for violating team rules.
The Associated Press
Michigan State got within a point on Mike Peplowski's shot with 22 seconds remaining, but Minor's final point sealed the victory.
Best of the Best $ ^{R} $ R.30
A Far Off Place PG
$1.25
A River Runs Through It PG 5:00.7:45
A Farmland Place
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 841-5191
ALL SEATS
$1.25
Scent of A Woman $ ^{R} $ 5.00,8.00
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
SUNY College of Arts
committee members
Fine Arts
Feature Films
Live Music
Recreation/Travel Public Relations
Graphic Designers
Informational Meetings
Wednesday 17
7:30 pm
Burge Union - Frontier Rm.
C
Thursday, March 18
7:30 pm
Burge Union - Farner Rm.
(Applications only available
at either meeting)
Join the
Selections!
93 94
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
...
PLACE AN AD FREE!
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
♂♀
19 year old SWM. Hey Ladies I'm looking for a girl to spill with myiol in the .i m silly poster on camp Kansas University and I want to spend my time with you. No SPDS please. | F03202.
2 good-looking, in SWA smiles for 2 good-looking SWFs to pass the time with. Enjoy drinking, partying, & staying up until all hours of the night. Girl kids need not apply. Call t0 62332
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Authority questioning reality, hacker w/b a passion for Cyberpunk and an intensive collection of Camu bucks, sees a date w/b substance. Looking for canaux in the real world, make sure you have imperfections. Must enjoy dancing, partying, candlelight games, & video games. Rush Lumphin fans & uprights need not apply.
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Cool guy, secure easy going, attractive, open minded . and all that other good stuff. Seeking one intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for us. Buy 10728
I have Brillis Plain Black hair - a bad knee - I tend to lace my throat a lot. I only have one shirt, and sometimes my voice cracks but I can make people laugh. If interested in taking a chance, call box A5.
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SWIM 67" *160 lb*. Looking for someone to run in and jump a 14-meter plate three times a week. If you need a partner to keep you honest to your fitness program, give me a call at box391.
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SWM. Smart, smart, honest, open, gentle, good look, mournal, moral guy seeking an honest, Do you like Paul Simson? Billy Joon? Phantom of the Opera? Beesley? Sunny Days? If so, call. If you thought you'd never answer a personal aid, then I never thought I place one! Call Box #16327
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2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both over 30, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet them w/ dry sense of humor, clean intellect, & down long walks, movies, talking on the phone, & trying to scam to get us in rich quick. Call box e20142
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M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single C Gay
H Gare G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smok
casy white male seeks flings and possible relation-
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GWM. It's hard to understand why so many others are out here to look find to someone to share something special with you. So spring is going around the corner and so is beautiful weather, so get out of the winter blues! Put a hat on, wear a scarf and go outside we can hope we can meet it and hit it off. I'm sincere, no-smoker, light drinker and I love it. Call 800-3064
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an and in the Jaitak Network section of the Kanan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the *Kansan*, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mail-box number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. VoICE prompts will lead you along the way. You It be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
}
CAMPUS: Enrollment in KU's Air Force ROTC has dropped about 50 percent since 1988, Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.102.NO.124
FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1993
(USPS650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Students find time at game time
William Alix / Special to the KANSAN
**Above.** Students gather in the lobby of the Kansas Union to watch the Kansas men's basketball team defeat Ball State. Approximately 40 students watched the game yesterday on a television temporarily set up in the Union. **Below right.** sophomore center Greg Ostertag gives senior center Eric Pauley and freshman guard Sean Pearson a high five. Kansas defeated Ball State 94-72 yesterday and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Basketball Championship.
NEWS:864-4810
People on campus combine basketball classes, homework
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
Yesterday morning, the men's basketball team began its annual business at the NCAA Tournament at its first-round game against Ball State in Rosemont, Ill.
Meanwhile, on campus classes and homework made it business as usual for KU students, even though some were able to tear away from the daily routine.
Ten minutes after tip-off, Suzanne Johnson, Benton senior, rushed down an ice Mount Oread sideway toward home for a lunch of pancakes.
Johnson, who said she was too busy with an architecture project to watch the game, was out of class earlier than usual. Her class was cut short by her professor.
"I didn't even know the game was today," said Vici Godal, Great Bend senior, who was working on French homework. "I wondered why everybody was in here."
More than 50 people sat on the sofas, chairs and floor of the Kansas Union lounge to watch the game.
In the Kansas Union Bookstore, another television was tuned in to the game.
As Rex Walters sank a three-pointer late in the first half, Bill Wilson, cashier, raised his hands into the air.
wittmann, Ben Nees, Des Moines, Iowa,
junior, finished a cigarette in front of the
Union. He had a French test and chemistry
work to contend with.
"I just hope we win," Wilson said. "We gotta win. We gotta play Duke a couple games down the line."
He was not worried about missing the game. It was videotaped for him by his roommates, whom he said were more avid basketball fans. But he said their tastes were rubbing off on him.
Across the street from Bailey Hall, Tanae Sump, Randolph senior, waited for the bus and listened to the game on a radio through earphones. She hoped to make it home for part of the second half.
Stacy Hensic, St. Louis freshman, was not that lucky.
"I wish I would have had a chance to watch it, but classes are a little more important," said Hersic, who had a 1 p.m. test.
1. mean, how can you not like basketball in Kansas? Nei's said
KANSAS
00
In an architecture studio in Marvin Hall, eight students watched two televisions and listened to the game on the radio while working on projects.
Paul Kraemer, St. Louis senior, explained how the students combined work and keeping track of the game: "We listened to it on the radio. If it was a really good shot, we would get up and watch the replay."
NCAA Tournament
Kansas defeated Ball State
University yesterday to move
on in the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas meets Brigham
tomorrow at 3:30 p.m.
For complete coverage see
page 7.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
Ku
KU Space Program shoots for the stars
By Robert Allen
Special to the Kansar
In the dusty basement of Learned Hall, behind the wind tunnel in a storage-room-corner-closet, a group of students is aiming for space — and reaching it.
They are the 20 or so members of the KU Space Program, and they design and build experiments to go on the space shuttle.
"It's fun," said Kim Lowe, Colorado Springs, Colo., junior and club treasurer. "What other chances do students have to put things in space?"
The group puts things in space via NASA's Get Away Special program. This program allows anyone to buy a special canister designed by NASA to place on the shuttle. The canister resembles a huge cookie tin, and the experiments, from growing crystals to mixing chemicals, take place while orbiting the earth.
Saeed Farokhi, associate professor of aerospace engineering, is the faculty adviser for the group.
"The Get Away Special is a program of
NASA I believe to do a service to society and provide a link between the common man and the space agency," he said. "They allow space in a canister on board the shuttle, and you are allowed a number of operations in the experiment. Once it lands again, they give the canister back. They treat you as a customer."
The president of the club, Tom Miller, Leawood junior, said the group was currently working on an experiment that could be ready in less than a year. The experiment is called a Taylor vortex, and it studies the flow of fluids inside a cylinder.
"A Taylor vortex occurs when you have a fluid of known viscosity between two rotating cylinders," he said. "At certain rotation speeds, flow patterns arise which you wouldn't expect."
These flow patterns form rings in the fluid, one atop the other, from one end of the cylinders to the other. It resembles many tiny whirlpools stacked on top of each other. Understanding the behavior of Taylor vortices could be applied to many things, such as the mixing of fluids in nozzles and combustion engines.
"This experiment has never been performed in space or low gravity," Miller said.
It is important to perform the experiment in space, he said, "so you're sure that the motion is due only to the rotation of the cylinders" instead of the earth's movement.
KUSP was started in 1986 when Paul Fiesler, then a KU student, bought two canisters from NASA. The first two-and-a-half years were spent "dragging our feet in the mud," Miller said, because of a lack of money.
The first canister contained three experiments. The first attempted to grow protein crystals, which can form more perfect structures in the low gravity of space than in Earth's gravity. The second was to mix together three chemicals and form cell
The third experiment was simply a package of vegetable seeds that went along for the ride.
The group was disbanded for one and a half years; only in 1900 was any significant progress made. On Sept. 12, 1902, the first canister of experiments was launched on board the Space Shuttle Endeavour.
But these two experiments failed because the chemicals did not mix properly during the trip.
membrane materials.
"The purpose of the seeds wasn't to get super tomatoes, but to give the kids a chance to work on an experiment that has been in space," Miller said.
The group distributed the cabbage, corn, pea and radish seeds to Pickney and Deerfield Elementary Schools, among others, to be grown by the children. The children were supposed to tell KUSP whether the vegetables turned out strangely.
Meanwhile, work on the new canister continues. The club now is deciding on how to put the experiment together.
The canister will include two cameras to record the Taylor vortices as they occur. The club hopes that a company such as Sony will donate cameras to the experifaculty salaries.
Story continues, Page 5.
Students say testimony one-sided
Law students offer support for Tonkovich, defend selves
By Brady Prauser
Kansan staff writer
Two former students of law professor Emil Tonkovich said yesterday that sexual harassment allegations brought against the professor by other law students were untrue.
In the 22nd week of dismissal hearings for Tonkovich, Pam VonEssen and Shannon Taylor, third-year law students, said that the University's accounts of the allegations were one-sided; both said they wanted to set the record straight.
"That's why I'm here, so people will have both sides," VonEssen told Tonkovich's "lawyer, Lisa Ford, during direct examination." I know certain things about Professor Tonkovich that need to be told.
VonEssen rebutted law student Lisa Byrd's testimony given last year alleging that Tonkovich coerced female law students — including Taylor — to sit on his lap during a spring 1991 party that Tonkovich threw for his students at The Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St.
VonEssen, who attended the party, said the students she witnessed sitting in Tonkovich's lap did so voluntarily and in a joking manner. She said Byrd's subsequent allegations and testimony against Tonkovich about what happened were not true.
"I can't believe she would even insinuate that happened because it was not even close," VonEssen said.
Most of Taylor's testimony centered on allegations several law students have made against Tonkovich that involve Taylor, such as a lap-sitting incident at the Yacht Club party and remarks the students alleged Tonkovich said to her.
Pete Johnson, a member of the faculty committee on tenure and related problems, asked Taylor whether Tonkovich had ever made statements to her concerning oral sex for grades, her sexual availability or sexual prowess.
"Absolutely not, and I guarantee you if he had, I would not be testifying in his behalf today," Taylor said.
Like VonEssen, she also said that the lap-sitting incidents were voluntarily initiated by her and Byrd and done in a joking manner.
Taylor said that she did not want to testify but did so to "clear her name" because the allegations concerning her had made her look worse than Tonkovich.
After she learned of the allegations by other students involving her and another law student, Luci Burlingame, Taylor said, she and Buringame met with University administrators and KU associate general counsel Rose Marino in March 1991.
Taylor told Ford during direct examination that Marino tried to pressure them to talk about the allegations without an attorney present. Taylor said she and Burlingame referred to the meeting as "the ambush."
"Luci and I said we never felt harassed until we met with the administration." Taylor said.
In April 1991, Taylor had another meeting with administrators. Taylor's father attended that meetfaculty salaries.
Taylor testified that her father told the administrators the allegations involving her were harmful and were not useful in the University's case. He requested that the administrators drop the allegations.
Taylor said Marino told the administrators, "I'm trying to build a case here."
Chancellor Gene Budig moved to dismiss Tonkovich in August 1982, saying Tonkovich violated the faculty code of conduct. Tonkovich asked for a public hearing before the faculty committee on tenure and related problems to determine whether he had violated the faculty code.
INSIDE ADII crusader
ADUI crusader
(1)
State Rep. Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, has been one of the strongest advocates for tightening laws governing driving under the influence.
Regents like new salary financing proposal
See story, Page 3.
By Dan England
Kansan staff writer
It is where the money goes that concerns them. That is why they support a new bill in the Kansas Legislature that would put 20 percent of any tuition increase into a Regents-controlled fund for faculty salaries.
TOPEKA — Even though they don't like them, members of the Kansas Board of Regents are resigned to the fact that student tuition increases are unavoidable.
The bill, introduced by State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, creates a base budget for the state's universities and guarantees a 1 percent increase from the state general fund each year for three years. If enacted, the financing formula would begin in two years.
Shirley Palmer, a Regent from Fort Scott who heads the board, said the bill was encouraging because it addressed raising
Board of Regents
"I was hoping that we could raise faculty salaries without raising tuition, but you can't have one without the other," she said.
Palmer said that she knew many students were wary of any increase. However, she also said that she was confident students would support the bill because it guaranteed that their money was helping their instructors.
"Many times students don't see any result from a tuition increase," she said. "If they can get a quality education, many are willing to support an increase."
But Palmer said that more than a 1 per
cent increase a year was needed to raise faculty salaries to the level of those at KU's peer institutions.
Rick Harman, a Regent from Prairie Village, said the bill proposed salary increases that were considerably higher than increases of the last few years.
See related stories, Page 3.
Regents members will begin pushing for a higher increase in the bill soon, she said. The bill is now in the House Appropriations Committee after its introduction yesterday.
"I am delighted that the Legislature is thinking about faculty salaries," Harman said. "Raising faculty salaries is our No. 1 goal."
The tuition and fees committee of the board also discussed a plan Wednesday that would increase tuition every year until faculty salaries were 100 percent of their peers.
The proposed plan
A bill introduced yesterday by State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, would change the method for financing the budgets of the state six universities. If enacted, the plan would:
■ Ensure a 1 percent increase to the higher education budget from the state general fund each year for three years, beginning Fail 1994.
Allow KU and other Regents universities to request their own tuition increases, which would be approved by the Board of Regents. Each university would retain 80 percent of its tuition.
now 20 percent of each tuition increase to go into a legends-controlled fund for faculty salary increases. The fund would be used to raise faculty salaries from 87.9 to 95 percent of their peer institutions.
Source: The Associated Press
Friday, March 19, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Daily Re-affirmation By living and working in accord with people, animals, plants and earth, we are givers and receivers in a rich and abundant environment.
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
Dickinson
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ON CAMPUS
■ Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alceva A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jennifer Roth at 832-1511.
Triathlon and Swim Club's run practice begins at 10 a.m. Sunday outside Auschutz Sports Pavilion. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
KU ENIRONS will sponsor an Meat-Out Day tomorrow. For more information, call Chris at 832-2167.
Tritanion and Swim Club's swim practice begins at 2 p.m. Sunday in Robinson Center Pool, call Sean Roland at 855-2731.
ON THE RECORD
--day in the 2400 block of West 25th Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $100.
A student's car stereo and compact discs, valued together at $500, were taken Wednesday or yesterday from a vehicle in the 1300 block of West 24th Street. Lawrence police reported. Damage to the dashboard and a window was estimated at $200.
A student's radar detector, valued at $50, was taken Tuesday or Wednesday from a vehicle in a parking lot near McColm Hall, KU police reported. Damage to a window was estimated at $150.
The passenger window of a student's car was damaged yester-
WEATHER
Omaha: 45°/31°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 61°/41°
Chicago: 38°/31°
Houston: 70°/47°
Miami: 76°/67°
Minneapolis: 36°/21°
Phoenix: 83°/58°
Salt Lake City: 61°/40°
Seattle: 51°/41°
LAWRENCE: 47°/32°
Kansas City: 44°/34°
St. Louis: 45°/37°
Wichita: 52°/36°
Tulsa: 56°/41°
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Partly cloudy.
47°
30 percent chance of evening rain.
High: 56°
Lower: 36°
Sunny.
High: 58°
Lower: 37°
Tomorrow Sunday
Sunny Day
High: 47°
Low: 32°
Sun
Defendant testifies in murder trial
By Mark Klefer
Kansan staff writer
James Ludlow, 24, said during his two hours on the stand that he had no recollection of the events of Nov. 21 and Nov. 22. Douglas County sheriff's officers found Tracy Robbins, 32, dead at his home south of Lawrence at about 1 a.m. on Nov. 22.
A Douglas County man charged with first-degree murder testified yesterday on the last day of testimony in his trial. The 12-member jury will begin consideration of the case this morning.
"I do not remember anything about that night," Ludlow said. "I do not know where I was at."
"I decided on the way there that I was going to get drunk and they might have to take care of me," Ludlow said. Ludlow's girlfriend, Macee Nelson, had gone to Aberdeen, S.D. about one week earlier.
Pool Room, 925 iowa St., with Robbins and Robbins' live-in girlfriend, Valerie Hartley, at 5:45 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 21.
Ludlow said that he went to The
Ludlou said that she had made plans to come back to Lawrence on Monday and that he wanted to "get rid of Sunday."
Nelson testified Wednesday that she did not want to come back to Ludlow.
He said he drank the three shots in 15 seconds and ordered five more, which he drank in less than one minute, and he ordered ten more shots within the hour.
Lladow said that when he arrived at the bar, he ordered three shots of Southern Comfort and a glass of beer.
Ludlow said that the last thing he remembered about the night was picking up the 17th shot. He said the next thing he remembered was a taxi dropping him off at a motel in Aberdeen in the afternoon of Nov. 22.
Donald Goodwin, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Kansas Medical Center, has researched alcohol blackouts, which he defined as alcohol-induced amnesia. Goodwin testified that someone experiencing a blackout was capable of functioning normally.
The amount of alcohol Ludlow
described was more than that used in his research, Goodwin said.
"It's hard to imagine drinking that much." Goodwin said. "If I saw a man drinking that much I would try and stop him because it's like watching a man kill himself."
Ludlow said that he called Nelson when he arrived in Aberdeen. He said that when she asked him about the shooting, he replied, "I don't know what's going on."
Aberdeen police arrested Ludlow in his motel room later that day.
"I cannot recall anything that happened that night," Ludlow said. "I believe that would not be in my nature to do that."
Ludlow described Robbins yesterday as his closest friend.
Changes proposed in abortion regulation
The Associated Press
TOPEKA—A supporter of a bill that would require a 24-hour waiting period before women could have abortions said the provision would give women time to make informed choices.
Sen. Lana Oleen, R-Manhattan, who chairs the committee, said it was possible the committee could work the bill on Friday, but it is not a top priority.
Kent Roth, lobbyist for Kansans for Life, the state's largest anti-abortion group, testified yesterday before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, which completed two days of hearings on a bill making changes to the state's 1992 abortion law.
Roth said if given 24 hours to wait, some women undoubtedly would choose not to have an abortion.
Sen. UL. "Rip" Gooch, D-Wichita,
asked Roth whether women did not
already work for weeks that they
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
were pregnant and so had plenty of time to think.
Roth said the current eight-hour waiting period, enacted last year as part of a comprehensive abortion regulation law, was not working and that women needed 24 hours to "sleep on" their decisions.
"Hasn't she been sleeping on this for several weeks?" Gooch said.
Susan Wenger, who called herself a victim of abortion, said she never received information about possible side effects and long-term consequences of abortion.
But a woman who had an abortion when she was 15 and a second when she was 24 said she would not have "killed her two children" if she had received more information.
"At the abortuary in Kansas City they were cold and uncaring," she said.
Peggy Jarman, a lobbyist for the ProChoice Action League, said the law that passed last year had specific requirements for counseling women who are under 18 years old.
Jarman, who spoke on behalf of Women's Health Care Services in Wichita, called the bill a travesty.
"It mocks both the efforts of the Legislature last year and the women of this state," she said.
The bill contains numerous flaws including one provision which narrows the definition of medical emergency so that it requires serious risk of impairment of a major bodily function, Jarman said.
"We must put to rest the idea once and for all that Gerber babies are being put to death up until the moment of birth because some woman is having a bad hair day," she said.
The bill's provisions include:
- Redefining the term viable to include the stage of development when the life of the fetus may be continued by artificial life support sys-
Mandating reporting of all abortions, including a statement from the physician about why the abortion was not a crime and whether the spouse was notified
Banning the use of birth control pills, intraruterine devices and Norplant, a surgically implanted birth control device.
George Gardner, a Methodist minister and co-chairperson of Kansas Religious Leaders for Choice testified against the bill. He said he thought it interfered with freedom of religion.
Supporters of the bill say they view it primarily as a right-to-know bill and there is no hidden agenda.
He said behind the bill is "aChristian anti-choice theology disguised in legal language."
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Malaysian Student Association presents:
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Date: 3/26/93
Place: Robinson Gymnasium
Fee: Free for M'SIA KU members $2 for non-members
Contact: Thomas 842-5970 Tang 832-2733 Phang 832-2208 Fiona 864-8128
*Games: Badminton, Basketball, Volleyball, and Swimming
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 19, 1993
3
BRIEFS
House committee endorses bill to create qualified admissions
TOPEKA — A House committee yesterday endorsed a bill that would set standards for students entering the state's six Regents universities, including the University of Kansas.
The bill creating qualified admissions is supported by the Kansas Board of Regents and now goes to the House for what could be an emotional and lengthy floor debate.
The House Education Committee's action came on a 13-9 vote after extensive discussion of the proposal. When the Senate passed the measure about two weeks ago, it was the first time a legislative chamber approved such a proposal, even though lawmakers have been debating the issue for years.
"It's elitism, at least de facto," said State Rep. Bill Reardon, D-Kansas City.
Critics of the proposal contended that the measure would keep students out of college. Supporters said that it would force high school students to take themselves for the demands of higher education.
"I look at the bill and all I see are minimum standards," responded State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, who supports the measure.
Kansas has had an open admissions policy since 1915, and it is the only state in the nation to still have one.
The bill would require all students to pass a test in 10th grade indicating that they had mastered basic skills. Beyond that, to enter a state university, students would need to meet one of three requirements: a 2.0 grade point average, a composite ACT score of 23 or a ranking in the top third of their high school class.
Preliminary hearing postponed for man who posed as ABC agent
The preliminary bearing of a Lawrence resident charged in a string of burglaries and with impersonating an officer was postponed until April 29 in Douglas County District Court yesterday.
Larry D. Liggett, 19, was arrested Jan. 27 and charged the next day on 21 counts, including burglaries in the southwest area of Lawrence, battery and impersonation an officer.
Laggett's hearing was postponed yesterday to allow the court more time to examine the charges against Laggett.
On Dec. 2, 1991, a KU student was approached by a man who claimed he was an ABC agent. Another woman reported a similar case Oct. 13.
Court delays sentencing of man involved in 1991 injury accident
The sentencing of a Lawrence man involved in an accident that injured Burge, former director of the Kansas Union, was delayed until April 8 yesterday at Douglas County District Court.
Michael J. Armstrong, 24, was charged with leaving the scene of a Nov. 1, 1991, accident that shattered Burge's thigh.
Sentencing was delayed because Armstrong did not have a lawyer to represent him.
A car hit Burge, who was riding a bicycle, near the intersection of 15th and Iowa streets, injuring his head and breaking his thigh and ankle.
P.D. Q. Bach to appear as guest conductor for Symphonic Band
Composer and musical satirist Peter Schickele, better known as P.D. Q. Bach, will be the guest conductor of the KU Symphonic Band for its spring concert at 7:30 p.m. on April 1 in Crafton-Preyer Theater in Murphy Hall.
Schickele will make a rare appearance as P.D.Q. Bach, Schickele's satirical character, who recently retired from conducting so Schickele could move on to composing more serious works.
Schickele will conduct two of his own works, as well as two by P.D.Q. Bach, Robert Foster, KU director of bands, will conduct the rest of the program, which will consist of four other works by various composers.
"There are people who think he is a comic genius," Foster said. "It's like a cult following."
Schickele, a Juliillard educated composer, is the winner of three Grammy awards. His latest release, "Music for an Awful Lot of Winds and Percussions," is a bestseller on the Billboard crossover chart.
Psychotherapist to speak, sign books at Mount Oread Book Shop
Beth Hedva, a counselor who blends ancient wisdom with modern psychology, will be speaking at 11:30 a.m. on March 31 at the Mount Oread Book Shop in the Kansas Union.
"She is a licensed counselor and psychotherapist who studies nontraditional forms of wisdom and health and tries to bring them together with modern methods," said Lisa Either, manager of the book-
Hedva will be reading and signing her latest book, "Journey from Betrayal to Trust: A Universal Rite of Passage." The book portrays betrayals, such as broken promises and disappointments, as a fertile ground for personal growth and an increased capacity to trust.
Hedva is the youngest member of the faculty of President Kennedy's Department of Consciousness Studies. A graduate of Michigan State University, Hedva has appeared on the Sally Jessy Raphael show as an expert on interacial relationships.
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writers Will Lewis and Ezra Wolfe and from Associated Press reports.
Regents approve new KU degrees
By Dan England
TOPEKA — The Kansas Board of Regents yesterday approved one new KU degree and another degree the University has had for several years.
Kansan staff writer
The Regents endorsed the University's plan to establish a bachelor of science degree in environmental studies, an addition to the bachelor of arts and the bachelor of general studies degrees that already are offered in the field.
The other degree, bachelor's of science in education for sport science, has been around for some time even though it has not received formal approval from the Regents, said David Shulenburger, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs. A lot of students are already in KU's sport science program, he said.
"It happens occasionally where a degree has been offered for some time, and we discover that the board did not have it in their books." Shulenburg said. "This is a way for KU to ask 'Hey, we've been doing this for some time now. Is that OK?' "
The degree provides a noncertification option for students who want to pursue a career in sport science but do not expect to teach in secondary education, a Regents report said.
The degree will have concentrations in sports management and sports information. Faculty from the School of Business will teach management, and faculty from the School of Journalism
Board of Regents
will teach sports information, the report said.
"Lots of employees demand a B.S.," he said.
Data of employees demand a B.S. 'the said'
The environmental studies program is the fastest growing undergraduate major at KU. It has grown 500 percent from 53 students in the program in the Fall 1986 to 256 students in the Fall 1990, the report said.
"These degrees result from strong academic programs already in place." Budig said.
Chancellor Gene Budig said that the degrees would not require any new instruction or classes from the University.
Shulenburger said the new degrees would not require any additional money. The University's cost-saving efforts have been embodied recently by program review, which was partly an effort to save money.
"We were very reluctant to add costs after undergoing our program review," he said.
Regent appointment receives cool greeting
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - Appointment by Gov. Joan Finney of former state senator and KU graduate Jack Steineger to the state Board of Regents received a cool reception yesterday from the head of the Senate committee that will consider his confirmation.
Steineger, a Democrat from Kansas City, Kan. took a seat on the board as a replacement for Ruth Schrum of Manhattan, whose appointment was withdrawn from the Senate confirmation process.
The governor's office made no announcement of Steineger's appointment to the board before he showed up yesterday morning to attend the Regents monthly meeting in Topeka.
Gov. Joan Finney's press office
distributed an announcement that said he would serve a term expiring Dec. 31, 1996.
Mary Holladay, Finney's chief of staff, said the Steiner appointment would be submitted to the Senate by Friday, and the governor hopes he can be confirmed yet this session.
But Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, chairman of the Senate Education Committee, which will consider the appointment first, was not enthusiastic about it.
Steineger, 68, did not seek reelection to the Senate in 1902, ending a 28-year career in that body. He served as Senate minority leader for 12 years in the 1973 through 1984 sessions. He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1949.
BORNISON
Legislator pushes for stiffer alcohol bills
Lowered DUI level is continuing quest By Ben Grove
Kanean staff write
State Rep. Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson,
thanked Wanda Stewart after she testified
last month in favor of a bill that would tighten
drunk driving laws.
As head of the Kansas House Judiciary Committee, O'Neal has heard a lot of highway patrol officers and teary-eyed mothers testify in favor of lowering the state's legal blood alcohol content level for drivers. Stewart, who is regional director for Mothers Against Drunk Driving, has testified several times, most recently on Wednesday before a Senate committee.
He knew it was difficult for her. Stewart held back a tear when she described how her infant son had died after her car was struck by a drunken driver.
State Rep. Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, heads the Kansas House Judiciary Committee, which has drafted a stricter DUI law. O'Neal, who is sponsoring the bill, has been involved with nine DUI bills in his nine years as a representative.
Mark Rowlands / KANSAN
O'Neal, too, is a strong advocate for strict laws for drunken drivers.
Since he was elected in 1984, O'Neal has written or signed nine bills designed to toughen such laws. He helped write one now in the Senate Judiciary Committee that would lower the legal blood alcohol content level to 0.8 percent.
".08 is the politically possible," he said. "It may be higher than what is needed, but we have to get legislators to agree to lower the current standard."
O'Neal also said it politically was possible to get the legal limit to zero by the year 2000.
The current level is.1 percent.
O'Neal is a member of the Criminal Justice Committee of the National Conference of State Legislators, which meets every year.
"I always come back with ideas for making DUI legislation better, tougher," he said.
One of the provisions in this year's DUI bill is a clause that would make the legal blood alcohol content level. 04 percent for anyone under 21.
A 160-pound person would need two cans of beer to reach a .04 level, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.
"We already discriminate against 18 to 21-year-olds by not letting them buy alco
But O'Neal said making DUI and other alcohol laws stricter for minors would help deter them from breaking the laws.
Some legislators have said that such a provision constitutes age discrimination.
hol, "O'Neal said. "All the 04 does is keep those people off the street."
O'Neal said a number of drunken driving tragedies had occurred in his voting district since he was elected — one involving John Buzbee, the son of a former editor of The Hutchinson News. O'Neal's home-town newspaper. Buzbee lost his leg because of a drunken driver in May 1987 while he was a student at KU.
"That affected me as much as any of the others." O'Neal said.
O'Neal introduced three DUt bills in 1988 after the accident.
Since the accident, The Hutchinson News has been running editorials supporting strict DUI legislation far more frequently, said former Hutchinson News' editor Richard Buzbee.
"He has been a constant champion of legislation that would keep drunks off the highway," Bbee said.
O'Neal works closely with another advocate of strict DUI laws, State Rep. Rex Crowell, R-Longton, head of the House Transportation Committee.
Crowell said legislators called on O'Neal
Cracking down on DUI offenders
1985 House bill 2201: would have lengthened time of license suspension;
1986 House bill 2760 would have required offenders to install lock issue
Here are the drunken driving bills State Rep. Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, has written or signed since he was elected in 1984. Few passed the Legislature.
1988 — House bill 2760: would have required offenders to install ignition lock devices in their cars; House bill 2952: would have required offenders to pay restitution to a victim or the victim's family; House bill 2953: would have lengthened time of license suspension;
1989 — House bill 2228: would have lowered legal blood alcohol content level to .05; House bill 2230: would have made it illegal to ride with someone who has a .15 blood alcohol content level;
1991 House bill 285.3 would have lowered legal blood alcohol level 74.
1992 House bill 285.3 would have lowered legal blood alcohol content to 70.
1993 — House bill 2355, would lower legal blood alcohol content level to .08, .04 for anyone younger than 21.
whenever they had questions about DUI laws.
"He's extremely fair, but he recognizes that driving is a privilege and a person doesn't have the right to go out and endanger another's life because they can't manage their drinking." Crowell said.
O'Neal said the .08 level had enough support to pass this year.
"If this passes, I will not come back next year and try to get it lowered further," he said. "I'd like to take a couple of years and see what the statistics show."
And if .08 does not pass this year?
"I'm going to raise hell," he said.
Towers to get new lighting and a courtyard
Residents will not need to supply own lighting
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
Additional lighting and a new courtyard are under construction at the Jayhawker Towers and should be completed in May, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
The courtyard is replacing a swimming pool because student housing officials said that the pool cost too much to maintain and needed many repairs.
Stoner said the courtyard would provide
a pleasant atmosphere for residents. It will feature a fountain and sun terrace.
"This is more of a social area, a sitting area," Stoner said. "It's kind of an informal park-type area."
Additional lighting will be provided to comply with campus standards, he said.
"Any time you improve lighting outdoors, you increase sense of security," Stoner said. "People feel better about having a well-lit area."
Although the new lights have been installed, they will have to be rewired because an old underground conduit has collapsed or been cut, he said.
Also under way is renovation inside the Towers, which consists of installing wall
Tifani Collins, Beloit sophomore, is happy with the addition.
"That was kind of the 'in' thing to do in the '60s," he said. "It was up to the occupant to provide his or her own lighting."
and ceiling fixtures in individual apartments. The additions mean residents will not have to provide their own lighting anymore.
Stoner said that when the buildings were built about 30 years ago, light switches were wired directly to plugs, not to any interior lighting.
"It's a lot better," said Collins, who had lights installed in her Towers apartment. "Before, you had to bring your own lights for the bedrooms, so it's a big
difference."
Most of the renovations have been completed. Stoner said Any remaining work left on the courtyard and inside the apartments should be done by the time residents return from spring break.
Stoner also wants to create a second apartment designed for persons with disabilities by removing the common wall between two neighboring apartments. This would allow easier access to appliances and a wider turning radius for persons who use wheelchairs.
One apartment was opened last fall at the Towers for persons with disabilities.
4
Friday, March 19, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Gambling is no answer to state's revenue woes
H. L. Mencken quipped, "For every problem there is a solution that is simple, neat and wrong." This could serve as a government credo.
11 This could serve as a government credit, because in today's politics simple and neat attempts at solutions are used far more often than sound, prudent ones. The gambling issue is proving to be such an example, in Kansas and across the nation, as politicians scramble to keep new revenues flowing into their accounts.
Twenty years ago, only three states had lotteries. Today,48 states have some form of gambling and most are continuing to expand their gaming operations.The impetus for this is derived from legislators' unwillingness to raise taxes or cut spending.So they have turned to creative ways of convincing the citizens of their states to continue to fill their bottomless pockets.
Unfortunately, their creative idea is not a good one. In fact, it is a sham. In many states, the big revenues that were predicted never occurred, or did and then fell off after the first few years. For example, as indicated in the September 1991 issue of "Governing," lottery ticket sales in the 1980s increased by an average of 26 percent every year. Yet they grew only 8 percent in 1990 and 3 percent in 1991. Unfortunately, legislators have already earmarked the anticipated funds for one program or another. Thus they are forced to either cut spending or raise taxes. And we all know how good legislators are at cutting spending and new programs.
Somehow, through this whole mess, the American Indians of our country have also been sold on this false bill of goods. Instead of being forced to sit down and truly work out solutions to the problems of the American Indian nations, we are attempting to remain removed from these problems by allowing them to harbor casinos on their land. With monies from these "sin dollars," they would hopefully rebuild their nations, but the chances of that are slim.
The 1993 Kansas State Legislature has been barraged with a variety of gaming proposals. Under the pressure of federal law, they are being forced to negotiate a gaming compact with American Indians. This potential loss of state revenue, along with the foreseeable loss of tourist dollars to Missouri's new riverboat casinos, have even put full legalization of high-stakes casino gambling on the floor of the Kansas Senate. Those who stand to profit from the legalization of casinos in Kansas have promised jobs, tourism and increased tax revenues. But these carrots should not blind legislators to the facts.
Gambling is a short-term solution that inevitably fails and leaves in its wake increased amounts of crime and a plethora of broken promises. The Legislature should stand opposed to any new gambling measures and seriously look at the benefits that have never materialized from the lottery and parimutuel betting that we passed in 1986.
We should all be embarrassed by our treatment of American Indian tribes across this country. What a lesson we show them as we turn our backs on real solutions, and leave them only the wrong ones. Gambling is no solution at all.
JEFF REYNOLDS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Kansan Editorial Board:
Kris Belden, Greg Farmer, Vered Hankin, Jeff Hays, Val Huber, Kyle Kickhaefer, Tiffany Knight, Stephen Martino, Jolinda Matthews, Colleen McCain, Chris Moeser, Simon Naldoza, David Olson, Carol Pfaff, Jeff Reynolds, Chris Ronan and Michael Taylor
WACBBO, TEXAS
MUST BE A MISTRANSLATION OF THE GREEK!
MUST BE A MISTRANSITION
OF THE GREEK!
NO SIR, MR. KORESH,
I DON'T FIND IN
REVELATIONS, CHAPTER 22.
WHERE IT SAYS ANYTHING
ABOUT .50 CALIBER MACHINEGUNS
HOLY BIBLE
PAUL 3-93
Who needs creative decorating if alcohol, cards, stereo are it?
I've been at KU for a couple of years and I've seen many different apartments and dorm rooms. After much consideration I have come to the conclusion that it's all for naught, because here at KU, if you've seen one you've seen them all.
What I'm talking about is the apartments and dorms of males. I really have not had that many opportunities to visit female living quarters. The issue is, in my experience, that guys living arrangements lack a certain creativity, and in a sense are basically the same. The college lifestyle is confining, and forces one to live in a certain way, and this seems to be especially true as far as males are concerned.
I've noticed a few things which seem present in most men's apartments. See if any of this sounds familiar.
ANDREW
GILMAN
A huge display of any and all alcoholic cones shown proudly on the mantel or cabinet. Usually, I'm in awe. "Wow! That's really impressive how you've managed to drink 19 bottles of Overever this week." Usually
STAFF COLUMNIST
most rational people would throw away the bottles or maybe even recycle them. But again, we college males are proud of our killings, and if nothing else, this provides an excellent conversation piece.
There is the huge stereo system and all of its components, with tapes and compact discs for all to admire. There's nothing wrong with this, it's great for parties or when you're by yourself. Play a little Skymnard, drink yourself silly, put your empty bottle on the table, and enjoy, a good time is well within your grasps.
Another thing that is popular would
be the deck of cards on the coffee table. These are a great source of entertainment for one and all. If your guest wants to play some "Go Fish," or just practice the latest from David Copperfield, it's more than possible. The great part about any of these things, is you can mix and match them with each other, and the fun increases exponentially.
Of course, there are the posters. From girls to beer bottles to sports heroes, and the gratuitous 1988 NCAA champs banner. It's great to support the team and appreciate history, and even better to know that the local businesses still have a market for them.
The point I'm making is all of us are the same, and that's scary. This could be attributed to a lack of cash flow, or even more drastic, it could be a lack of imagination. Maybe instead of a voda bottle, a nice Monet print would work. Originality is foreign in these domestic environments.
This does not seem to be an uncorrectable dilemma. It may not even be
aprobble. It just seems odd that most male apartments are the same. Is this by choice? I hope so. I'd like to think that guys are resigned to do what is expected of us. We know that the stereotypical nule is a beer-guzzling sports freak. Maybe we are just trying to live up to our image, thus we manifest it through a lack of originality in our homes. It could also just be laziness. Why paint when you have posters? Why reach when you have remote? It's all about living up to the college lifestyle.
We know that the alcohol-stereo card combination works, so we stick to it. There's nothing wrong with it, and it's accepted, but it's boring. Try something new! Put carpet on the walls. Put away the Jimmy Buffet CD Go crazy. If we don't, we may all end up in "Margartiaville," and there certainly would be no "Woman to blame, cause you know... It's your own damn fault."
Andrew Glilman is a Norman, Okla., sophomore majoring in English.
Gunman gives 'right to life' new meaning
STAFF COLUMNIST
Last week in Pensacola, Fla. James Gunn, a doctor who worked in abortion clinics, was murdered in cold blood. He was shot three times by the same man who killed Michel Griffin. Guess which side Griffin represents? Right to life.
Ironic, isn't it? The battle cry of many right-to-lifers is the idea that no one, including a pregnant woman, has survived the attack or dies. But Griffin changed the rules.
The logic goes something like this: Gunn was "murdering babies," so Griffin was morally justified in killing him, order to prevent any more "murders."
STAFF COLUMNIST
JULIE
WASSON
Should it be that no person has the right to decide who lives or dies unless that person thinks he is right, regardless of what the law says?
Most anti-abortion groups, including Operation Rescue, one of the most active groups, have denounced the murder.
But the Houston-based group Rescue America has set up a trust fund for its film's fictional dummy donor, DOOM'S dummon murder. If that is the case, why is the group rewarding
it?
Gunn's murder is particularly alarming because it moves anti-abortion tactics to a new level.
Protesters no longer are content to picket clinics and harass patients. Now protesters harass patients and staff members at home by taking down vehicle license numbers and looking up home addresses.
Protesters make personal threats against abortion clinic staff members, as well as the family and friends of those staffers. Some protestors have even sunk to harassing the children of staff members. One group of protestors stood outside the playground of a school attended by the $ ^{6} $
year-old daughter of a clinic staffer in Dallas and yelled at the child.
Protesters also bomb clinics, raid clinics and destroy property inside them. And now a protester has killed. The difference between these tactics and the ones mentioned previously is that the others are legal.
The most frightening thing is that in the minds of these religious zealots, such terroristic actions are just — regardless of their illegality. Protesters justify their actions by saying they are doing what God wants them to do. By saving babies they believe they are following God's law.
Here's the catch: this country does not operate according to God's law. The law of this land is found in the Constitution, in statutes and in court decisions, and not in a book or ideology that some group has deemed sacred and has chosen to loosely interpret to suit its needs.
Federal regulations need to be enacted to protect both the staff and patients of abortion clinics across the United States.
Anti-abortion protesters argue that such legislation singles them out, and
that protesters for other causes do not face such severe restrictions. But environmental activists protesting the destruction of a rain forest or nuclear-weapons activists surrounding slos are not trying to deprive anyone of her legal rights. Any time a protester tries to do the wrong with nuclear weapons, the environment or abortion — the protester should be stopped.
Kate Michelman, president of the National Abortion Rights Action League, recently said, "The government needs to ensure that vigilantes, terrorists and religious extremists do away our basic right to choose."
If protesters, especially extremists, really are concerned with abortion, they should quit attacking the people in the way that has been done and continue trying to change the law.
And those who believe in the right to choose should do everything in their power to encourage legislators to protect that right.
Julie Wasson is a Springfield, Mo. senior in political science and journal-
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
Editors
Aest. Managing ... Justin Krupp
News ... Monique Guiselain
Editorial ... Stephen Morrison
Campus ... KC Trauner
Sports ... David Mitchell
Photo ... Mark Powlandi
Features ... Lynne McAdoo
Graphics ... Dan Schauer
Wire ... Tiffany Lahey Ha
Assistant Editors
Asac. Editorial ... Chris Muster
Asac. Campus ... Joe Harder
Ast. Campus ... Christine Laue
Stacy Mortford
Asac. Sports ... Richard Hankiss
Reporters
Vicki Bode ... Mark Button
Jess Delfaven ... David Dorsey
Matt Dove ... Daniel England
Ben Grove ... Kristie McCleary
Tarun McCormick ... Brady Praiser
Jim Reece...Brett Riggs
Todd Seifert...Blake Spumney
Erin Willis
Todd Sillett
Jay Williams
Ezra Wolfe
Copy Chiefs
Scott Anderson
Copy Editors
Heather Anderson
J.R. Clairborne
John Paul Fogel
Kevin Furong
Keith Hedley
Tiffany Lala Hurt
Noelle Kastens
Liam Uppert
Stacey Mofford
Tracy Ritchie
Julie Wasson
Photographers
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Douglas Hasse
Renee Knoeder
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Graphics Artist
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Designer
Katherine Manweller
Derek Noten
Sean Tevis
Jule Wasson
Stephany Klimball ... News Clerk
STEVE PERRY
Business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
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Campus sales mgr .. Brad Broon
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Ad Director .. Dave Habger
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Jennifer Blowey...Kim Brown
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Retail Account Executives
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Mike Murray Ker Rathbun
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Campus Account Executives
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Mendi Stauffer...
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
22
5
Cutbacks hurt ROTC enrollment
By Kari Van Hoof
Military cutbacks and a decrease in open pilot slots have spurred a decline in Air Force ROTC enrollment at KU and other campuses.
Special to the Kansan
KU's Air Force ROTC program has seen its enrollment drop from 104 cadets in 1988 to just 50 in 1992.
Sambrad Gentry, assistant professor of aerospace studies, said the backacks are forcing the Air Force to put more restrictions on scholarships and to reduce the number of pilot-training slots.
"The technical expertise required of the support is high." Gentry said.
Gentry said the Air Force gave scholarships only to students planning to major in science and technical areas, such as engineering, computer science, mathematics and meteorology. The Navy and the Army set fewer restrictions concerning students' majors.
The Air Force consists of 20,000 pilots and 410,000 people in support positions.
Gentry also said the current needs of the military played a role in the number and type of scholarships the Air Force offered. Some fields have all the personnel they need.
Friday, March 19, 1993
The reason for these tight restrictions, Gentry said, is the structure of the Air Force.
"Right now, we're not offering scholarships for aerospace engineers." Gentry said. "There are too many out there. We don't need them."
Darcy Richard, Omaha, Neb.
sophomore and Air Force cadet, said
she had wanted a scholarship for aerospace engineering but ended up in another engineering field.
"I wanted aerospace, and they gave me one in civil," Richard said. "They said the field was full in the Air Force."
Richard changed her scholarship to mechanical engineering and worked with the engineering department to devise a course of study combining mechanical and aerospace engineering.
Prospective Air Force cadets also are discouraged by the news that the Air Force is experiencing a surplus of pilots.
"Right now, we're in a pilot glut." Gentry said. "We have more people wanting to be pilots than we have slots."
Gentry said that each year, 150 pilots were selected from ROTC programs and 200 were selected from the Air Force Academy.
But during the past two years, about 50 percent of these pilot candidates have been "banked" after flight school, he said, meaning that the trained pilots work at a desk job for two to three years before they get a pilot assignment.
"The number of available cockpits has gone down in recent years," he said.
The lack of pilot slots also is affecting other universities' Air Force ROTC programs.
Maj. David Kipfer, assistant professor of aerospace studies at the University of Missouri, said the Air Force ROTC unit there had experienced a drop in enrolled cadets.
Enrollment in KU's Air Force ROTC program has been in decline during the last few years.
ROTC enrollment
1988
104 cadets
1989
109 cadets
1990
93 cadets
1991
75 cadets
1992
50 cadets
1988
Andrew Hodges / KANSAN
"Our enrollment has decreased about as much as KU's over the same time period," Kipfer said.
Kipfer cited the decreased amount of pilot slots as a major hurdle in recruiting new cadets out of high school.
"The pilot allocations that are available are down significantly," he said. "High school students want to fly. Right now, it's difficult to get into flying."
A main reason pilot slots are so difficult to get is simply because there are fewer cockpits available, Kipfer sai14
"The problem with the Air Force is they're cutting back one-third to one-half of the airplanes that they're going to have," he said.
The cutbacks also have created a public relations dilemma that is making the problem worse, Kipfer said. The Air Force is battling a false perception that the military isn't hiring anymore.
"The military is getting smaller and we need fewer recruits," Kipfer said, "but we're still looking for people."
Numbers are down at Kansas State University's Air Force ROTC detachment as well.
"We've dropped just like everybody else," said Tech. Sgt. Carl Soap, who is in charge of Air Force ROTC information management at Kansas State. The program there also is down to about 50 cadets.
Soap cited the lack of money for scholarships as a reason for the drop.
The Air Force has "cut way back on scholarships," Soap said. "It basically comes down the curtains."
He said the Air Force was introducing different types of scholarships, which were aimed at recruiting college juniors and seniors rather than incoming freshmen. Also, more pilot slots are expected for the near future. In fact, by 1995, he said, the Air Force is predicting that there will be more slots than pilots.
No matter what the numbers look like now, though, KU's Gentry said he was optimistic that the number of Air Force recruits would increase.
"By the time people now entering the program get commissioned, slots will be plentiful," Gentry said.
ment.
Group seeks money to finance second experiment
The group can't afford a camera because one of the group's biggest problems is money. It costs $3,000 to purchase a 60-pound canister.
About half of the club's financing comes from the School of Engineering. The rest comes from interested corporations, the Kansas Space Grant Consortium and club members.
In the past, Student Senate has not
Story continued from. Page 1.
granted the group's requests for money, Miller said, because the club is defined as an academic organization, which precludes it from receiving Senate money. Recently, the Senate did offer $300.
"We do this instead of going out and playing Frisbee, and the Frisbee club has no problem getting money." Miller said.
All of the members are engineering majors, but Miller said anyone was welcome.
welcome
"If someone from the art school
wanted to come along and contribute to the design aesthetically, we would welcome it," he said. "It doesn't take an engineering.background to do these experiments and assemble the canisters. Grade schools and Boy Scout groups have had canisters on the shuttle."
For now, the group is trying to get the present canister completed so it can be launched next year. The canister will contain seeds again, along with the Taylor vortex experiment.
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to get a successful canister or two in space and possibly attract the interest of companies, for whom the club could perform experiments in space and receive payment.
In the near future, KUSP would like
the space Program had a slow start — it took six years for the first canister to be launched — but the pace is pickup.
"For a while, things were getting shaky," Lowe said. "Now, we've seen some interest in KUSP. I'm seeing good things."
Riverside Bar & Grill
Bottleneck
841-5483
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
1105 Massachusetts
TIN PAN ALLEY
Where can you laugh, eat and lay like broccoli?
CORNUCOPIA
1801 Massachusetts
The University of
Kansas Theatre for
Young People
Presents the Classic
Brothers Gimm
Folk Tale
Hansel
and Gretel
Because of dark lighting and scary noises, this production is recommended for children ages five and older.
regardless of age to change
tickets by phone using VSA or
MasterCard call 913/864-3902.
2:30 & 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 20, 1993
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
SUA Office, Kansas Union; all
Tickets on sale in the Murphy
Adapted by Max Bush
?
March a Theatre in our Schools Month
with Sunglasses from
•Vuarnet-France
•Bausch & Lomb
•Ray-Bans
•Mary McFadden
•Marilyn Monroe
•The Etc. Shop
Fri. March 19
Common Ground
Sat. March 20
MU 330
Blue Meanies
Conspiracy
Mon. March 22
Open Mic
Tues. March 23
25¢ Draws
928 Mass.
Have a Safe Spring Break
The Etc. Shop
Safe Ride
will ride the nights of the 19th and 20th
BUT will not operate UNTIL March28th
The Kansas Transportation
Remember Safe Ride Hours are 11pm-3am
Catch Some Rays!
STUDENT Board SENATE
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS &
SCIENCES
Graduate Mentor Award
Spring1993
Nominations are now being taken for the newly created advising and mentoring award within CLAS. This will be awarded to an outstanding graduate educator. Nominations for the award will be solicited from graduate students within the College. Criteria may include the following: outstanding mentoring, outstanding educator, and outstanding research and scholarship guidance.
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A monetary award will be given, in addition to the name of the recipient affixed on a plaque outside the College Office.
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Faculty members eligible must be current members of the graduate faculty of the College. If you have questions as to availability, call the CLA Graduate Division Office.
Send your nominations to: Committee on Graduate Studies, 209 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence 60404. Deadline is April 2, 1993
eligibility, call the CLAS Graduate Division office,
864-4898. Please keep your nomination letter to
one single-spaced page!
Wed. March 24
Agent Orange
Crawl Pappy
18 & over
Thurs. March 25
Todd Newman and the
MaHoots
God's Favorite Band
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6
NATION
Friday, March 19. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NATIONAL BRIEFS
Gulf war vets may suffer from uranium exposure
BOSTON — Thousands of Persian Gulf War veterans may have gotten sick after being exposed to radiation from American weapons tipped with depleted uranium, according to an environmental group.
The National Toxics Campaign Fund, in a report delivered yesterday to Congress and the White House, said the contamination came from about 4,300 rounds of armor-piercing shells fired from aircraft and tanks.
The radiation could be behind some of the unexplained illnesses reported by hundreds of Gulf War
veterans, the Boston-based, nonprofit organization said.
The Army denied radiation from the bullet-like munitions posed any widespread hazards.
In addition, people living near about 50 U.S. weapons-manufacturing and testing facilities may have been exposed to cancer from depleted uranium storage and processed at the sites, it said.
"We don't think that it represents a health problem," said Peter Esker, representative for the U.S. Army surgeon general.
Psychiatrists clear Woody Allen in abuse case
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Woody Allen said yesterday that psychiatrishes had cleared him of Mia Farrow's allegation that he sexually abused their adopted 7-year-old daughter.
Allen, 57, was accused of molesting the child, Dylan, in August at the Bridgewater home of Farrow. Allen's companion and favorite leading lady for 12 years before a bitter split last summer.
had been meeting with Allen, Farrow and Dylan since Thanksgiving.
Aspart of a state police investigation of the allegations, Dr John Leventhal, director of the Vale New Haven child sex abuse clinic,
Allen and Farrow met for 212 hours with Leventhal and other psychiatrists yesterday. Allen then proclaimed to a small army of reporters and photographers that he had been cleared.
Farrow wouldn't comment on the report, except to say, "I'll always stand by my children."
He said the psychiatrist's report found that "I never ever used my daughter, that no sexual abuse took place."
Aspin reported fine after pacemaker installation
WASHINGTON — Surgeons implanted ansilver dollar-size pacemaker just below Defense Secretary Les Aspin's collarbone yesterday to control a worsening heart condition. Doctors said he probably would resume a full work schedule next week.
"It went perfectly well," said Al Soloman, the pacemaker specialist who conducted the 90-minute operation at Georgetown University Medical Center.
David Pearle, Aspin's cardiologist, said that although the defense secretary was suffering "a serious underlying condition," he expected the pacemaker to eliminate the coughing and breathlessness that
have bothered Aspin.
Aspin, 54, has a congenital heart condition known as obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. His heart muscle has thickened, impairing its ability to pump adequate volumes of blood. Doctors said the pacemaker would relieve his symptoms by reducing the force — but not regulating the rhythm — of his heartbeat.
"We would expect him to return to a normal level of activity for him, and certainly all the things that are important for him to do within his job description," Soloman told a news conference just minutes after the operation.
Briefs compiled from Associated Press reports.
House marks end to Reaganomics
Clinton's economic plan set for approval
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The House moved yesterday to close the book on Reaganomics and embrace President Clinton's economic prescription for new spending to create jobs, coupled with long-term budget cuts and tax increases to whittle the deficit.
"It is clear that the time has come to make a fundamental change in policy and direction," Clinton told Treasury employees as he headed a last-minute campaign to solidify support and make his victory an imposing one.
National NEWS
With an 80-vote numerical advantage in their pockets, Democratic leaders predicted that in a long day of debate they would steamroll Republicans and approve two of Clinton's economic recovery measures.
One would lay the blueprint for future bills trimming the deficit by $510 billion over the next five years, to be split evenly between spending cuts and tax increases, primarily on the rich and corporations. It resembled a plan the Senate was also debating.
in new spending into community development grants, small-business loans and other job-create projects. The administration says the measure would create 219,000 jobs this year and more later.
True to their word, top Democrats showed they could hold their rank and file together. On a vote of 295 to 135, the House killed a GOP budget that would have cut spending by $429 billion over the next five years — and dropped all of Clinton's tax increases.
The Democratic measures flew in the face of Republican orthodoxy that has long called for tax cuts, reductions in social spending programs and a strong defense budget. That approach prevailed when Ronald Reagan entered the White House in 1981 but both he and successor George Bush failed to deliver on their promises of a balanced budget.
"We've had no-pain presidencies for 12 years, and now the pain facing the American people is greater than anything we could have possibly imaged," said Rep. John Bryant, D-Texas. "A president that's willing to say we need to make cuts and we need to increase taxes in certain areas is a president with courage who deserves to be followed."
Republicans warned that Clinton's priorities were off base.
"The they think a large federal government is the answer," said Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio. "We believe empowering the individual and getting government off individuals' backs is the answer."
But outnumbered and with no White House to protect them, their efforts were doomed from the start. Taking no chances, Democrats even limited the number of amendments GOP lawmakers could offer, a routine tactic that nonetheless infuriated Republicans.
"We were royally zapped," Rep. Robert Walker, R-Pa., moaned in an interview.
Behind the scenes, Clinton was at work. In phone calls and letters to wavering Democrats, he urged them to support his plan.
"He had all the details about jobs, all the facts and figures," said Rep. G. W. "Sommy" Montgomery, D-Miss., a conservative who said he got a call at
home from Clinton at 10:20 p.m.
Wednesday. "I just listened."
Montgomery and other conservatives were most troubled by the jobs package, which they complained would add to budget shortfalls that are already historically high. But they seemed all but ready to concede that the plan would go through.
The president made quite a few calls to round up votes, said Rep. Charles Stenholm, D-Texas, a leader of the conservatives.
Just to be sure this works, Democratic leaders were piecing together an amendment trimming the jobs package by about $10 million. Its goal was to remove projects that Republicans had chided as ludicrous wastes of money, such as $3.2 billion to produce atlases about fish populations and $800,000 to get America's white-water canoeing team ready for the 1996 Olympics.
"The goal here is to have the fewest number of Democrats defect," said Rep. Philip Sharp, D-Ind., one of the party's vote counters. "We're interested in demonstrating we have the capacity to govern."
The Democratic aim was clear: win big and convince the public that gridlock is over.
New drug found to inhibit Alzheimer's
The Associated Press
ROCKVILLE, Md. — The first drug proposed to help victims of Alzheimer's disease has been found to significantly improve the quality of life for people with the disorder, according to reports presented today to a Food and Drug Administration advisory panel.
The drug, tacrine, was tested at 20 hospital centers across the country, and FDA investigators said there was "statistically significant" improvement when comparing Alzheimer's patients receiving high doses of the drug with those who received placebos.
The studies, which lasted from 12 to 30 weeks, monitored the effects of the drug based on tests measuring intellectual function.
who received the highest doses of tacrine for the 30- week trial.
Both the short- and longer-term studies showed a steady decline for patients receiving placebos. For patients on tacrine however, there was improvement or a delay in the rate of intellectual decline, FDA experts said.
The best improvement was found among patients
FDA statistical analyst Nancy Smith said patients receiving the high doses of tacrine showed a "statistically significant difference when compared with placebo patients."
Since then at least one published study has shown that the drug slows the gradual loss of mental function in some Alzheimer's patients.
Tacirine is thought to prevent the destruction of a brain chemical called acetylcholine that has been found to be deficient in patients with Alzheimer's. Acetylcholine is a type of neurotransmitter that assists in sending signals from cell to cell within the brain.
for the patient's family.
Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, incurable neurological disorder in which patients experience a slow loss of intellectual function. Patients first have lapses in memory. Later they undergo personality changes and lose control of bodily functions and language skills. The decline, which eventually leads to death, may take more than a decade and create an immense financial and emotional burden
The disease has struck about 4 million Americans, most over age 65. More than 100,000 die of Alzheimer's annually, making it the fourth leading cause of death among adults.
A positive diagnosis can be made only through an autopsy and is defined by a formation in the brain of abnormal structures called tangles and plaques.
Though medical scientists have determined that Alzheimer's patients have a deficiency of acetylcholine, it is not known if this causes the disease or is a result of other processes in the brain. There is also a build up of a substance called amyloid beta. Research has linked one form of the disease to a genetic defect, but the cause of Alzheimer's remains elusive.
A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in November reported that 51 percent of patients taking tacrine showed at least some improvement.
More than 25 percent of the patients in the study, however, experienced some side effects, including increases in liver enzymes.
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BRIDGET
THE GOVERNMENT
GAVE HER A CHOICE.
DEATH.
OR LIFE
AS AN ASSASSIN.
NOW, THERE'S
NO TURNING BACK.
POINT OF NO RETURN
T FONDA
ETURN
WARNER BROS. PRESENTS
AN ART LINSON PRODUCTION A JOHN BADHAM FILM
BRIDGET FONDA "POINT OF NO RETURN"
GABRIEL BYNE DERMOT MULRONEY
WITH ANNE BANCROFT AND HARVEY KEITEL
CO-PRODUCER JAMES HERBERT MUSIC BY HANS ZIMMER
FILM EDITED BY FRANK MORRISSE
PRODUCTION DESIGNED BY PHILIP HARRISON
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY MICHAEL WATKINS, A.S.C.
BASED ON LUC BESSON'S "NIKITA"
SCREENPLAY BY ROBERT GETCHELL AND ALEXANDRA SEROS
PRODUCES BY ART LINSON DIRECTED BY JOHN BADHAM
OPENS MARCH 19TH EVERYWHERE
LT FONDA
RETURN
OPENS MARCH 19TH EVERYWHERE.
SPORTS
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, March 19, 1993
7
Jayhawks pull away from Cardinals
KANSAS
34
KU
Kansas eliminates Ball State
Sophomore center Greg Ostertag tips the ball in over junior forward Richard Scott and Ball State sophomore forward Steve Payne. Kansas defeated Ball State 94-72 and will advance to the second round of the NCAA Midwest Regional.
By David Dorsey
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
ROSEMONT, Ill. — Within a matter of seconds, the Kansas mens basketball team blew open what had been a two-point game and turned it into a 10-point lead during its 94-72 rout of Ball State.
The Cardinals dropped out of the NCAA Tournament in the first round, but not before staying with the No. 2-seeded Jawahrak for 30 minutes.
Kansas was up by two points as halftime neared until junior forward Steve Woodberry nailed a three-pointer at the buzzer, giving the Jayhawks a 48-43 lead.
"I just kept wondering when they were going to miss a shot," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "I challenged our guys at halftime to pick it up on the defensive end."
Ball State closed in on Kansas after halftime, however, and again came within two points of the Jayhawks.
The Jayhawks responded midway through the second half when Woodberry became the catalyst of an 8-0 run. After making a three-pointer, Woodberry picked off a Ball State pass, led the break, and gave the ball to senior guard Adonis Jordan, who ladd it in.
During the final seven minutes, Kansas outscored Ball State 17-5.
Jordan, who finished with 13 points,
four steals and a season-high 11
assists, credited teammates Rex Walters
and Richard Scott for giving the Javahawks offensive balance.
One possession later, Jordan made a three-pointer to put the Jayhawks ahead 68-58 with 12 minutes remaining.
Walters, senior guard, scored a game-high 23 points and made all six of his three-point attempts. Scott, junior forward, scored 16 points and made five of six first-half shots.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
If Rex has his first two shots, nothing but net, he gets hot," Jordan said. "He was my option on the outside, and Richard was hot on the inside."
Kansas 94, Ball State 72
BALL STATE (26-8)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Hall 1-2 1-2 0-2
Payne 4-7 1-2 9
Gillis 6-11 2-4 14
James 3-9 1-2 7
Mathews 6-11 5-6 18
Holmes 0-0 0-0
Sylvester 7-8 4-4 18
Hardwick 1-2 0-0 2
Bentendon 0-0 0-0 0
Benson 0-0 0-0 0
Broz 0-1 0-0 2
Turner 1-1 0-0 2
Winders 0-0 0-0 2
Totals 29-55 13-18 72
KANSAS (26-6)
Hancock 1-4 0-0 2
Scott 6-9 4-8 16
Pauley 9-13 0-0 18
Walters 7-9 3-3 23
Jordan 5-15 1-1 13
Ostertag 3-3 2-3 8
Rayford 0-1 0-0 0
Richey 0-4 2-2 2
Woodberry 4-5 0-0 10
Pearson 1-5 0-0 2
Gurley 0-0 0-0 2
Totals 36-64 12-17 94
Halftime Kappa 48, Ball State 43-3 point
goals Bail State 15, Mathews 13, Hard wick 1, Benson 0, I Kansas 10-19 (Wall
6, Woodberry, 2, Jordan 2-8)
Rebounds Bail State 28 (Payne 9, Kansas 10-19)
Assists Bail State 17, Rheic
4 Assists Bail State 10 (Mathews 7),
Kansas 24, Jordan 11) Total fouls Bail
State 16, Kansas 19
Senior Eric Pauley, who sprained his knee during practice on Monday, split playing time at center with sophomore Greg Ostertag. Pauley picked up his four foul with 15 minutes remaining but finished with 18 points. He made four 18-foot jump shots from the top of the key.
"There is no way in the world that they are a No. 15 seed," Walters said.
"They are a really tough team."
Despite the margin of victory, several Jayhawks said the Cardinals had earned their respect.
The Cardinals outbounded the Jayhawks 16-13 during the first half and shot 53 percent from the field for the game.
"They were like animals on the boards," Jordan said. "We couldn't even box them out."
Ball State junior forward Jeermal Sylvester and senior guard Jamie Mathews led the Cardinals with 18
row. The Cougars, 25-8, defeated Southern Methodist yesterday.
"This was a good guitorie for us during a part of the season everybody loves." Scott said. "The losses are behind us. I'm ready to play in the tournament."
points each. Sylvester, like Walters, said he thought his team should have been seeded higher. Ball State was the co-champion of the Mid-American Conference.
"We showed that the MAC Conference can be competitive. We were always there, and we had a chance to do it."
"Kansas is a great team," he said.
Kansas, 26-6, will play Brigham Young in the second round toomor
Walters scores 23 points in front of old teammate
Jayhawk guard ties NCAA record for three-pointers
KANSAS
34
KU
KU
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
Guard Rex Walters grabs a rebound over forward Richard Scott and Ball State forward Steve Payne. Walters led the team with 23 points.
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
ROSEMONT, Ill. — Kansas senior guard Rex Walters' jaw dropped and his eyes widened yesterday at the Rosemont Horizon. And that was before he tied the NCAA Basketball Championship record for the most three-pointers made in a game.
Walters' surprise was due to the arrival of Don Polite, who was a teammate of Walters at Northwestern. Polite, a 6-5 small forward, was a senior during Walter's sophomore season, after which Walters transferred to Kansas.
"There's no question that he's a great player and a great person," Polite said. "He's very loyal to his friends. And even in his warmups, I could tell that he's added a lot of bulk. That's going to help him when he gets to the next level."
Walters, who averages 14.4 points a game, has picked up his scoring this month. He scored a career-high 27
points at Oklahoma State and led Kansas with 22 against Colorado in the Big Eight Tournament.
"I just concentrate on squaring up and getting my feet set," Walters said. "I'm not a ball-watcher. I keep my
Walters was seven of nine from the field overall and hit all three of his free throw attempts. He also contributed five assists and four rebounds.
eyes on the rim the whole time."
He made six of six shots from three-point range, which tied the tournament record and broke the Midwest regional record. The performance helped propel Kansas to a 94-72 victory against Ball State. As a team Kansas hit 10 of 19 three-point attempts. Ball State made just one of five.
Walters embraced his former teammate 30 minutes before yesterday's game in which the Jayhawks' shooting guard scored a game-high 23 points in 29 minutes of action.
Kansas Jayhawks
record:
26-6
head coach:
Roy Williams
Probable Starters:
■ Rex Walters
G Sr. 6-4
■ Adonis Jordan
G Sr. 5-11
■ Richard Scott
F Jr. 6-7
■ Darrin Hancock
F Jr. 6-7
■ Eric Pauley
C Sr. 6-10
Men's basketball
game
2
Saturday,
March 20
3:30 p.m.
Rosemont Horizon
Rosemont, ill.
Radio: KLZR-FM 105.9
TV: CBS
Brigham Young Cougars
record:
25-8
head coach:
Roger Reid
Probable Starters:
■ Randy Reid
G Fr. 6-2
■ Nick Sanderson
G Sr. 6-4
■ Russell Larson
F So. 6-10
■ Mark Durrant
F So. 6-7
■ Gary Troust
C Sr. 6-10
Men's basketball game 2
Polite, who had not seen Walters since their days as teammates at Northwestern, was impressed with the senior's play.
Andrew Hodges / KANSAN
Source: Kansas Sports Information
Brigham Young advances to NCAA's second round
Cougars to meet Kansas; winner to join Sweet 16
The Associated Press
ROSEMONT, III. — This time, Brighan Young didn't have to contend with Shaquille O'Neal in the first round. The Cougars ended up with a result they liked a whole lot better.
"It was easier this time, a lot easier," said coach Roger Reid after BYU beat Southern Methodist 80-71 yesterday in the NCAA Midwest Region.
Last year, O'Neal and Louisiana State beat BYU 94-83 in a West Regional opener.
It was different playing Shauqliu O'Neal. "Reid said. "He had 14 blocked shots and dominated the inside against us."
Center Gary Trost, who led all scorers with 28 points, and Jared Miller, BYU's rebounding leader with 10, still had plenty to worry about against SMU.
The Cougars, 25-8, advanced to the second round and will play Kansas, a 94.72 winner against Ball State.
The second-round game is at 3:30 tomorrow.
"SMU fought for every rebound,"
SMU, 20-8, made just 36 percent of its field goal attempts and 50 percent of its foul shots.
Trost said, "it was rugged, but that's what it is all about when you get to the NCAAs. We expected a physical game. But it was fun out there."
SMU trailed by as much as 14 in the opening half, but drew within two early in the second half. The Cougars responded with a 3-pointer from Trost and a jam by Russell Larson to go in front 46-39.
SMU used three straight turnovers for a 7-0 run that narrowed the deficit to 74-69, but the Cougars held on by making their free throws down the stretch.
"Their strength is their size. It seems like everybody they send is a 7-footer." he said.
"We just didn't shoot the ball well and the majority of them were shots that we can make," said Shumate.
Mustang coach John Shunate said he thought that BYU's taller squad may have made the difference.
SPORTS EDITOR
The seventh-seeded Cougars, a team dominated by underclassmen, were an at-large entry from the Western Athletic Conference.
Four different Cougars scored as Brigham Young opened the game with a 9-0 run.
DAVID
MITCHELL
Round two:
A Kansas roadblock
Kansas improved its all-time record in the NCAA Tournament to 44-21 yesterday with its first-round victory against Ball State.
However, the road to the Final Four only gets harder. While some people — such as Ball State coach Dick Hunsaker — are heralding Kansas as a final team, others — such as Sports Illustrated's Alexander Wolff — pick Brigham Young University to upset Kansas in the second round.
Oddly enough, both predictions make sense in light of Kansas' recent tournament history. With the exception of Kansas' third-round loss to Georgetown in 1987, Kansas either has lost in the second round or made it all the way to the Final Four in every tournament appearance since 1984.
After back-to-back second-round exits in 1984 and 1985, Coach Larry B肯 guided first round wins in 12 years in 1986.
However, Kansas slumped from its 3-4 1986 record to 25-11 in 1987. The Jayhawks fell to Georgetown in the regional.
In 1888 Kansas was back in the Final Four. With an All-American performance from senior Danny Manning, Brown guided a struggling 19-11 squad to the title with victories against Kansas State, Duke and Oklahoma. All three teams had beaten Kansas at home during the regular season.
In 1898 the Jayhawks, victims of NCAA probation, watched the tournament at home for the first time in six seasons.
However, Kansas was back in the tournament in 1990, and coach Roy Williams guided the Jayhawks to a 30-victory season in just his second year. Kansas was omitted from the preseason polls after the injury-plagued Jayhawks struggled to a 19-12 finish in 1989. However, Kansas won the preseason National Invitational Tournament and was ranked either No. 1 or No. 2 for 13 weeks.
Kansas' luck ran out in mid-March. The Hawks lost to Oklahoma in the second round of the Big Eight Conference Tournament 95-77. After slippingpast Robert Morris 79-71 in the first round of the NCAA's, Kansas was upset 71-70 by UCLA in the second round.
After losing four starters, 1991 was supposed to be a rebuilding season for Kansas. Instead, the Jayhawks won the first of three consecutive Big Eight regular-season titles. But again Kansas made a second-round exit from the conference tournament, and most analysts did not pick the Jayhawks to last long in the NCAA's tough Southeast region.
However, Kansas just kept winning, Indiana, Arkansas and North Carolina all fell to the underdog Jayhawks before Duke stopped Kansas in the championship game.
In 1992 Kansas had high expectations and ended the regular season with another Big Eight title. Kansas also won the Big Eight Tournament. Kansas was rewarded for its success with the No. 1 seed in the Midwest region.
kansas destroyed Howard 100-67 in the first round. But the slow-down game of the University of Texas-EI Pao done the Jayhaws to another second-round loss.
Tomorrow Kansas faces a BYU team that won 25 games. Whether the second round will be more friendly to Kansas remains to be seen. If the Jayhawks escape BYU they again could face Duke and Indiana.
If Kansas can get past those same perennial powers it faced in the 1991 tournament, it will earn a place in the Final Four in New York.
To get to the Crescent City, Kansas will have to win in the second round and stay on the road to the Final Four.
David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior majoring in journalism.
8
Friday, March 19, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
West Coast spring break awaits Kansas softball team
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team is going to Disneyland for spring break.
However, seeing Mickey Mouse is not high on coach Kalau Haack's priority list.
However, seeing Mickey Mouse is not high on coach Haunk Haum's priority list. Kansas, ranked No. 13 in the nation, will play seven games in a West Coast road trip.
"I've scheduled a trip to Disneyland, but how much fun we'll have depends on how we play. Haack said. "When we play well, we always have a good time."
Kansas takes its 5-2 record to Fullerton, Calif., to play Massachusetts on Sunday. Massachusetts spent its spring break this week in California playing a series of games, and will face the 'Hawks just hours before the team's flight home.
"We're playing them at 8:30 in the morning," Haack said with a smile. "Hopefully they'll be tired."
After Sunday's game, Kansas will travel about 50 miles up the coast to play playheaders against DePaul and No. 7 California State Northbridge in Northridge, Calif.
Haack said the Northridge game would be the most important of the road swing. The Matadores are 12-2 and are responsible for No. 2 UCLA's only two losses.
Also, Haack has a history against Northridge. In the early 1980s, he was an assistant coach at Sam Houston State. For three consecutive years, the LadyKats faced Northridge in the NCAA Division II national championship game. Houchampionship game. She said the honor was unexpected.
Wednesday, Kansas will return to Fullerton to take part in the Pony Texotian.
KANSAN
The Jayhawks will play California State Fullerton, Western Illinois and Washington in the preliminary games. Depending on the results of those games, Kansas will receive its seed into championship bracket play.
Sophonore Lora Richardson, who was shuffled from first base to second base because of an injury to senior Shanna Cole, said the California State Fullerton game would be an important outing.
"They are the toughest team in our pool." Richardson said. "We need to beat them to win our pool and get a good seed."
Richardson was named the Big Eight Conference's Player of the Week last week. She batted .357 in the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational last weekend and had six runs batted in and a three-run home run in the
Kansas stayed at No. 13. Missouri moved up two spots to 15th. Oklahoma State moved up two spots to No. 5.
NCAA Top 20
rank team record pts. pr
1. Arizona (6) 21.1 120
2. UCLA 15.2 114
3. UNLV 11.3 105
4. Florida St. 17.0 98
5. TIE - Fresno St. 10.7 92
6. Oklahoma St. 15.4 93
7. Cal St. Northridge 12.2 89
8. California 15.4 92
9. Michigan 11.5 64
10. Mississippi 16.1 63
11. Long Beach St. 11.4 57
12. UMass 1-1 52
13. Kansas 5-2 50
14. Cal St. Sacramento 13.4 13
15. TIE - Missouri 9-1 32
16. New Mexico 16.5 32
17. Hofstra 4-2 24
18. Illinois-Chicago 15.0 15
19. Virginia 8-1 13
20. TIE - Iowa 6-3 NR
Source: NCAA
"I was shocked," she said. "When they told me about it, I asked why."
Besides the beaches, Disneyland and the sunny weather, the West Coast trip will provide the five Kansas players from California a chance to play closer to their families.
Sophomore infielder Krissy Carpenter said the games at Northridge were about 10 minutes from her parents' home.
"Even though my family comes out here often to watch my games, playing close to home is nice." Carpenter said. "It's a definite bonus for the California girls."
NOTES:
**Hack picked up his 200th victory as the coach at Kansas on March 7 against Sam Houston State. His alma mater. His career record is 235-128-1.**
Williams, who was named this week's Big Eight Pitcher of the Week, has pitched 24% consecutive scoreless innings.
The Jayhawks' home opener against Wichita State, which was canceled on March 13, has been rescheduled for April 7.
Men's tennis team to play Wichita State, Indiana State in weekend dual meet
KANSAS BRIEF'S
The Kansas men's tennis team, 6-4, will head to Wichita this weekend for dual matches against Missouri Valley Conference opponents Wichita State and Indiana State.
Wichita State, 2-5, will play Kansas at 7:30 tonight, and the Jawhays will face Indiana State, 5-3, at noon tomorrow.
Kansas coach Michael Center said that neither team was spectacular, but both were capable of beating Kansas. The Shockers have traditionally played the Jayhawks close, and he expected no less this weekend.
He said that the important thing for the Jayhawks to do was shake off the shoddy performance from its last outing against Drake. The Bulldogs drilled the Jayhawks 7-0 without losing a set.
"I just think we need to play better than the last time out or it won't matter who we play," he said.
Kansas must go forward, he said, if the team is going to contend for the Big Eight Conference title.
Kansas senior Carlos Fleming said that this weekend's matches were important because both were against regional opponents.
"The more regional opponents we beat, the better our chances of making the NCAA tournament," he said.
Fleming, Kansas' No. 1 singles player and ranked No. 59 in the nation, will be taking on Korn Simonk, for the Shockers, and Bryce Barnard, of the Sycamores. Both are among the top 10 singles players in the Midwest region, Center said.
Fleming, 8-3 for the season, has lost only one match this spring.
During spring break, Kansas will also make a road trip to Arizona for three matches. On Tuesday, the Jayhawks will be in Tucson to play Arizona followed in successive days by Arizona State in Tempe and Northern Arizona in Sedona.
Ultimate club's Horsorontals to open season in Texas frisbee tournament
The Kansas Ultimate club begins its season this weekend, traveling to Austin, Texas, to play in the CenTex Ultimate Tournament.
Three-year club member Matt Babler, Pittsburgh senior, said that the men's team, the Horrorontals, were ready to get this season under way after suffering its worst season in recent years.
Last season, the men's team broke its string of eight consecutive appearances in the national tournament by failing to qualify. The team has set its focus on returning to nationals this year.
Babar said the CentTex tournament consisted of many non-collegate teams. He said that the majority of teams would be
"This is the most confident we've been going into a tournament this early in the year." Babler said.
The women's team, known as Betty, is the defending champion of the CentTex tournament.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
DUI or OUI?
Court Evaluations
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Notjust for bowling anymore!
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Ray Ban
PROFESSOR OF
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Classified Directory
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
11am-2am
100s
105 Personal
110 Business
125 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
842-1212
DELIVERYHOURS
200s
Entrance
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Service
11am-3am
110 Bus. Personals
need 1.5lb of sand.
The Etc. Shop ships shipments of handmade pendants, crystals, and semi-precious stones.
Assorted Bear fetishes
$5-$20.95
The Etc. Shop
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against people with disabilities, race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is submitted to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 for license and certification. limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disearn cash when participating in an
ALB-What is the state of limitations on heart too vorticose? on heart too vorticose? on heart too vorticose? on execution or execution
105 Personals
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care
841-2345 1419 Mass
We're always open
100s Announcements
Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban and Vauret-France
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
99% Mass. 850.01"
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300s
Merchandise
864-9500
Rent Cars for Hours
Mon-Fri - 8 a.m - 4:30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11:30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon-Fri - 4:30 p.m - 10 p.m
Wed - 4:30 p.m - 10 p.m
Sun 8 a.m - 4:30 p.m
Watkins Health Center
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Lose up to 30 lbs, in 30 days for $89.100% Guarantee
823-0487.
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
VISA 842-9979 MAHV CARD
15% OFF BOARDING FOR DOGS & CATS
Morning Star
Pet Care
120 Announcements
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
1 Mile East of Johnny's
Call 864-4076 to inquire about the
People with insulin-dependent diabetes
or anonymous info and support for AIDS con-
spirations. call 841-2435. Headquarters.
MIRACLE VIDEO
84 195 Adult Sale
N 102 n 2 N 841-863
190 Haskell N 841-704
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about who is叫一声 481-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counselor Center
QUESTIONS? Call Bissau, Gay, and Lesbian Peer Counseling. Free, confidential referrals through Headquarters (841-2345) or KU Info (964-3506). Called return.
YOURE NOT ALONE! Bisexual, Gay, and Lesbian Support Group on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters (814-234) or KU Info (864-306) for confidential location.
130 Entertainment
Spring Break quad daytona Beach,
room, limo service
2/15 7:49 Pete 740-392
2/20 8:35 Pete 740-392
Mountain Clyde AT BENCHWARMERS Friday March 19 2 for 1 Well Drinks Come here early Saturday to catch the NCAA action
140 Lost & Found
Substantial Reward- Information leading to return of Silver Bach Stradivarius Trumpet Model 5180-37 Serial #229108, Case #184, Call collect W. Drake (M36) 323-2113
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
APPLY NOW
NOSTARTING
NO EXPERIEN NEC great resume build. Scholarships, tumpy, over spring Break-participant; Graphic Designer needed to postpose and program for late April concert. Large fee
Babyshifter: Female, English speaking must have
own transportation to a break & week
after school.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach, swimming canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics camp, crafts, watersports, camping, crafts, watersports, DRAMATIC, or Riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $101 or more plus 4R48. Marca Sorege 176 Maple, Nild., II.
Children's counselors, instructors, horse people,
naut drivers, cooks, kitchen managers, kitchen
lainns, innkeepers/keepers, maintenance person
or Mountain Summer Camp, Box 710, Boulder.
CITY OF LAWRENCE
SUMMER JOB
table in the following attributc:
OUTDOOR DAY PROGRAM-SPECIALISTS
The City is accepting applications for all summer, part-and-full time positions. Positions are avail-
OUTDOOR DAY PROGRAM SPECIALISTS
SPORTS INSTRUCTORS
PLAYGROUND PROGRAM
PLAYGROUND PROGRAM
MUNICIPAL POOL
A DOMINION PROC
SPECIAL POPULATIONS PROGRAM CONCESSIONS
CONCESSIONS
MAINTENANCE AND LABORER
INSTRUCTIONS
Complete application at Administrative Serv. 2nd
floor, City Hall, 6th East 8th, Lawrence, KS6044.
No phone calls please. Deadline: Friday, April 2nd
at 5:09. M.E.O. (MOVE) O
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday,March 19,1993
9
Counselors/Summart
staff=children's camps & campus top salary, rm/benary salary, travel allowance. Mimic salad serving, basketball, basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama, dance, gymnastics, gibbonry, horseback riding kid sent jumping, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, piano, rockeriness, collaborating, bread, sakes, caterers, weights, wood. Support staff-kitchen steward/workers, baken, cooks, baking/drives, maintenance, winadu, Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N.Y. *10434 14581-888* Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 814-888-
Credit line entry level on board indicate position
transportation line. great pay.
transportation paid ( 813) 229-474.
Day or evening help needed. Apply in person only
at Border Bandido, 1528 West 23rd.
Farm and apartment maintenance. Part-time during school, full-time during summer. Tractor experience necessary, cattle and maintenance. Wakara Partners, P.O. Box 1781, Lawrence
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BYDONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Full-time, Home-based Therapist-to provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents and families. Require minimum of 2 yrs. exp. providing mental health care for children, adolescents and families. Send resume and letter of interest to Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center. Inc. 336 Missouri. Suite 202. Lawrence,KS 47415. Victoria Rocca Appointment deadline March 24, 1993.
**Help Wanted:** First Christian Church is looking for loving 16-year-old boys and girls. June 6-June 25. m 12:30, p 12:30, p 15:30. Please send resume to First Christian Church. After Arts Powers, 1008 Kenkue Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make 12.900
employees in the Philippines, Japan, and Taiwan. Many provide room and board + other benefits. No previous education required. For prerequisite: 1. exp. work in 6-1042 job code 4. ext. 3750.
Lake of the Ozarks Summer Employment The Barge Floating Restaurant is exceptionally popular for its salaries and tips great working conditions, and some food furnished. Apply while housing is available.
Line up your summer job here. We are currently hiring a crew for 1960 harvest, starting in May. Only drug-free, nonmoking individuals need assistance. Call 913-525-8262. Nagel Combining Inc.
GREEKS & CLUBS
S1,000 AN HOUR!
Each member of your trust sorority, team club et al. sends a message to you and your group can raise $1,000 in a few days!
Plus a chance to earn $1,000 for yourself!
1-800-932-0528. ext. 65
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" & call
them 816-766-0081.
Models wanted for the "Girl of Kansas City"
"Men of Kansas City" Calendar. Please call Touva
or (804) 769-2150.
NOW HIRRING: Part-time, full-time all-shifts
at the following sites at the following
places in Hainesville:
Motivated District Manager for property management company. Full-time experience preferred Send resume to P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 60044
Nationals positions available nationwide including
Arizona summer rally, Round Rock
freeway, 621 St. Johns Blvd.
Please apply in person at the following EO. Steps
65 E 12. 04/02/13
APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER I
Deadline 04/02/13 $alary $500/$600/month
Duties include participating in programing, maintenance, management and/or other specific output; share responsibility for insuring that programs perform as expected; and the solution of operational difficulties encountered in executing programs; assists in preparation of necessary text data and in preparation of necessary test data and organized testing schedule. Supply a submitable document with your resume to Roger, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60400/EA0
Students earn extra money. Set your own school
earn. Lunch $10 or more a day. Call (314) 574-9900
Summer John Outdoors. Over 7,000 Openings!
[New York, Kerns.] Fire & Rescue
JOBS IN KC!!
Send Stamp for Free Details.
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The most productive way to find new opportunities quickly at hundreds of top Kansas City Employers.
Call ACCESS at 1-800-362-0681 or (in KC) 432-0700 or check with Career
Summer Positions Available
Freed P. O'till a Kitchen & Grill on Country Cliff Plaza seeks personal, quality minded people to manage day to night care for Night, full and part time positions available. Experience help, but not mandatory. Apollo.
person after 3p m, at fried P. O'Hare's 4770 C
building. Country Club Plaza. For more information
at countryclub.com.
TEAMMARKETING. Salary plus commission;
voyeurs. Call 841-1299
Tennis juniors summer children's & camp-northwest
and women juniors well good tennis clubs.
Good salary, money &
board & travel allowance. Women call
Winnings, Siena Lance, Maracorce, N Y 10543
Winnings, Siena Lance, Maracorce, N Y 10543
Waterfront Job-WSJ-Summer children's camp-north meat and women who can teach children to swim, coach water, watererski (calamari, trick boat), swim lessons, good salary room & board, travel allowance, Men call or write, Camp Wooda, a Glen Lane, Manor, Salisbury, Wheelbarrow at Wheeler at 841-6000.
Models needed pro $175/300-day & TV/Film
extracts $175/200-day. No exp required. 541-9099
Q
Packer Plastics Incorporated
Part-time unskilled factory work on
weekends,starting Friday at midnight
and ending Sunday at midnight. Flex time
possible. A student work team will be formed to cover these hours. If
interested please call Packer Plastics at 842-3000,ext.475to
arrange for ar interview.
225 Professional Services
- Driver Education offered a midwife Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
FREE MONEY for school visit include Financial and scholarship fees, or $150 in income or required box 2014a-10 (Box 2013a-10). Promo Photos and Headshots. B&K Darkroom. Fast Service. First Photography. #841-4244 Starving clean and landscaping works Will help with spring cleaning and landscaping. Yrs exp.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUTY
Fake ID and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
The law offices of
Donald G Strobe Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
TEACHER WANTED: to work w/autistic child. Prerequisites: 304 & 308 experience in Behavior Mgm1, Child Development, & other developmental disabilities pref. $10.40 lb; 842.640 for interview.
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Procession. Former editor
transforms text into pages of letters at
853 - 295 363
**AFFORDABLE TYPING & EDITING** Honors
English Grad. will type & edit any paper 24 hrs.
a day. Tutoring nail. Near campus. Lowest rates in town.
832.1296
Expedient typing by experienced secretary. IBM Corp.
Expert in IT support. EA Lawrence, Call Mrs. Mattila 6412-1198
EVA, Call Mrs. Mattila 6412-1198
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Church.
No calls AFTER ppm: 843-8568
Word processing, applications, term papers
dissertations, resume Editing, composition, rush
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Word processing, thesis, dissertations, papers,
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X
300s
Merchandise
Aquaria for sale (1) 140 gallon includes base, top lights, power & undergravel kits $750 and (2) 200 gallon includes stand, top lights, undergravity filter, 2 power filters. @ $89 call $60 at 841-7031
305 For Sale
91% ALU. CANN MTB FRAME, BB, HS, SP
Dave 749 - 208th MTB, ITX Components,
Dave 749 - 208th MTB
Ready to race Rock Hopper. Complete w/ bar elements, computer XT thumbscrew, new rim, XT derailer, cassette & cables, plus many extras $575.
Call Paul @ 749-0233.
Fernandes PA-15 Amplifier: Convenient size: 13.5" x
12.5" with 20 times 180-watt iPhone 10s best offer.
Full rear kit of RB-1434
Computers: New and Used
P.C. Compatibles
P.C. Source 823-1126
340 Auto Sales
Sail boat 16 K Catamaran with trailer $300 or best offer
Call: 1-813-9842, evening after 6pm
Fax machine 8900 bps plus auto voice/rax switch box and cleaning kit $175. MIDI interface plus cabie and Meesto software for MDOS $50 call Archi at 865-350-364 after pkm 07.
You green Iguana, elegant condition, easy to handle, 17 long, come with set up. 864-862 make
Bus seats for Spring Break trip to Texas. $225 for bus and hotel tickets, San Antonio, Austin, Mexico. (BUS)
Wairless position available. Apply in person at Quinton's Bark & Deil. 613 Mass.
85 Ford temp GL, A/C Automatic. Clean but
right front damage. $100 or negotiable.
Unframed RU pride prints. Limited edition of 300.
Same as one in Allen Fieldhouse. Plates destroyed.
Certificate of Authenticity small quantity still
available. Call (913) 631-6978
Travel to Sunny Texas!
Porsche 87645, silver, excellent, one owner, sxc, rec, all stock. Best offer over $7,000.
*85 Nissan Sentra AM/FM/CAF, AC $150 or negociate
Call Mark B23-8541
370 Want to Buy
Tickets to the Sat. Mar 21 session of the NCAA
Tourney in Chicago, Call Sahey 390-1096.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1900 NAISMTH 3 & 4 BR 2 Bath Lg. rooms.
1900 NAISMTH 3 & 4 BR 2 operative laundry,
operative leaves, tiles 12x8.
1 BR Bur. apt. available now. New paint + mini blinds. 1 yr lease 843-4217.
1-2 roommates four Bdrm apt sublet. May-Aug.
187 $300, free cable, walk to camp
187 $300.
4 Bdmr Apt. Lease now till July 31st. Low price $500. Call to set appt. 845-0011
816 Arkansas, good location. 2 bdrm ap upstairs,
furnished, modern conveniences, central heat &
air, protected parking. Sublease immediately with
reduced deposit. Renter retains the difference
¬member cooperative, near campus/downstreet,
has room for 12 students/street parking.
Landscaping, tills included: 843-790-7
688-652-2888
Available Now furnished Rw's / w/ kitchen
decor. Warehouse KW / kU w/ off-street
patients, no pets. Call 814-565-7300
Boardwalk
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apts for August, but if you can take one June 1, you can take another. This is where you buildings at West Hips Apts 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS 841-3800 or 540-2900.
& Fall Move-ins
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience.
Hey.KU) Med Students, Rainbow Town Apartments is now leasing St. 12 & Bedroom apartment #4 at 360 West 87th Street & Water Park, pool, sauna, jacuzzi, & spa, garage 353 Bedroom Kinko Bldg K C K 6163. Arena sports 350 Basking Ridge
For lease 4 BR Townhouse, 2 baths, 3 car garage $760 per month or $89 with wash and dryer. Avail w/ free water.
SUMMER SPECIALS
*1, 2 and 3 bedroom units
*3 month leases
*avail end of May
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
843-4754 (call for appt.)
House for rent 2 bd rm. lease, no pets 842-4403.
LUXURY TOWNHOME, 4 BK, 2/4 bath,
microchip, dishwasher, fireplace, wet bar, 2 car
garage with owner, full basement, near golf
course. 15H + Lawrence Avenue, $285.50 per
person - utilities. Application and deposit. 749-207
on weekdays for appointment. Keep trying.
MACKENZIE APTS. now leasing for Aug 1. Newly constructed luxury apts, close to campus. All 3 BR, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appl. 2 decks or柜房, wall Insulated, energy efficiency.
3 new bdr town house avail for next semester on bus line idle for 4 people. Fireplace, patio and tennis plus 1 car garage + 1/2 baths with skin light. 850/mm² + /+ util Call Jeff at 859-392. Nice quiet. 3BR duplex in south location. All kitchen appl. C/A, gas, heat. 1 room. 700 sq ft.
Nice, quiet, 3BR duplex in southwest location. All kitchen appl. C/A, gas. heat. 1½ B/A. W/ hooks, luggage. No pets. References $450/mo.
B-BR from 9:30s
- Jacuzzi in教练
- Jacuzzi in教练
- Private bachelors/Patios
- Pd cable TV/Phones
- Basketball coach/mentor
- Outsidia & Dushahi 64.81-1815
Office Hours
5:15pm - 2:15am - 2:45am or For Appointments
Naismith Place
Rent(Lease m or 3R bus house. East Lawrence, close to KU on bus route, receives dog food for delivery.
a Dipen West Apartment A, 2B 1 br 1
e daseen, no pets, water on bus route 865-500
or 865-490.
Now leasing for Fall
FIRST MGT. INC.
*NOW LEASING*
Bradford Square
Chamberlin Court
Carson Place
Stadium View
Oread Apartments
1425 Kentucky
cell739-1556 M-F 2-5 pm or
Quail Creek
meadowbrook
Southpoint Apartments
2166 W. 26th St. Apt 3
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing.
Mon-Fri call for appl. 843-6446.
42-4200
call 749-1556 M-F2-5pm or
841-8468 M-F9-12pm for an appt
Room to rent in a barm apt lease till 31st Jan. $12
+ A/PLATIUM. Call 843-001-01.
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and
The Perfect Apartment!
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
NOW
waiting for you
are filling up quickly!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
Sorry no pets
EDDINGHAM PLACE
( next to Benchwarmers)
2111 Kasold 843-4300
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
Spacious 2 bedrm apl. Summer sublease-all utilities paid except electricity. Affordable rent & quiet living. Swimming pool, laundry facilities. Call evenings. 749-3829.
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!!
24th & EDDINGHAM
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
protessionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Sublease 3 bedroom/2 bath. Furnished apt, close to campus, avail. May 15-Aug 10.
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
S
Swan Management
- Gravstone
1-2-3bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
Summer & Pall Leasing. Furished 1 & 2 bdm
from KU w/ off-street parking, no
call 641-8548.
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
*1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft $305 to $365 per month
and unturnished
•1 bedroom apts, 735 sq ft
*2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft*
$305 to $365 per month
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0848. Stop by 146 Tennessee
2 bedroom apartments 500 sqm
$375 to $450 per month
WATER PAID ON ALL APTS.
WALKING DISTANCE
GREAT LOCATION-Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(or other times w/appt.)
(or other times wappt)
This ad for original buildings only.
This ad for original buildings onlydoes not include Phase II-call for
TRAILRIDGE APTS.
Now signing leases for summer & fall
Call Sarah for your appointment at
843.7333
Two bdmr. furnished apt. Now-Aug 31 Call 864-
809 or 864-2683. Price negotiable.
OPENDAILY
2 Pools
Volleyball Court
On KU Bus Route with
4 stops on Property
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Washer/Dryer
---
FURNISHED
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Don't be left in the cold!
MASTERCRAFT
Wanted. Summer sublease for a 3birm/2 bath
Swimming Pool. Appt. location, balcony, on bus
route, pool & sand volleyball $540/oBO
Water pail. DC 841 JIWK
HanoverPlace-841-1212
Studios,1,2,2+3&4bdrm apts...designed with you in mind!
Campus Place-841-1429
Home Washer/Dryer
Hookups
HanoverPlace-841-1212 14th&Mass
Hookups
Regents Court-749-0445
Park25
Arkansas
Tanglewood-749-2415
10thb & Arkansas
Orchard Corners 11.1
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255
7th & Florida
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Tanglewood-749-241
10th & Arkansas
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
842-4455
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Waterbed allowed
Summer sublease studio apt at Traiellrue Avail-
able from this route $900 mo
with water route $1,500 mo
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
mer, Valley LN, $225/mo - /u:/utils, Plan now in start. June, 86-554-769, leave message Female, N/room assignment for fall: 1 br in 2 br up. On bus route pool, AC, free water, cable.
Female roommate wanted for 4 BR 2 BA duplex.
Lease begin June for 12 mos. $156/mo. + 7vail.
If you're outgoing and responsible, call Stacy at
865-382-963
1 I roommate needs to share a 2br, Ha 1.2r yr,
imsc area in scenic place. Must be a non-smoker, clean
and responsible, on bus route. Starts Aug. 1,
*197 $ 50 M+ (m) + until.* Please call
- B Mail: 1191 Stairmaster Fitch, Lawrence, KS 46053.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas Office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Vita account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
NO LEASE $200 + / utilities. Roommate to share house, large yard, washer + dryer 842-2096
Summer Sublease. Two females to share large 3 bdm apt. $200 + / utilities W/D, w/P陪, 865-2922
e phone: *ooh-oo*.
Ads phone used may be killed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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1.76 1.00 0.70 0.55 0.55 0.35
1.67 1.00 0.70 0.55 0.50 0.35
OBJEXTRACTORS
140 last & found
200 sale & found
225 professional services
225 miscellaneous
75 house services
105 personal
118 business personals
129 announcements
130 entertainment
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flii Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68044
THE FAR SIDE
© 1983 FarWorks, Inc. Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
By GARY LARSON
2
"Look, Dad!... Snidgets!"
10
Friday, March 19, 1993
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
West region
Temple Owls defeat Missouri 74-61
SALT LAKE CITY — Aaron McKie and Eddie Jones scored 24 points each while Temple's scrambling defenseuffed Missouri in a 74-61 first-round NCAA West Regional victory yesterday.
Brick Runson added 14 points for the Owls, 18-12, while Mark Atkins led Missouri, 19-14, with 17 points.
NCAA TOURNAMENT BRIEFS
Santa Clara's defense upsets Arizona
Jevon Crudup and Mekin Booker added 13 points apiece for the Tigers. Missouri earned an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament by winning the Big Eight Tournament.
SALT LAKE CITY — Unheralded Santa Clara held Arizona to only one field goal for 15 minutes of the second half yesterday to defeat the No. 2-seeded Wildcats 64-61. It was Arizona's second straight first-round loss in the NCAA Tournament.
Vanderbilt takes Broncos for a ride
Vanderbilt, with four players scoring in double figures led by as much as 30 in the second half before No. 14-seeded Boise State closed the gap to the final margin.
the broncos, 19-11, became only the second No. 15 seeded team to win a first round game in tournament history. Santa Clara will meet Temple in the second round.
SALT LAKE CITY — Billy McCaffrey scored 20 of his 26 points in the second half as Vanderbilt broke the game open to take a 92-72 West regional first-round victory against the outmatched Boise State Broncos.
Vanderbilt will meet Illinois in the second round.
Inside game helps in Illinois victory
SALT LAKE CITY — Illinois found its inside game yesterday in time to offset Andy Kaufman's cold outside shooting against upstart Long Beach State.
Kaufmann went scoreless in the first half, but the Fighting Illini's only true big man, Deon Thomas, dominated the boards and had a hot shooting hand in a 75-72 victory in the first round of the NCAA West regional.
Southeast region
Late shot sinks Kansas State 55-53
ORLANDO, Fla. — Matt Greene's three-point play with 52.7 seconds left turned out to be the deciding points in Tulane's 55-53 victory against Kansas State yesterday in the first round of the Southeast regional.
K-State's Aaron Collier led all scorers with 18 points. Vincent Jackson, with 11 points, was the only other player in double figures for the Wildcats.
Anthony Ree scored 12 points for the Green Wave. Tulane will meet Florida State in the second round.
ORLANDO, Fla. — Charlie Ward, taking advantage of Evansville's decision to concede him his shot, scored 15 points yesterday to help No. 3-seeded Florida State to an 82-70 victory in the first round of the NCAA Southeast regional.
Ward made 6 of 11 shots and keyed a strong defensive performance with four steals. Ward and Sam Cassell had 18 points each.
Seton Hall rolls in first round game
ORLANDO, Fla. — Seton Hall continued its run of first- round success in the NCAA Tournament, routing Tennessee State 81-59 in the Southeast regional last night night.
The Pirates, who have not been eliminated in the round in five tournament appearances, showed off all their weapons against outmanned Tennessee State, which was in the tournament just one year after going 4-24.
Tennessee State ended its season at 19-10.
Hilltoppers defeat Memphis State
ORLANDO, Fla. — Mark Bell scored six of Western Kentucky's last 10 points, including a pair of free throws with 31 seconds remaining, to help the Hilloppers eliminate Memphis State 55-52 last night in the first round of the NCAA Southeast Regional.
Bell's foul shots capped an 18-point performance for the 5-foot-8 point guard.
Western Kentucky will meet Seton Hall in the second round.
East region
Tarheels outmuscle East Carolina
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Eric Montross outmusced East Carolina's shorter front line and scored 17 points as top-seeded North Carolina took an easy 85-65 victory in the NCAA East regional on last night.
Lester Lyons of East Carolina tied a personal season-high with 27 points. George Lynch had 15 and Brian Reese scored 11 for the Tar Heels.
North Carolina will meet Rhode Island in the second round.
Purdue falls to Rhode Island 74-68
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Damon Collins' rebound and two free throws with 12.4 seconds last night sealed Rhode Island's 74-68 victory against. No. 22 Purdue in the first round of the NCAA East regional.
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — St. John's coach Brian Mahoney wanted Carl Beckett to provide some rebounding and defense off the bench.
cartos Coffield scored 16 of his 22 points in the second half as eighth-seeded Rhode Island, 19-10, won its first NCAA Tournament game since it advanced to the Sweet 16 in 1988.
St. Johns defeats Texas Tech 85-67
what he got instead from the shooting guard was the offensive spark St. John's needed last night to defeat Texas Tech 85-67 in the first game of the NCAA tournament East regional.
St. John got 17 points from Derek Brown and Will Fleemons had 26 points and 10 rebounds for Texas Tech.
Arkansas Razorbacks beat Holy Cross
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Arkansas keeps chipping away at the myth.
"They think when we play basketball we just rip and run, and shoot," Razorbacks coach Nolan Richardson said after his team's 94-64 victory against Holy Cross in the first round of the NCAA Tournament East Regional.
Corliss Williams scored 19 points to lead Arkansas. Arkansas will meet St. John's in the second round.
Midwest region
Duke beats Southern Illinois 105-70
ROSEMONT, Ill. — Two-time defending NCAA champion Duke extended its run of first-round tournament routes to six.
The Blue Devils took a 26-point halftime lead behind senior guard Bobby Hurley en route to a 105-70 Midwest regional victory against Southern Illinois last night.
Duke, the No. 3 seed, plays No. 6 California in the second round Saturday.
Kidds's layup lifts Cal past Tigers
ROSEMONT, Ill. — Freshman sensation Jaskid Kidd banked in a spinning, driving layup with 1 second left yesterday to give California a 66-64 win over Louisiana State in a first-round NCAA Midwest regional game.
It was the Golden Bears 10th victory in 11 games since coach Lou Campanelli was fired and replaced by Todd Bozeman.
The Tigers were led by Andre Owens' 17 points.
Compiled from Associated Press reports.
BASEBALL BRIEF
kansas, Washburn game canceled; three-game home series scheduled
Kansan Staff Report
Kansas' home game with Washburn yesterday was postponed because of inclement weather.
It marked the second consecutive day a game was postponed. Wednesday's game with Emporia State also was postponed. No makeups for either game have been scheduled.
Kansas, 11-4, is scheduled to play host to Chicago State for a three-game series this weekend, beginning at 3 p.m. today.
Kansas will open the Big Eight Conference season at against Oklahoma State March 23 at Stillwater, Okla.
Clip and Save with Daily Kansan Coupons !!!
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BEGINS MARCH 29th
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Jayhawk Bookstore
only at the top of Naismith Hill!
843-3826
KU
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...
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE
♂
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
SWM. 63" x 190. Ibis for someone to run with a 14 log 6-miles at a moderate pace t times a week, or try a 21-log 6-miles at a moderate pace your fitness program, give me a call at box 61251.
SWM. Smart, mature, honest, open, gentle, caring, good-looking, kind, fun and funny. Do you enjoy the girl for friendship or dating. Do you like Paul Simson? Billy Joel? Phantom of the Opera? If not, please don't thought you'd never answer a personal ad, call me 1 new thought 1 place! Call Isa
- good-to-tooking, in shape SWMs looks for 2 good-looking SWPs to take the time with. Enjoy drink-party, & staying up until 9 o'clock. Call box #40123.
25 yr old pre-PD. student here for 3 years. Like to meet slim, attractive female who's sensitive and affectionate. Age unimportant. Serious. Prep to swim. SWM dark hair & eyes. #6° 190 lbs. seeks honest, emotionally mature, and caring woman w/ desire a clean cut, caring, and dedicated man w/ traditional values. Call box
Authority questioning reality, hacker w/a passion for Cyberpunk and an intensive collection of Camel bucks, sees a date w/ substance. Looking for camel bucks, see the latest imperfections. Must enjoy dancing, partying, candlelight绰ings & video games. Ralph Lushman fans & upgrades need not apply.
Cool guy secure, easy going, attractive, open minded, and all that other good stuff. Seeking one intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dengguan guests. Box r10329
I have Brillis Pd Black hair - a bad knee. I tend to clear my trot a lot. I only have one stair, and sometimes my voice cracks but I can make people laugh. I interested in taking a chance call box s
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
Kismet! that if gets your attention then keep learning with it. *A warm, green eyes, in good mood with a low mileage, white hair, female, who is attractive and open-minded, but sometimes feels like a fish out of water, Calm.*
♂
2 SWF from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both under 25, but we feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet me w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down town walks, movies, talking on the phone, & trying on any scar to get us in rich quick. Call box #20142
DCWF, 40-lab. Addictions are out. Self-honesty,
insight, communication, and faith are in. Non-
smoking, non-drinking, vegetarian, or vegan.
Undergardened with good sense of humor; considering building
caring relationship with S/DCWF with similar
intentions. Children and pets. ks.
1盒20348
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White L Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Single Hispanic female 18 years old cutie, long brown hair recently broke up lookings a sunny smile. She is wearing a backpack and the ages of 18-23 who enjoys walking, jogging, weight lifting, dancing and partying, call box s
MEN SEEKING MEN
GO
Common abbreviations
Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open-minded, and all that other good stuff. Seeking 1 intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dionysian quest. Box #z0066.
GAM 24 hard worker, studies a lot, also makes time to go Enjoy. enjoys stargazing, walks on a moonlit night and stimulating conversation 'till waddz with jazz music. Seeking someone older, romantic, mature, conservative, old man, social drinker, Very discreet. Non-smoker, social drinker. #30063
Gay叫男 male seeks flings and possible relation:
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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan,
you call a free 800-number to listen
to the messages people leave for
you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone) enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
SPORTS: The Kansas baseball team wins four of five games against No. 8 Oklahoma State, Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102,NO.125
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
64...32...16...8...Final 4
CHRISTIAN RIDGWAY
Stephen Pingry / KANSAN
Senior guard Adonis Jordan got a handshake from Kansas coach Roy Williams on Saturday night after Jordan told 12,000 fans at Allen Field House; "We're on our way to the Superdome!"
Fans flock to streets, field house to celebrate
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
The wheat rarely waves so beautifully across Lawrence.
Jayhawk fans packing Lawrence bars performed the ritual Saturday after the Kansas men's basketball team earned its ticket to the Final Four. defeating Indiana 83-77.
At about 7 p.m., about 6,000 people scurried in waves to campus in what has become another campus tradition.
Honking horns, exploding fire crackers and cheering for the Jayhawks' victory was all anyone cared about.
Hands extended from cars driving down Jayhawk Boulevard and slapped high fivees to people running along the street. People ran along the sidewalks to join fans amassed between Strong and Wescoe halls.
"It's fantastic," said Jennifer Brehm, Pratt junior. "Screw all those reporters and announcers that dogged us throughout the tournament."
Andy Bigna, Lawrence senior, jumped around as if he had overdosed on adrenaline.
"We're going all the way," he yelled.
"Anybody who doesn't think so is screwed up."
Ben Gennart, Overland Park junior,
climbed a light pole outside Wescoe
with a KU flag sticking out the back of
his shorts. When he reached the top,
he stood and waved it as the crowd
looked up and worshiped the two letters imprinted on the banner.
"I did it for all the great partners here at the University of Kansas," Gebhart said.
A string of firecrackers exploded and the smell of sulfur mixed with the bitter scent of beer.
An ordinance passed in the spring of 1992 prohibiting alcoholic beverages on campus kept consumption minimal, said KU police Lt. John Mullens. "We realize that people are going to bring cans in their coats and pockets," he said. "What you see tonight is not a truck driving up with a keg in the
back. What they do sneak in won't affect their state of inebration."
Walter Givens, Junction City senior,
noticed the control.
"It's a lot calmer," he said, referring to KU's trip to the finals in 1991. "Last time, beer was being thrown, folks were getting knocked around. The police knew how to deal with it this time."
KU police sent 27 officers to monitor the event. No injuries were reported and a receiver torn from a blue phone at Alumni Place was the only damage.
The crowd began to disperse at about 8:30 p.m., when fans left to greet the players at Allen Field House
Cheerleaders led chants, and the Jayhawks signed autographs as the crowd of about 12,000 awaited the arrival of the team. Tennis balls and rolls of toilet paper flew from bleacher to bleacher.
KANSAS KU NCAA NJ
When the team arrived at 11:40 p.m. sophomore center Greg Ostertag led the pack, slapping the hands of fans as he walked toward the center of the floor.
Senior guard Adonis Jordan grabbed the microphone and waited for the volume in the field house to decrease. A net hung from his neck.
"A lot of people thought the Jayhawks were coming home in the first round," he said, drawing boos. "But right now, we're on our way to the Superdome!"
Williams recalled a man approaching him last Saturday when the team arrived in Topeka from Chicago. The man, who wanted Williams to sign a 1992 tournament hat, asked the coach if he remembered KU's loss against Texas-El Paso in the second round of that tournament.
"I really wanted to tell him where to put that hat," Williams said.
Kansas coach Roy Williams hesitated when it came his turn to address the crowd. Jordan led the crowd in chants of "Roy, Roy, Roy ..." prompting Williams to come forward.
All the players spoke to the crowd,
thanking the fans for their support.
Greg Ostertag, Calvin Rayford, Greg Gurley and Darrin Hancock celebrated the Kansas victory from the bench during the last few seconds of the game against Indiana on Saturday night. Kansas will play North Carolina on Saturday in the NCAA tournament semifinals in New Orleans.
1993 FOUR
LOUISIANA SUPERDOME
Midwest Region:
Southeast Region:
Kentucky 106, Florida St. 81
East Region:
North Carolina 75, Cincinnati 68
North Carolina 75, Cincinnati 68
West Region:
West Region:
Michigan 77, Temple 72
More coverage: pages 3, 6, 7 and 8
Jayhawks earn trip to New Orleans
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
ST. LOUIS — With 1:45 left in Saturday's Midwest regional final, the "Rock Chalk" chant filled The St. Louis Arena, as Jayhawk fans sensed a Kansas victory.
Minutes later, the second-seeded Kansas men's basketball team earned a berth in the NCAA Final Four bylasting top-seeded Indiana 83-77.
Players quickly donned T-shirts that declared Kansas the Midwest regional champions and huddled together to hug cheer and wave to the national television audience.
Meanwhile, assistant coaches Steve Robinson, Kevin Stallings and Matt Doherty formed their own huddle and embraced.
This weekend's trip to New Orleans will mark the second trip to a Final Four for senior Adonis Jordan and juniors Patrick Richey, Richard Scott and Steve Woodberry.
The Jayhawks advanced to the Final Four two years ago, where they defeated North Carolina in the semifinals before losing to Duke in the championship game. The Jayhawks will face the Tar Heels on Saturday.
After the Indiana game, Williams said that it had been difficult but fun.
"First of all, I'd like to say that I'm happy to be here smiling," he said. "The Mississippi River trick worked again. Thank goodness it runs all the way down to New Orleans."
The Jayhawks had spit into the river earlier that day for good luck and plan to do it again at the Big Easy.
Williams said that earning the berth against a team like Indiana made it even more special. The Hoosiers have won five national championships. Kansas will be making its tenth trip to the Final Four and vying for its third national championship.
"We're talking about two tradition- rich programs," Williams said.
Senior guard Rex Walters was more subdued than some of his teammates after the victory.
"I're really proud of my teammates and myself," he said. "What we have is a chance of a lifetime."
INSIDER
Reality on a microchip
Reality-based computer simulation games such as SimCity and Civilization are challenging video game buffs with gaming that requires strategy, foresight and logic. These complex games are appealing to students and even have been used in classes at KU.
See story, Page 3.
Ordinance could be costly for greek houses
By Ben Grove
Some fraternity and sorority members are awaiting a Lawrence City Commission decision that may require them to install fire sprinklers in nearly every room of their houses.
Kansan staff writer
The commission will vote tomorrow on the city's fire ordinance which includes an amendment that strengthens the codes for congregate residences, such as fraternity and sorority houses.
If the commission approves the amendment, some Greek houses may face expenses from sprinkler installments that would cost tens of thousands of dollars.
Thirteen of KU's 39 greek houses that were by definition congregate residences already had sprinklers throughout the houses, according to Lawrence Fire Maj. Richard Barr. He estimated that there were 10 houses that had no sprinklers at all.
Lambda Chi Alpha president Lance Weeks, Downs senior, said that his house had no sprinklers and that a four-year-old estimate set the price of installing sprinklers at $35,000.
"We'd probably have to raise dues and also borrow some money to install them," he said.
The commission tomorrow will decide a deadline for installation. Three- and five-year deadlines have been discussed.
Weeks said it would take time for his fraternity to raise the money needed for the sprinklers.
"The three-year time frame puts a crunch on us," he said. "Ideally, we realize we need to put fire sprinklers in, but it is a burden on us."
sorority about $10,000 in 1988 and had no estimate about what it would take to finish the installation.
Shelley Clark, Topeka sophomore and Delta Gamma house manager, said that five years ago her sorority had installed sprinklers on three floors of the house but not on the first floor. She said it cost the
The fire sprinkler code amendment was modeled after one in Berkeley, Calif., that was enacted 120 days after a fire there claimed the lives of several fraternity members.
"We don't want that to happen here," said Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain. "We think it is a specific life safety problem we need to address."
the installation of Naismith Hall, a private residence hall at 1800 Naismith Drive, also will have to install sprinklers if the proposed amendment passes. Installation estimates for Naismith range from $75,000 to $90,000.
The fire code amendment would not affect other residence halls on campus or any other campus buildings that are under state — not city — jurisdiction. The amendment also would not affect apartment buildings in Lawrence.
Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain said the increasing number of fires in Greek houses
Dousing fire threats
increasing number of fires in greek houses
six since 1909 — made an ordinance
mandating sprinklers necessary. Here are
the most serious greek house fires
since 1967.
186. 24, 1987 — Sigma Phi Epsilon, 1645
Tennessee St., cause; electrical, $400,000
damage, five injured.
May 1967 - Phi Gamma Delta, 1540 Louisiana St. cause; not available.
$455,000 damage; none injured.
Jan. 20, 1978 - Delta Upsilon, 1025 Emery Road, cause, candle, $200,000 damage, none injured.
Dec. 9, 1991 — Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
1301 West Campus Road, cause: candle;
$180.00 damage, none injured.
.
April 6, 1994 — Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
cause; electrical; $85,000 damage; none
injured.
2
Monday, March 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
cotton island
642 Mass. LIBERTY HALL 749 1912 The theater is accessible to all persons
LIBERTY HALL
642 Mass 749-
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Theatre 41 is accessible to all persons
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-Siskel and Ebert
Damage (R)(Th.1)
Daily:(+45)7:15:9-45
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The Crying Game (R)(Th.2)
Daily:(+45)7:00:9-30
Dickinson
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CB4 . R(5.10) 7.20 & 9.20
Ground Hog Day . PG(5.10) 7.15 & 9.10
Fire in the Sky . PG(5.10) 7.10 & 9.15
Point of No Return . PG(5.00) 7.05 & 9.20
Born Yesterday . PG(5.10) 7.15 & 9.25
Hear No Evil . R(5.15) 7.25 & 9.30
Times good Mon.-Thurs.
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Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Film Hall, Lawrence, KC 60455
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Interviews will be held March 31, from 10a.m.-2p.m. Sign up in the Placement Center, 110 Burge Union.
ups
FOEM/E
You Can Go Home Again!!! Welcome back University of Kansas alumna and winner of the 1990 Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions
PHYLLIS PANCELLA mezzo-soprano PERFORMING WITH THE NEW WORLD STRING QUARTET
Curtis Macmacer, violin Jeffrey Irvine, viola Vahn Armstrong, violin Ross Harbaugh, cello
The program will include the world premiere of Lowell Liekermann's Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking; Op. 41
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
A Mid America Arts Alliance program
office, Kansas
senior citizens and other
7864 39B2. Partially
Kansas University Endowment
8:00 p.m. Friday April 2,1993 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Office, KU student tickets available through the SUA Office, Kansas University, all seats reserved, public $15 & $13, KU and K 12 students $7.50 & $6.50, senior citizens and other students $14 & $12, to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard, call 913/864-3982. Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Tree, Swatshield Society, and the Kansas University Endowment
STUDENT
SENIOR
$^{1/2}$Price for KD Students
made possible by the Student Senate
ON CAMPUS
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Association will hold a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 864-7317.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will hold its business meeting today. For more information, call GLSOK offices at 864-3091.
International Studies and Programs will hold a worldview lecture, "The Resistance of the French People," from noon to 1 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
- International and European Studies Committee and the Hall Center for the Humanities will hold an open forum, "Migration, Nationalism and Human Rights", from 3:00 to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Jawhayk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the Office of International Studies at 864-4141.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 843-6250 or Laura Hanson at 842-6887.
Annney International will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 832-8337.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will hold its meeting at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-4256.
Triathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7:30 tomorrow night at Robinson Center Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Beth Powers at 864-4606.
WEATHER
Omaha: 70'/39'
LAWRENCE: 75'/45'
Kansas City: 76'/42'
St. Louis: 78'/47'
Wichita: 79'/50'
Tulsa: 78'/49'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 66'/46'
Chicago: 48'/37'
Houston: 74'/50'
Miami: 79'/70'
Minneapolis: 42'/30'
Phoenix: 83'/58'
Salt Lake City: 61'/40'
Seattle: 51'/41'
TODAY
Partly cloudy with evening
High: 75'
Low: 45'
Tomorrow
65 percent chance of showers.
High: 65'
Low: 42'
Wednesday
Cloudy.
High: 64'
Low: 41'
Source: KU Weather Service: 864-3300. KANSAN
Tomorrow Wednesday
Partly cloudy with evening
65 percent chance of Cloudy.
Sunny
Typists make life easier for students
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
Fortunately for those students, there are typing services available.
Typing essays and reports is an integral part of a college student's career. Yet many students do not have typewriters or computers, do not know how to type or simply do not want to.
The average cost is $1 to $2 a page.
Last-minute jobs cost more, usually twice the normal rate.
The services, which are provided by people in their own homes, include typing term papers, dissertations and resumes. Some typists will edit papers and even do rush jobs on items that are due the following day.
Jewell Willhite, a Lawrence resident who has provided her typing services for the last four years, said most of her customers were students, but that she has typed letters for businessmen.
The quality of the written material
she receives varies, Willhite said. Grammar, word usage and spelling reflect upon the different abilities of her customers. Sometimes even the handwriting is hard to read, she said.
"There are some intelligent students and some that don't belong in college. Willie hurt. There also are English students who don't understand English grammar."
Pam Wagner, also a Lawrence resident, said she started her typing service because she liked to type.
Wagner said that a majority of her jobs are last-minute jobs. People will call requesting her services because they are in a bind.
"I had one guy finish writing a paper in my kitchen," Wagner said.
INTRAMURAL INDOOR
One student went to Wagner because his computer had crashed the day before, and he had a paper due the next day.
The emergencies Wagner's customers face can range from truly hopeless situations to seemingly trivial ones.
Managers Meeting Tuesday
March 30,1993
7:00 115 Robinson
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March 31,1993
8:30-4:00
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All others may sign up in 208 Robinson Thurs. April 1, 1993 IF SPACE IS AVAILABLE
SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES 208 ROBINSON 864-3546
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications for OFFICE & WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for 1993-1994 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
DEADLINE
Return NEW Applications to SUA Office by 5:00 pm on MARCH 31,1993
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 29, 1993
3
New mall raises concerns
Downtown shops fear competition
By Todd Selfert Kansan staff writer
The same outlet mail that may help juvenile the North Lawrence economy may harm the downtown area and the existing Riverfront Plaza outlet mail.
The Lawrence City Commission to March 16 to plan to build the 84,000 square feet.
The new mall's location on North Third Street, just south of Interstate 70, has some concerned that shoppers will neglect the downtown area.
"There is the chance that people will turn off the interstate and shop at the new mall and not go downtown," said Dan Watkins, a representative for the Riverfront Plaza.
Price Banks, Lawrence/Douglas County planning director, said another concern was that rezoning more land for commercial development
contradicted goals set in Plan 95, a comprehensive plan for land use in Lawrence through 1995.
One Plan 95 goal was to maintain the downtown area as the city's central business district.
Banks said that although existing buildings were vacant, the city was approving more commercial development than was agreed to in Plan 95.
But Rob Phillips, a member of the North Lawrence Business Association, said the New York-based Stanley K. Tanger and Company mall could provide the area with needed economic development.
"North Lawrence business people are excited about this project." Phillips said.
Banks said that although the project would increase development in North Lawrence, it also raised a concern that the area around the new mall could become overdeveloped because of other smaller projects that typically develop around malls.
Banks said that even with the concerns, the city's staff never had recommended shelving the project.
Wint Winter Jr., a representative for the Tanger group, said the new mall would help the city comply with the Plan 95 goal to maintain downtown as the city's central business district.
"With the city's growth to the south and west, this would also help bring balance to the north and east sides of town." Winter said.
The city commission has approved development plans for two Walgreen's stores, a Hy-Vee supermarket and a Wal-Mart store. All of the sites are in south or west Lawrence, well outside the area recognized as the downtown in Plan 95.
Winter said the new mall would be an extension of the central business district.
"Extending the downtown is an interesting concept," Watkins said. "They're saying that this project will be complimentary to the business center of Lawrence. I'm not sure I agree with that."
Watkins, the Riverfront Plaza representative, said describing the project as an extension of the business district was an overstatement.
New businesses develop on Lawrence's horizon
Some Lawrence businesses and
some cities are concerned that the
downtown area will be hurt
by new business or the loss of
new businesses in other areas.
Tanger Mall North Third and I-70
Walgreen's Sixth and Kasold
Sixth Street
Downtown business district
Walgreen's 23rd and Louisiana
Massachusetts Street
Iowa Street
Hy-Vee Clinton Parkway and Kasold
23rd Street
WalMart 31st and Iowa
59
40
KANSAS RIVER
56
10
KANSAS
FINAL POUR
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Rain orshine
Even through yesterday's rain, the frenzy for Final Four T-shirts continued. These shirts were being sold outside the Kansas Union. However, many Lawrence businesses reported that KU memorabilia sales were brisk.
Late break Bars prime places to view Jayhawks while on vacation
Late break disrupts fan unity during victories
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
While the Kansas men's basketball team traveled the road to the Final Four, many of its fans took a detour last week.
While the 'Hawks spent their spring break playing in the NCAA basketball tournament in Chicago and St. Louis, many of their supporters were at the beach or on the ski slopes.
Lawrence senior Wade Freeman was in Dillon, Colo. on a ski trip.
"We weren't certain that the BYU game would be shown because they were showing mostly Western Region games," said Freeman, who was relieved to find the game broadcast in the region.
Freeman said that although the victories against Brigham Young and California were great, he was disappointed that all the students couldn't have been together in Lawrence.
"It's too bad spring break didn't come a week earlier," he said. "But now that all the students are back, we'll be out in full force if we happen to beat North Carolina."
Ixtapa.Mexico.
Another diehard Jayhawk fan, Chicago senior Adam Moriet, was not in Lawrence last week. In fact, he was not even in the United States. Moritz spent his week away from classes in
He said that he and his family were getting groceries when they passed by a bar and saw the BYU game on television.
However, watching Kansas play California would not be as easy.
"There were a lot of California fans there," he said. "They were pretty rowdy, but when Rex hit his fourth three-pointer, they pretty much shut up."
"The place was having problems with their satellite dish," he said. "I had to call the cable man, speaking in Spanish, and have him come to the bar and find the right channel."
Moritz also said that he and his family were not the only basketball fans in Mexico.
during Saturday's Indiana game, but his luck with viewing the games had not run out. The pilot called a 45-minute delay, and Moritz watched the end of the game at the airport.
Moritz's flight home was scheduled
Brian Merckens, Dearbom, Mich., senior, was one of the Jayhawk fans who spent his spring break the same place he spends the whole semester — at school.
Merckens said that since most of the students were gone, the school unity was not as strong as it was in 1991.
"When we beat Indiana in the third round of the 1991 tournament, everyone went nuts and stayed that way for the next three games," Merkens said. "This year, after beating Cal, there were only about 250 students at Wescoe. But things were back to normal after the Indiana game."
Joe Heim, Clarence, N.Y., graduate student, tries to conquer Civilization, a computer simulation game that pitted Heim — as Emperor of the Mongolians — against the world.
Simulation fans like designing game strategy
By Brian James Special to the Kansan
What Joe Heim saw shocked him. An armada of Russian ships was right off the coast with a phalanx of French soldiers not far behind, threatening the very existence of his peace-loving continent and the thousands of people living there.
As Emperor Joe, leader of the Mongolians, he decided he had to do what was best for his people.
He turned off his computer. "I really hate to see my people suffer," he said.
Besides, he had more important work to do than play Civilization, a computer simulation software game, all night.
Civilization, introduced in 1991, is just one in a growing field of reality-based computer simulation games that cater to users with more sophisticated tastes — often, those who don't like Nintendo.
"Simulations offer a real challenge," said Heim, a Clarence, N.Y., graduate student. "You have to plan strategies, be knowledgeable and think about long-range effects of your actions in order to be successful. The game isn't decided on how fast you can hit your finger on the paddle button."
Typical simulation fans are in their 20s and 30s, software industry experts say.
"They don't appreciate the no-brainer games anymore where you blow things up and shoot people," said Glenn Pericvall, a sales associate for Electronics Boutique at Oak Park Mall in Overland Park. "There are more like chess games, with logic and realistic consequences involved with every action."
Jeremy Littlejohn, Ottawa sophomore, has been playing simulation games for a couple of years with his friends. He has three of the games, but Civilization is his favorite.
Like many simulation fans, he enjoys the game's complexity.
"Building up your civilization throughout history with technology and warfare advances makes it in-depth and so real," he said.
Computer users now enjoy a diverse selection of simulations in which they can play out alternative careers.
SimCity, introduced in 1989, offers a chance for aspiring mayors to build their own city, juggling everything from taxes and property values to crime and traffic congestion. The game, like most other simulations, is essentially a balancing act: raise taxes and people leave town; cut the police budget and crime increases and the value of property plummets.
Other simulation software like SimLife and SimEarth allow simulation users to play with evolutionary processes involving various life forms and formations of land masses. Railroad Tycoon and A-Train let users work at becoming ruthless railroad barons. Crisis in the Kremlin and Shadow President are games that allow power-hungry simulation players to run countries.
The games, which are sold in disk format, are compatible with most personal computers, including Macintosh and IBM computers. Prices generally fall in the $25 to $50 range.
Sally Vandershall is a representative of Maxis, the software company that developed SimCity and similar games. She said that the unique possibilities the simulation games offered made them distinct from other games.
Greg Keizer, a consulting editor for PC Games, said simulations had practical applications also.
Vandershaft said booming computer sales in the past five years and the availability of powerful computers at lower prices, opened up new markets of software users.
"I see potential for some of these to be used in schools for history and science. SimCity has already been used in some college-level classes to teach city development."
Donna Luckey, KU associate professor of architecture and urban design, used SimCity in an urban planning course three years ago. She plans to use two other simulation games, Fish Bank and Stratigem, in two environmental planning courses next semester.
Luckey said that simulations were not widely used in KU classrooms but that they were effective teaching aids.
"I strongly favor gaming because you learn to be a decision-maker and work with all this feedback, which is helpful in any level of construction," she said.
"It's usually a fun thing to work with, too. We tie it in with something larger, and apply it to a lesson."
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NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY!!!
4
OPINION
Monday, March 29, 1993
25
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
KU fans should celebrate victories responsibly
The University of Kansas' victory Saturday vaulted it into the Final Four and stirred the Lawrence community into a celebration frenzy. Many strucommunity into a celebration frenzy. Many students rushed Wescoe Beach and Jayhawk Boulevard to display their pleasure with KU's victory. The team's victory is a time for celebration, but students should exercise common sense in their revelry.
Times are different from two years ago when the Jay hawks made the Final Four. Since then, the city has passed an ordinance banning the possession of alcohol on campus. Police officers Saturday night spent much of their time enforcing the law by asking students to pour out beer bottles and cans.
With the police enforcing the alcohol law, the mixture of bottles and cans is dangerous to say the least. A few people found their bottles and cans effective projectiles. Even the shards of broken glass on the ground create a dangerous situation for the fans celebrating on campus.
Furthermore, some people set off fireworks, from small crackers to bottle rockets. With 5,000 people tightly packed into a small area, inaccurate and dangerous fireworks could strike somebody. The potential for an injury is enormous and certainly not worth the risk.
When the Jayhawks win their next two games on Saturday and next Monday, there will certainly be a rush to campus. Given the fact that many people will be drinking and even more people will be in town, all persons choosing to celebrate at the heart of campus should use common sense when doing so.
Those who bring alcohol to campus will do so in a futile effort. Bottles and cans are bound to be poured out by police. Kansas basketball deserves to be celebrated, but the celebration should not lead to injury.
Be careful and respectful of your fellow fans
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Affirmative action creates problems it should prevent
I am not against equal opportunity for all people, but to favor one party whether it be because of race, ethnicity, religion, sexual preference or gender snacks of just the opposite. Affirmative action can lead to quotas, and quotas can lead to mediocrity. Hiring by quota guarantees, in some instances, that people who are more qualified for a job will be denied that position. And what happens to the person who is less qualified? It's obvious. The employer will have to spend more money training the worker who is less qualified.
Some would say that journalists, college professors and politicians live in ivory towers, and in the case of Andrew Gilman's column on affirmative action and equality, I find this to be true. It appears that political correctness has really struck this university in Gilman's column. In the column, Gilman offered his idealistic, anti-racism proposal, which in the long run hurts everyone.
What really frightens me about Gilman's idea is that it depends on someone or something to enforce this institution of affirmative
action. Is the government going to have to spend more money in these financially tight times to enforce these quotas? Will all companies be required to have on their payroll the same percentage of minorities as are in the general population? What will be the additional cost that an already fragile, recovering economy will have to pay if Gilman's wish were to come true? Gilman says this is a small step. I want to know what constitutes the larger steps of his plan to erase discrimination.
Gilman talks about the increasing incidents of racism in this country. Has he ever considered that giving unfair advantages to minorities may cause better-qualified individuals to be racist? Has Gilman considered that programs instituted to eliminate racial discrimination on college campuses have actually caused the opposite result?
Thomas P. Grelinger Kansas City, Kan., junior
WHEN THE COMMUNISTS WERE IN POWER,
WE AT LEAST ALL HAD JOBS.
TELL US
ABOUT IT.
BASE CLOSING
BASE CLOSING
BASE CLOSING
BASE CLOSING
BASE CLOSING
THEES
UNIVERSAL PRESS, BAND.
3 © 1993 THE NEW REPUBLIC
WE CAN'T TAKE THIS
SHOCK THERAPY
I do not think anyone is arguing that racial and gender discrimination does not exist, but to propose a solution that could spread racism and sexism is, at best, ironic. What I would suggest is that individualism is a better ideal than any affirmative action program that Gilman has put forth.
Band member recalls thrills of tournament
The members of the KU basketball band and spirit squad file onto the bus. We are tired, sweaty, thirsty and sore.
And we are ecstatic.
I am writing this column as a member of the band. KU has just beaten Indiana, and we are celebrating.
"FINAL FOUR! FINAL FOUR!" we chant as the bus begins to sway back and forth.
We are on our way. Not just to Lawrence but to New Orleans.
The bus rolls out, and the driver is encouraged to reach warp speed. We want to get back as soon as we can. After all, we just might make the pep rally. Lawrence is only five hours away from St. Louis.
OK, now that things are starting to settle down a bit, and Eddie Murphy's movie, "Boomerang," begins to play on the tiny video screens, I can now reflect on the trip. I must preserve every memory of this trip. This is, after all, something I will want to relive over and over...
It's 8:30 on a cold. Thursday morning. During any normal week, campus would be jumping by this time, but this is the week of spring break. The only activity in this sleepy Lawrence town is on a bus behind Murphy Hall, where band and spirit squad members are busy loading the vehicle and wiping the sleep from their eyes.
There are no tests for me to worry about. Just basketball, my friends and my horn. Paradise.
On the way to St. Louis, Jared Klein,
Overland Park junior and alto saxophonist, finds a Danny Manning basketball card in his pack of three from McDonalds.
Luck. Are we superstitious? Yes. It rules the band and the spirit squad. It makes Jason Delong, Lawrence senior and tenor saxophonist, wear the same socks to every tournament game. (He does wash them in between the games.)
Luck makes some band members wear a Jayhawk tattoo on their left cheeks. The only tournament game I
"Hey, this is a good omen," Klein says. "I'm keenning this for luck."
KANSAN REPORTER.
DANIEL KIDMAN
DAN ENGLAND
DAN ENGLAND
have attended that the Hawks did not win, and I've been to almost every round since 1991, was the UTEP game. That was the only game that I did not wear a tattoo.
On our way to a pep rally at Schmiezings, a sports bar in St. Louis, we are given a new song to play, "St Louis Blues." We begin to practice by singing our notes together before we have to play it in front of the hundreds of KU fans who will be attending the rally. The cheerleaders roll their eyes.
The bus stops across from the bar, where we begin to play and warm up. Notes come out in short, excited bursts.
Nervous energy
Once we arrive at the arena, we are led into a deep, dark tunnel underneath the stadium. It reminds me of a dungeon. Muffled activity can be heard from the Louisville-Indiana game.
Time out. We are allowed to go to our section in the front.
We enter the stadium, and the KU fans jump up and begin to cheer. Electricity fills the air. Welcome to the NCAA tournament.
Band members, rookies and veterans alike, feel their hair raise on end.
"It's like a regular season game with eight times the intensity," says Scott Jarboe, Olathe freshman and trombonist.
With five minutes left in the California game and KU leading by 10, the Rock Chalk chant begins to echo through the stadium.
Friday is a day for reflection and recovery. Our chops are tired, our bodies are sore and our throats hurt.
wants this to last as long as possible. He doesn't know if he will be back next year.
"I hate it," Fuchs says. "it really hurts. These are 30 of my closest friends, and this is the thing I'll miss the most."
Saturday. The big game.
Relax. RELAX? Yeah, right. Some band members wring their hands. Others just walk around. Anything to calm the nerves. And we aren't the only ones.
We are in the arena two hours before the big game starts. Band members pace back and forth. Fuchs tells us to have a seat.
"You can't help but get pumped up with the atmosphere," says Sonya Snyder, Topeka senior and captain of the cheerleaders.
Tawny Hall, Topeka senior, says "I'm so nervous, I feel like I'm playing the game."
Band members are told not to jump up or stand during the game. So when KU scores we jump to our knees and pound the floor, screaming.
Jeff Fuchs, director of the band.
I hate to be a gushing teenager, but it was totally awesome.
Let's face it. No one cheers for you for playing an instrument. But in the tournament we were cheered several times. We were celebrities. It felt good. Really good.
When time ran out and the players began to cut down the nets, that was their moment. When the team had its rally at Allen Field House, which we missed by ten minutes, that was its moment. The team sure deserved it.
Our moment comes when there were two minutes left on the clock, with KU leading by 11. Time out is called. We jump up and begin hugging each other. We know the game is ours. And then we begin to play "In the Stone," one of our trademark songs. The crowd goes nuts. Organized chaos. To be a part of this, to be a factor of the victory, to celebrate and play together.
This is our moment. And it is sweet.
Dan England is a Lenexa junior majoring in journalism.
STEPHEN MARTIN Jayhawks overcome predictions
It was no small feat making it to the Big Easy, but the Jayhawks did it. Roy's boys, counter to the predictions of the pundits, went ballistin on Ball State and BYU, schooled Jaskid Kison and California and became the only conference team to ever beat Bobby Houssers twice in the same season.
But with Kansas' fans in the national media, like most announcers at CBS, a person might think that the Jay-hawks are more worthless than Coach Williams' favorite opponent, St. Mary's sisters of the Blind.
Mike Francesca, CBS' regular sit-behind the desk-and pick-the-East- Coast teams commentator, made a few predictions that didn't set well with Rex Walters. Namely, that he was in line to be upset by Bull State.
Walters then launched into a verbal trade about Francesa's qualifications to analyze basketball teams. Walters' point: Francesa doesn't apparently have any. Yet, what are we to expect from CBS? Sweetly, she says: "The exception of James Brown, is the clef in one respect or another."
Of course, what should we expect from CBS, the network that gave us Bill Walton in 1991. Walton is yet another example of someone who played the game well but couldn't cover it to save his life. Like Francesca, Walton in 1991 predicted a first-round victory by playing at the hands of New Orleans. Obviously, Walton isn't going to be getting a job as an odds-maker anytime soon as Kansas made it to the championship game that year.
Accordingly, as fans, we have to be content knowing our team is one of the most fundamentally sound, our coach is one of the best and brightest, and people like Mike Francesca earned their right to gab from a high-priced broadcast school and not by putting leather on a wood floor.
How soon people forget that Kansas is the third-most successful program in NCAA history and has been in just as many Final Fours as Kentucky.
STEPHEN MARTIN
As for recent history, Kansas has been in four of the last eight Final Fours, a total surpassed only by Duke. Kansas captured its third consecutive Big Eight championship this season. Oklahoma won the All-Big Eight Conference and Steve Woodberry second-team by the Associated Press.
Roy Williams, in his five years at Kansas, is 132-36 including an 11-3 record in the tournament. That's a 785 overall winning percentage. Williams was named 1992 National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press and twice Big Eight Coach of the Year by AP. Williams is so highly thought of that he was the only known college coach approached in the summer of 1992 by the Los Angeles Lakers to fill their head coaching spot.
KANSAN STAFF
Kansas has plenty to be proud of from its student-athletes. Despite the doubles, jayhawk fans benefit by seeseeing the team compete in basketball programs in the nation.
On Friday, the Kansan will produce a special section to recognize the team for their efforts and what they have accomplished this year. Seeing how they won't see or hear many poses from the audience beneath the beltway, the Kansan is committing as much space as necessary to run letters wishing the team well. I am sure you'll be Kinder than most so-called professional journalists.
Editorial Editor Stephen Martino is an alo
the senior malaring in political science.
GREG FARMER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG Managing editor
BILL SKEET, Technology coordinator
General manager, news adviser
Astet Managing | Justin Knuck
News | Monique Guialain
David Mitchell
Editorial | Stephen Martino
Campus | KC Trauer
Sports | David Mitchell
Campus | Mark Rowlands
Features | Lynne McAdoo
Graphics | Dan Schauer
business manager
MELISSA TERLIP
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
EDITORIAL EDITOR
N
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr Bred Braden
Regional sales mgr Wade Baster
National sales mgr Jennifer Perrier
Co-op sales mgr Aahley Hessel
Production mgrs Ashley Langford
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Creative director Holly Parry
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TOM EBLEN
MARVE PERRY
Business manager
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number.riters affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staircase-Fire Hall
1906 FM
"... AND THIS IS THE REMAINS OF THE VICTORY CELEBRATION SATURDAY NIGHT, AS KANSAS BEAT INDIANA TO REACH THE FINAL FOUR FOR THE 10TH TIME."
KUu
HI, I'M MIKE FRANCESA OF CBS
SPORTS FILLING IN FOR DIDD, KU
ROLLED IT OFF FOLKS, AND I
KNEW ALL RONGS THEY COULD
DO IT. I'M TEVING TO
GET AN
INTERVIEW
WITH
REX...
2008 BOB CHAIN
CBS
music
BUT I CAN'T SEEM TO FIND HIM OR ANYONE ELSE TO TALK TO... CLOSET UP OF THE BOWFISH
KA POW!
By
By Moses Smith
[NOW, ALL THE KANSAS FANS,
WHOSE HAND JUST CAME
IN THE PICTURE] ...?
GOOD
SHOT.
REX.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 29, 1993
5
© 1993 Teachers Insurance and Academy Association College Retirement Equity Fund
Budget battle continues
Proposal's road could be rough
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Round one in the battle of the nation's struggling economy is about to go to President Clinton. But his recovery plan, which now looks sturdy, has soft spots that might be bruised in the nastier brawls Congress will wage soon, some say.
Lawmakers, aides and lobbyists watching the budget plan's progress believe that Clinton's proposals to raise spending for road repairs and other programs, to boost the energy tax and to bestow an investment tax credit on companies face rough going.
Republicans and even some Democrats will be leading the charge for alterations.
"We start shooting with real bullets from here on," Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., promised last week after his chamber approved a preliminary blueprint of Clinton's budget package.
The House passed its own version of the budget bill and has approved a separate short-term stimulus bill, which includes $16.3 billion for summer jobs, unemployment insurance, highway projects and various other civic improvements.
The Senate takes up the jobs bill this week. By week's end, Congress will have all but certainly blessed a final version of the budget outline, which reflects the economic medicine Clinton prescribed in a national television address just six weeks ago.
It will envision increase tax increases and spending cuts to trim $500 billion off budget deficits during the next five years, plus long-term increases for a list of domestic programs Clinton says will spur economic growth.
But that measure is just a statement of goals.
Actual tax and spending changes will be made in legislation that Democratic leaders hope to finish this summer. At that point, the stakes get higher, because lawmakers will be voting directly to raise their constituents' taxes or cut programs in their home districts.
Then Republicans hope they can cure away enough Democrats to unravel Clinton's package. But Democratic leaders disagree.
"We think we're going to pass the president's program largely intact," said Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine.
Democrats say the plan's tax increases on the rich are unshakable.
defend Clinton's planned defense cuts, which are about $110 billion deeper than President Bush had planned for the next five years.
Republicans want to cut the reduction in half, and predict that in an unstable world and with domestic defense jobs at stake, they will get enough Democratic support to do it.
They also say they successfully will
Bitter fights also loom later this year when Congress puts its domestic spending bills together.
That is because the budget will hold these programs to slightly less money than would be needed to stay even with inflation. The competition will be fierce — especially because Clinton wants to give big boosts to jobtraining and dozens of other programs to help the economy grow.
As a result, Clinton probably won't get all the increases he wants. And perennially favorite targets like the $40 billion space station and the $8 billion superconducting super collider are likely to face big pressure for cuts.
Another big battleground will be the tax Clinton has proposed on energy use. The broad tax, based on a fuel's heat content, is supposed to raise $70 billion in five years, making it one of the cornerstones of his package.
Russian Congress' attempt to oust Yeltsin and rival fails
The Associated Press.
MOSCOW—Both President Boris Yeltsin and his chief political rival claimed victory yesterday after surviving an attempt by the Russian Congress to remove them from office.
But the secret ballot by the Congress of People's Deputies left the country's political crisis unresolved after a dramatic day of rejected compromise and huge street rallies.
"A Communist coup has failed." Yeltsin told thousands of cheering supporters outside the Kremlin after the vote. "The people have won."
Despite the euphoria, Yeltsin is in is the same predicament he faced before the Congress convened Friday. He vowed to press ahead with an April 25 referendum to resolve his power struggle with the parliament, dominated by former Communists who want to slow his free-market reforms.
Waving his fist, he then led the crowd in a chant of "Russia! Russia! Russia!"
The parliament's electoral commission announced 617 legislators cast their ballots for Veltins' ouster, 72 short of the 689 votes — or two-thirds of the Congress — needed to remove him.
Only 339 lawmakers voted to replace Yelisin's rival, parliament speaker Ruslan Khasbulat. At least 517 votes, a simple majority of the 1,033 member Congress, would have been needed to replace the 50-year-old parliament leader.
The vote followed Congress' rejection of a compromise proposed by Yeltsin and Khasbulatov in an effort to end their political battle.
The compromise enraged the legislators because it would have eliminated the Congress — and their jobs — in favor of a smaller, bicameral legislature.
The Congress adjourned after the results were announced. It will reconvene today. Khasbulatov thanked the legislators for their support and said he was surprised by the outcome.
"During the three years that I have filled this post I thought many more
deputies had reason to be dissatisfied with me," he said.
Khasbulatov added that the voting signaled the need for a change in Yeltsin's economic reforms.
"When an enormous number of deputies almost remove the president from office, we all have to think about this signal very seriously," he said.
Also yesterday, Yoltsin issued a series of decrees aimed at helping the people who have been hit hardest by his economic reforms. The measures double the minimum wage, increase allowances for students and the disabled, improve health care funding for government workers and give regional governments the right to stabilize skyrocketing prices for basic goods.
Yeltsin earlier told a crowd of about 50,000 supporters who rallied outside the Kremlin that he would not step down, even if the Congress voted to oust him.
"I will obey only the will of the people," he said as he raised a clenched fist while standing on a platform under the domes of St. Basil's Cathedral.
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Bicycle
6
Monday, March 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANS
NCAA
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
Kansas junior guard/forward Steve Woodberry guards Indiana junior guard Damon Bailey. The Jayhawks defeated the Hoosiers 83:77 Saturday at the St. Louis Arena to earn a trip to the Final Four in New Orleans.
Hail to the 'Hawks
While waiting for the basketball players to arrive, Crimson Girls Tasha Hammond. Lenexa sophomore, and Sharon Zambri. Prairie Village senior, receive the help of one of the youngest Jayhawk rooters.
COLLEGE OF SPORTS
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
DUO LUCKY
The Kansas team stormed the court after the victory was sealed and began its on-the-court celebration, which included cutting down the nets.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
MILWATER
Junior guard/forward Steve Woodberry, senior center Eric Pauley and junior forward Richard Scott celebrate the victory at Allen Field House. About 12,000 fans attended a pep rally for the team after its arrival in Lawrence.
During the celebration on campus, revelers caught with alcohol are asked to empty it.
POLICE
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
In response to chants of "Roy, Roy, Roy," Kansas coach Roy Williams speaks to the Allen Field House crowd.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
---
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 29, 1993
7
Kansas' victory ends Indiana's season
Jayhawks' next stop: Final Four
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
ST. LOUIS — Thanks to sharp shooting and pressure defense, not necessarily in that order, the Kansas men's basketball team will again play near the banks of the Mississippi River — next weekend at the Final Four in New Orleans.
Kansas coach Roy Williams thinks that spitting in the river before a game brings good luck. His team performed the ritual a few hours before Saturday's night's 83-77 victory against Indiana in The St. Louis Arena.
Skill outweighed luck, however, in the second meeting this season between the Jayhawks and Hoosiers. Kansas shot 59 percent from the field while holding the Hoosiers to 45 percent during the 83-77 victory. Kansas defeated Indiana 74-69 on Dec. 5.
"When you play against an Indiana or North Carolina, you realize that you have to elevate your game," Williams said. "We've got five guys in double figures, and I was pleased with the way we played defensively. We'll be one of four teams left playing. That's as good as it gets for a coach."
North Carolina, Kentucky and Michigan round out the Final Four. Kansas will play North Carolina on Saturday in the semifinals.
Saturday in the semifinals.
Junior forward Richard Scott led the Jayhawks with 16 points against the Hoosiers. Junior forward Darrin Hancock, senior center Eric Pauley and senior guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan also scored in double figures.
Kansas led 38-34 at halftime, but the Hoosiers passed Kansas in the second half with about 13 minutes remaining. Indiana senior guard Greg Graham, who led all scorers with 23 points, scored four consecutive points and pushed Indiana ahead 50-48.
Kansas fought back with a 10-0 run that began with an eight-foot turnaround jump shot by Pauley. Sophomore guard Calvin Rayford then entered the game to give Jordan a rest.
After a three-pointer by junior forward Steve Woodberry, Rayford continued the run by assisting Walters on another three-pointer and then steal
Kansas 83. Indiana 77
KANSAS (29-6)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fa tp
Hancock 3-4 6-6 12
Scott 7-10 2-4 16
Pauley 6-12 1-1 13
Walters 4-8 3-4 12
Jordan 4-7 1-1 11
Woodberry 2-3 4-4 9
Rayford 1-3 4-4 0
Ickey 1-0 2-0 2
Ostertag 3-5 0-0 6
Gurley 1-1 0-0 2
Pearson 0-1 0-0 0
Totals 31-52 17-20 83
INDIANA (31-4)
P. Graham 0-3 0-0 0
Cheaney 10-19 2-2 22
New 3-5 3-4 9
G. Graham 8-14 4-5 23
Bailey 3-7 1-2 7
Henderson 0-1 0-2 0
Leary 2-7 2-3 6
Knight 2-7 2-3 6
Reynolds 0-1 0-0 0
Evans 1-9 0-0 0
Evans 1-9 0-0 10
20-66 12-16 77
Halftime Kansas 38, Indiana 34, 3-point
goals Kansas 4-10 (Jordan 2-3, Watters 1:
4, Woodbury 2, Pearson 1, Indiana 5)
North Carolina 27, Iowa 3, Indiana 6,
Baylor 1, Baryl 0, P Graham 1, Chester 2,
Lee 4) Rebounds Kansas 27 (Ostergate
6), Indiana (Cherey 9) Asiatis Kansas
23 (Watters 8), Indiana (Baryl 4) Total
for four Kansas 16, Indiana 20 (Attendance
18):
ring the ball from Indiana junior Damon Bailey. Rayford capped the run with a layup that put the Jayhawks ahead 58-50.
"Calvin's really stepped it up," Jordan said. "He gave me a rest, and he made a big-time steal."
Hancock, who scored 12 points and had four rebounds, made two of three outside jump shots. He also blew by three Indiana defenders along the baseline and turned around in midair for a slam dunk that put Kansas ahead 66-57 with 7:25 remaining.
"Darrin has worked hard on his jump shot in practice." Williams said. "And I didn't coach him on that dunk. I can promise you that."
PAULEY
51
AMSAS
32
WALTERS
23
KU
Indiana cut the deficit to 76-73 with another basket from Greg Graham, but a split second later, Walters was sprinting down the left sideeline with the ball. He found Jordan in the middle for a layup.
"To tell you the truth, I wanted to score," Walters said. "But I saw Adonis in the middle."
the last meeting between Kansas and North Carolina was in the semifinals of the 1991 Final Four in Indianapolis, which the Jayhawks won before losing to Duke in the championship game.
Kansas center Eric Pauley and forward Darrin Hancock go up to block a shot against Indiana's Calbert Cheaney. Both Pauley and Hancock scored in double figures to help lead the team past Indiana 83-77.
Defense slows Cheaney
Four court national title in New Orleans
The four NCAA tournament division champions will meet this Saturday in the semi final round at the Superdome in New Orleans. The winner of each game will play for the national championship Monday night.
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
Sat. April 3 5:42 p.m.
East
North Carolina Tarheels
(32-4)
Kansas Jayhawks
(29-6)
Midwest
$
Cheaney, who played 40 minutes and made 10 of 19 field goals, said that the Kansas defense eventually wore him down.
NCAA National Championship Game
Kansas Jayhawks (29-6)
"He's a great player." Woodberry said. "We knew we'd have to do a lot of things to stop him. We just wanted to be there and contest every shot that he took. Unfortunately, you can't stop a good player."
Cheeney was named the Midwest regional's Outstanding Player. His teammate, senior guard Greg Graham, finished with a game-high 23 points and also made the Mid-West regional team. Jayhawks Adonis Jordan, Richard Scott and Rex Walters were also named to the队.
MICHIGAN Michigan Wolverines (30-4)
West
On the road to New Orleans
"They got me out of sync," Cheaney said. "They played tough defense. Anytime I came off a screen, they had somebody waiting for me."
30 min. after KU-UNC
Southeast
Kentucky
Wildcats
(30-3)
Michigan
Wolverines
(30-4)
West
ST. LOUIS — Shutting down Indiana's All-American forward Calbert Cheaney became the emphasis for the Kansas defense on Saturday. Although several Jawhacks guarded him, he still managed 22 points in what would be the final performance of his college career.
Superdome,
New Orleans
Mon. April 5,
7:00 p.m.
Kansas junior forward Steve Wood- berry said that defending Cheaney was tough.
KU 2 €
Indiana coach Bob Knight said he was impressed by Kansas.
On the road to New Orleans
They did a good job on Cheaney. He got 22 points, and that's his average."
Regional KU 2. Kansas 97 6. Cali
"Calbert Cheaney and Greg Graham were sensational today." Williams said. "We knew we wouldn't be able to shut them down. What we wanted to do was hold their percentage down."
"Their defense was tough," Knight said. "They made some big individual defensive plays that resulted in three or four baskets for them.
got 22 points, and that his average.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he knew stopping Cheenay would be difficult, if not impossible.
On the Tosa to New Orleans
Round 2
KU
2. Kansas 90
7. BYU 76
Kansan staffreport
Junior forward Richard Scott guarded Cheaney shortly after tipoff. Woodberry, Darrin Hancock and Patrick Richey also took turns defending him.
KU
Sean M. Tevis / KANSAN
ST. LOUIS — The Jayhawks shot 56 percent from the floor and 73 percent from three-point range during the 93-76 victory against California last Thursday.
Senior guard Rex Walters led the Jayhawks with 24 points and made four of five three-pointers. Senior guard Adonis Jordan scored 15 and made three of four three-pointers to go along with six assists in 31 minutes of play.
Second half scoring runs of 11-0 and 8-0 sealed the victory for the Jayhawks
"Basketball is a game of runs," said California coach Todd Bozeman.
Kansan staff report
ROSEMONT, III. — Two days after defeating Ball State 94-72, the Kansas men's basketball team used a 10-0 run to pull away from Brigham Young University late in the second half, on the way to a 90-76 victory March 29.
Kansas senior guard Rex Walters scored a career-high 28 points. Nick Sanderson led the Cougars with 24 points.
Source: The Associated Press, CNN
Kansas senior center Eric Pauley said he felt a sense of relief after getting past the second round. The Jayhawks were upset last season by the University of Texas-El Paso in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
On the road to New Orleans Round 1
KU 2. Kansas 94
15. Ball State 72
Kansan staff report
ROSEMONT, III. — Kansas guard Rex Walters tied an NCAA Tournament record by making six three-pointers without a miss during the Jayhawks' first round victory March 18 against Ball State.
Walters finished with 23 points and made 7 of 9 field goals during the 94-72 victory.
Ball State kept with the lajahays until midway through the second half, when forward Steve Woodberry ignited an 8-0 run in which he made a three-pointer, a steal and an assist.
Five Jajahws scored in double figures, including forward Richard Scott, who scored 18.
Tar Heels advance
Three-pointers secure victory for North Carolina
The Associated Press
The top-seeded Tar Heels, 32-4, had a chance to beat second-seeded Cincinnati, 27-5, at the regulation buzzer yesterday, but Brian Reese missed a dunk after taking an inbounds pass with eight-tenths of a second to play.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — A dunk didn't do it in regulation, but three-pointers in overtime did. And now, North Carolina is going to the Final Four for the ninth time under Coach Dean Smith.
on to play.
Donald Williams took care of things in overtime, making consecutive three-pointers as North Carolina beat the Bearcats 75-68 and kept Cincinnati from returning to the Final Four.
"Generally, you let down after a missed chance like that," Smith said. "We regrouped against an excellent basketball team, a difficult team to play against."
The Tat Heels were in trouble in the first
North Carolina will meet Kansas in the national semifinals Saturday in New Orleans.
half when Cincinnati guard Nick Van Exel snapped out of a tournament-long shooting slump with 21 points, all but three on 3-point field goals. The Bearcats led by as many as 15 points in the first half.
North Carolina rallied to take a lead late in the half and clamped down on Van Exel, holding him to two points after haftime.
"I probably wasn't looking for my shot in the second half as much as I should have, but I was trying to get everyone else involved in the scoring." Van Exel said. "Down the stretch, I didn't hit the big ones."
n mammals, North Carolina's only legitimate perimeter threat, finished with 20 points, but the big six came on the overtime three-pointers, which gave the Tar Heels a 74-68 lead with 1.53 to play.
"In the second half, we wanted to make sure we ran at him, but we have to give credit to Derrick Phelps." Williams said. "He did an outstanding job on him, wearing him down and getting him tired."
Williams thought North Carolina guard Derrick Phelps had a lot to do with it.
"I didn't get any shots at the end of regulation because they were expecting me to," Williams said. "In the overtime, as soon as I crossed midcourt I could hear coach yelling 'knock it down.'"
Final Four trip caps Wildcats' resurgence
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Four years after Coach Rick Pitino arrived at Kentucky to find a basketball program in shambles, the Wildcats are as healthy as ever.
The Associated Press
"It's an unbelievable feeling," Pitino said Saturday after Kentucky won the Southeast regional with a 106-81 victory against Florida State. "Everybody dreams about going to the Final Four, and we're one of the lucky ones this year."
The Final Four berth is Kentucky's 19th, but its first since 1984.
since 1894, the Wildcats have endured a recruiting scandal that forced out Coach Eddie Sutton and landed Kentucky on NCAA probation for two years.
When Ptinio left the New York Knicks to coach at Kentucky in 1989, he found plenty of emotional wounds and just eight scholarship players.
So Pitino went out and signed Jamal Mashburn, a 6-foot-8 forward, who has proven to be the cornerstone of the Wildcats' rapid resurgence.
Now, Kentucky is headed for New Orleans, gunning for the school's sixth NCAA championship.
The Wildcats shot 54.3 percent for Florida state. While the Seminoles' speed helped them for a while against Kentucky's pressure, the Wildcats eventually wore them down to produce another blowout.
The Associated Press
Michigan eliminates Owls
SEATTLE — Instead of excitement in the Michigan locker room, the prevailing mood was sheer relief, a sense that all the pressure the team had put on itself and felt from critics was suddenly wiped out.
it was wiped out with one super second half after starting out with a dismal
"We've been feeling the pressure," sophomore forward Ray Jackson said. "This whole tournament we've been playing not to lose. I think now that we're back to the Final Four, we're going to let everything hang out."
The Wolverines told as if this victory finally would end the criticism that Michigan doesn't play up to its potential for 40 minutes a game.
It was wiped out, at last, by a 77-72 victory yesterday against a good, disciplined Temple team that could not match Michigan's strength, talent and depth in the NCAA West regional final.
"We've been labeled as underachievers, people who would rather showbout than work hard," sophomore guard Jimmy King said. "But there's nothing wrong if you showbout, work hard and get to the Final Four."
Sophomore guard Jalen Led michigan with 17 points — 13 in the second half — as he took control of the offense along with King, who had 14 points. Sophomore center Chris Webber, who survived a beating under the boards, had 13 points and 12 rebounds and was named the West regional's outstanding player.
For the third straight game, Michigan played inconsistently. Fortunately for the Wolverines, they put together their best play in the second half against the Owls, coming back after trailing by 10 points.
"My first two attempts, I made it the Final Four," Webber said. "A lot of fifth-year seniors can't say that. I'm not relieved. I'm confident."
Sophomore guard Rick Brinson led Temple, 20-13, with 21 points. Junior swinger Eddie Jones, troubled by early fouls, scored 18.
Michigan, 30-4, was aided in the final minutes by a technical call against Temple coach John Chaney. The Owls trailed only 67-62 with 149 left when Chaney screamed about a call. Chaney argued afterward that he was yelling at his own player.
that, and other calls, allowed Michigan to pull away with five free throws — and a 72-62 lead with 136 left.
8
Monday, March 29, 1993
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Freshman excels against seniors
Kidd hopes to gain status of Hurley
By David Dorsey
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
California freshman Jason Kidd dribbles around senior guard Adonis Jordan during Kansas' game last Thursday. Kidd had 13 points and 10 assists in the game but fouled out with 1:21 remaining in the Jayhawks 93-76 victory.
ROSEMONT, III. — Shortly after Kansas defeated Brigham Young in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, Duke and California squared off in the first of two games that marked the changing of the guard.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
The nation's top senior point guard, Duke's Bobby Hurley, matched up with the nation's top freshman point guard, California's Jason Kidd.
The results for both were spectacular. Hurley played the entire game, scored a career-high 32 points and had nine assists.
Kidd, however, came on top. Although he scored just 11 points, he led all players with 14 assists, had four steals and scored California's most crucial basket. He was fouled while putting in an off balance shot off the glass that put the Golden Bears up for good.
CALIFORN
5
California won 82-77 and advanced to the Sweet 16 in St. Louis to play Kansas where Kidd matched up with the Jayhawks' senior point guard, Adonis Jordan, an honorable mention All-American.
Jordan prevailed, scoring 15 points and handed out six assists during the 93-76 victory. Kidd scored 13 points and 10 assists but had four turnovers and fouled out of the game.
Kidd said that he enjoyed playing against Hurley and Jordan, who he considered two of the top point guards in the nation.
"That's the NBA schedule," Kidd said after the Duke game. "But why
not go up against the best. That's the only way you can improve your game. I went up against Adonis when I was a freshman in high school, so it's almost deja vu for me."
Kidd went to St. Joseph of Notre Dame High School in Alameda, Calif. He was heavily recruited by California, and ironically by Kansas. Choosing California, he said, was a difficult decision, but one he did not regret.
"It's a decision that stays with you for the rest of your life," he said. "Staying home and letting my parents watch me play like they did when I was in high school on weighed going to the Midwest to Kansas."
Kidd said that the Jayhawks' depth at the guard positions also affected his decision.
"They've got a lot of great ball players," Kidd said. "You've got Rex Walters, and you've got Adonis at the other guard. Maybe I could have come off the bench somewhere, but Steve Woodbury's playing well and they have Calvin Rayford, who is an underclassman. Maybe I would have had to find myself a nice cushion for my seat down there on the bench."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said there were three point guards he saw play in high school that had impressed him the most. Kidd was one of them. The others were Derek Harper and Kenny Anderson, who both play in the NBA.
"We recruited Jason for a long, long time," Williams said. "We started recruiting him when he was a freshman, and we did feel like we had a good chance. Jason is a great young man. He's not going to be a heckuva player. He already is a heckuva player."
And while Jordan and Hurley are
likely to move on to the NBA. Kidd has three years of college eligibility remaining.
Kidd said that he hoped to attain the same consistency as Hurley, who led Duke to two consecutive national championships.
"I think Hurley had a great career,"
Kidd said. "To be out there with that kind of player, you just have to keep it inside you. You don't want to show the emotion of playing against somebody like that. It's like a dream come true because every ball player wants to go up against the best."
Teammates, family mourn pitcher's death
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — With the team chaplain asking, "Why Steve? Why now," the ashes of Cleveland Indians pitcher Steve Olin were buried yesterday high in the Tulatil Mountains.
About 300 people jammed the small chapel of Skyline Funeral Home west of Portland, where Olin was remembered by family, friends and teammates as a loving husband and father with an infectious sense of humor. His ashes were interred with memenents of his life.
Olin, 27, and teammate Tim Crews, 31, were killed a week ago when their 18-foot bass boat hit a pier on Little Lake Nellie, near the Indians' training camp in Winter Haven, Fla.
"Life has many mysteries." team
chaplain Tom Petersburg said of the suddenness of the deaths.
He urged the family and team not to despair, but to remember the good times they had shared with Oln.
"Memories keep us from moving toward resentment," Petersburg said.
Olin's wife, Patti, greeted friends' at the chapel door with warm smiles and hugs between sniffles. She was surrounded by support- family members, including her parents and Olin's sisters.
Drafted by Cleveland in 1987, Olin played rookie baseball in Burlington, N.C., and worked his way up through the farm system. He made his big league debut in 1989, and had his first full year with Cleveland in 1992, when he led his team in saves with 29.
Royals lose to Astros, 8-4
The Associated Press
KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Karl Rhodes hit a three-run homer in a four-run seventh inning, leading the Houston Astros to an 8-4 victory yesterday against the Kansas City Royals.
Rhodes, battling for a job as an outfield reserve, had three hits and scored two runs.
first home run of spring training.
Casey Candeale opened the seventh against Kansas City receiver Ricky Rojas with a single Jack Daugherty singled one out later. With two outs, Chris Donnells singled to right field, scoring Candeale and breaking a 3-tie.
Daugherty closed Houston's scoring by hitting a two-out home run in the eighth off Rusty Meacham.
Rhodesthen hit a1-1 pitch off the scoreboard in right field for his
The Astros, trailing 3-1 in the sixth, pulled even when Rhodes singled off Rojas and Eddie Faubense hit his first home run in spring training
Houston opened the scoring in the first inning on Jeff Bagwell's two-out double and Chris James' single.
Kansas City went ahead with two runs in the fourth. Hubbie Brooks singled with one out and scored on Mike Macfarlane's double. One out later, Greg Gagne doubled to score Macfarlane.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 29, 1993
9
Jayhawks dominate series with Cowboys
Kansas wins despite bad conditions
By Brady Prauser
Kansan sportswriter
It was worth the wait.
The Kansas baseball team's three-game series finale here yesterday with No. 8 Oklahoma State was delayed several hours by hail and rain, but a couple hundred Jayhawk fans who weathered the storm were rewarded when play resumed.
Kansas crushed the Cowboys 9-2 yesterday, snagging its fourth victory in five games against the perennial Big Eight power. The Jayhawks split a two-game series with them earlier in the week at Stillwater, Okla., to begin conference play.
Junior right-hander Chris Corn pitched eight and two-thirds scoreless innings yesterday before allowing two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning. The victory improved Corn's record to 3-1.
Oklahoma State is 14-7 and 3-4 in conference play. The Cowboys' starting pitcher, Brad Gore, 5-1, suffered his first loss.
In the longest outing by any Kansas pitcher this season. Corn struck out 10 batters, mixing up pitches and using a sharp-breaking slider.
In 23 games, Kansas, 18-5 overall and 4-1 in the Big Eight Conference, is off to its best start since 1907.
Corn said the victory was meaningful due to the caliber of the opponent.
"It's great for our team to know we can play with teams like that," Corn said. "It means a lot to pitch well against a top队."
Oklahoma State has had a stronghold on the Big Eight Conference Championship for 12 consecutive years. It played in the College World Series eight times during that span, finishing as high as second place three times.
Corn certified senior catcher Jeff Niemieer with disrupting the Oklahoma State batters' timing by calling for the right pitches.
"They just never knew what was coming," Corn said. "They were off balance all weekend."
Senior Jimmy Walker rehealed Corn with two cots in the ninth inning.
After scoring four runs in the first two innings, Kansas exploded for five runs in the sixth inning on RBI singles by junior center fielder Darry Monroe, senior first baseman John Wuycheck and sophomore left fielder Josh leon.
wuycick had two singles, two RBI and scored three times. He said he he and his teammates were focused in the five games with Oklahoma State.
"We're not going to be intimidated by anyone" Winycheck said.
by anyone. Wayne Jenkins
Kansas used ninth-inning heroics in
Friday's and Saturday's victories
against the Cowboys, Friday, Kansas
scored five runs in the ninth inning to
win 9-8.
Saturday, the Jayhawks rallied from a 3-0 defeat to win 4-3 when sophomore third baseman Brent Wilhelm tripled and scored on an error in the ninth inning.
Last Tuesday in Stillwater the layhawks were clubbed 14-4 before rebounding to win 7-4 Wednesday.
In three home games played from March 19-21 with Chicago State. Kansas swept the series by outscoring the Cougars 62-3. The Jayhawks won 20-1, 17-0 and 25-2.
Kansas 9, Oklahoma State 2
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said the fruits of the team's labor were beginning to show.
Oklahoma State (14-7, 3-4)
| | ab | r | h | rbl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2b Rivera | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| if Benz | 5 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| cf Prodanov | 4 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| ph Heath | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| ib Dohlers | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| db Childers | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
|rf Hugo | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| c Wallace | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| ss Ocasso | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
ph Buzzard | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
3b Prueti | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
/ph 3b Grimstead | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| 31 | 2 | 6 | 1 | 1 |
Kansas (18-5, 4-1)
ab r h rbi
2b Berlinger 4 2 0 1
cf Monroe 3 2 2 1
wBiycheck 4 3 2 1
c Niemier 5 0 2 1
if igou 4 0 1 1
rf Tarquinio 4 0 1 1
wBilheim 3 0 0 1
dn soul 4 1 1 0
ss Rude 4 1 1 0
Oklahoma St. IP H R R ER BB SO
Gale 1.2 4 1 4 2 1 2
Gorko 3.1 1 0 0 1 1
Bell 3.0 5 1 4 2 2
Kansas IP H R R ER BB SO
Corn 8.2 5 2 2 8 10
Walker .1 1 0 0 0 1
E **Bardo 2, Rivera DP Kansas 1 LOB**
Kansas 8, Oklahoma State 10 **B Niemeyer**
SB Monroe
"These kids have worked awfully hard for the five-plus years I've been here," Bingham said. "It's really the first time we're starting to see rewards from that. These kids have really hung in there."
Kansas next plays at Iowa State in a doubleheader on Wednesday.
The Jayhawks return to Hoglund-
Maupin Stadium for a 7 p.m. game.
Thursday against Wichita State.
5
Junior pitcher Chris Corn throws a strike during a rainy first inning against Oklahoma State. Corn struck out 11 Cowboys in yesterday's game. The game started late after it was delayed because of the rain.
Doud Hesse / KANSAN
Teams return from Southwest matches
Coach disappointed with performances despite victories
By Blake Spurney
Kansan sportswriter
Instead of Padre Island or Daytona Beach, the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams each traveled to the Southwest for spring break.
In San Diego, the No. 18 women's team went 2-1, while the men were 1-2 on their journey through Arizona.
Tennis
ku
The women's team, 9-6, fell to No. 20 San Diego by a score of 4-5 in its first match last Sunday and then rebounded to knock off No. 16 San Diego State 6-3 the following day. The Jayhawks also defeated Auburn 6-3 on Wednesday.
Kansas' No. 1 singles player, sophomore Rebecca Jensen, lost two of three on the trip. Jensen, who ranked 13th in the new polls, lost to Auburn's Anna Funderburk and San Diego State's Nicole Storto, but beat Julie McKeon, a top-25 player from San Diego.
for the national title."
Kansas coach Chuck Merzbacher said that Jensen was not pleased with her performance.
"In every great season you're going to have a low point," Merzbacher said about Jensen. "Hopefully this is it. She'll be one of the people to contend
He said that it was junior Mindy Weiner who had a great week. Weiner did not lose a match in singles or doubles while in California. She went into the trip as the No. 5 singles player, but moved to Nov. 2 after the first match
Kansas coach Michael Center said that he was not totally pleased with the team's play during the break.
"We play with inconsistency at times," he said. "We need to play more consistent if we are going to fight for the conference title."
Kansas also played matches on March 19 and 20 in Wichita against Wichita State and Indiana State. The Jayhawks defeated the Shockers 4-3 and drilled Indiana State 6-1.
The men's team dropped its matches at Arizona, 3-5, and at Arizona State, 1-5, on Tuesday and Wednesday. The Jayhawks beat Northern Arizona 4-3 on the Lumberjacks' home court Thursday in Sedona.
the concerters Manny Ortz and freshmen Eric Michaela and J.P. Visssep all won two of three in Arizona. However, Center said that no Jayhawk was outstanding on the trip.
PLASTIC HARDWARE
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Senior Carlos Fleming smashes the ball in practice. Fleming and the rest of the men's team compiled a 1-2 record on a spring break trip through Arizona. The Javahays lost to Arizona and Arizona State but defeated Northern Arizona.
Men's team plays in rain takes second in tournament
Bv Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
The weather continued to cause more havoc for the Kansas men's golf team this spring.
Snow and cold weather in February put the Jayhawks about three weeks behind in their preparation, according to Coach Ross Randall. Last week, it was rain that dampened the golfer's progress.
The 54-hole Baylor University Intercollegiate tournament last Monday and Tuesday at Fossil Creek Golf Club in Fort Worth, Texas, was shortened to an 18-hour tournament after thunderstorms washed out play on Monday.
we played fairly well, but I wish we had a chance to play some more rounds." Randall said. "It was OK, but it's just hard to get a read on the team from one round of competition."
The Jayhawks shot 290, giving them a second place finish, three shots behind Texas Tech.
Golf KU
Senior Brad Bruno turned in the top individual performance, shooting 71, which tied him for third place. Sophomore Tom Sims and senior Jim Young tried for fifth with rounds of 72.
Teams' airline reservations cut Tuesday's play from 36 to 18 holes.
Randall said he was pleased by the second place finish but emphasized that the most important part of the team's season was approaching.
Kansas will return to action next Monday and Tuesday at the Wichita State Shocker Invitational. Randall said he would not use his top four players, Bruno, Sims, junior Matt Gogel and junior John Hess in the tournament.
"We'll play some other players, such as Casey Brozek and Jay Hepler, to give them some experience," he said.
Randall said he hoped to use the Shocker Invite and the Western Intercollegiate April 13-14 in Santa Cruz, Calif., to find a five player lineup for the Big Eight Conference Championship April 26-27 at Prairie Dunes Country Club in Hutchinson.
COLLEGIATE SPORTS BRIEFS
South Carolina trustees, fans disturbed by Cremnas' decision
COLUMBIA, S.C. — University of South Carolina trustees questioned Bobby Cremens mental stability. One suggested his decision to accept, then reject the Game-cocks' men's basketball coaching job was some kind of bizarre plot for revenge for forcing out mentor Frank McGuire and firing friend George Felton.
And those were just the comments that could be oirted.
In barbershops and bars, the epithet laced talk was about how Cremins had elated Gamecock fans with his announcement Wednesday that he would leave Georgia Tech to coach at his alma mater, then how he had burst that bubble with his announcement Saturday he was staying in Atlanta.
Cremins said Saturday that to come to South Carolina would be deserting the Georgia Tech players.
Hob Spear, sports editor of The (Columbia) State wrote, "Bobby Cremins' decision to renge on his commitment to Carolina left me amazed, stunned, flabbergasted and disgusted. I suspect I am not alone."
School trustee Lily-Rolan Hall said, "If he's this unstable or its untrustworthy, then I guess it's better for us to find out now rather than later."
Five Kansas swimmers earned individual All-America honors at the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships.
At the men's championship last weekend in Indianapolis, junior Scott Townsend and sophomore Marc Bontrager both earned All-America honors in the 50- and 100-freestyle events for a jayhawk team that finished in 16th place.
In the women's championship from March 18-20 at Minneapolis, Minn., sophomore Frankie Hanson earned the honor in the 1,650-yard freestyle with a seven place finish after a time of 16:31.52.
Freshman Katie Chapeau did it by placing 11th in the 100 backstroke with a time of 55.46 seconds.
Senior Shawn Stevens capped his collegiate career with All America honors after a 15th place performance in the 400 individual medley.
The team finish was the highest for the Kansas men since 1989 and marked just the second time that the men's team finished in the top 20.
The 200 freestyle relay team of Townsend, Bontrager, senior Ed Riddle and junior Curtis Taylor placed third with a school record time of 11.82 to earn All-America honors.
Softball team amasses record of 4-3-1 in Southern California
In spring the No. 13 Jawahaws started their road trip by defeating Massachusetts 7-0. Then, on March 22, they split a doubleheader with De Paul, taking the first game 8-0. They dropped the second game 4-3.
The Kansas softball team went 4-3-1 during its spring break tour of Southern California.
On March 23, Kansas played to a 1-1 tie with California State Northridge.
The game was suspended after the 15th inning because of darkness. During the game, junior pitcher Stephani Williams' scoreless innings streak was snapped at 41% innings.
The next day brought the first round of the Pony Invitational Tournament.
The Hawks began the tournament by shutting out the host team, California State Fullerton, 3-0.
Senior center fieldier Shanna Cole's 10-game hitting streak came to an end in the first round contest.
kansas then defeated Western Illinois 7-6 before falling to Washington 4-2.
Texas A&M, a team that Kauss already had defeated this season, beat the Jahways 3-1.
Kansas will attempt to improve its 9-5-1 record at 2 p.m. tomorrow, when it plays host to Missouri.Kansas City for a doubleheader at Jayhawk Field.
Nine track team members win titles in first outdoor meet
The Kansas men's and women's track teams opened the outdoor season last weekend at the Southern Methodist University Invitational in Dallas with nine individual victories.
Junior John Bazoni won the pole vault with a mark of 16-0, leading a Jayhawk sweep in the vault.
Four athletes on the women's team also garnered titles at the invitational.
Senior Chris Walters and sophomore Nick Johamsm placed second and third, respectively, in the event.
Running to victories for the men's team were juniors Dan Waters, who took the 800-meter run in 1:52.01, and Michael Cox, who won the 5,000 in 14:54.33.
Sophomore triple jumper Cassie Bryant-Wans won with a jump of 41-2%, and junior Keeley Harding cleared 5-9% to win the high jump.
tively in the event.
Johannsen also won the high jump on a leap of 6-11%, and junior Dan Lahch speared the lavinel title with a throw of 203-0.
Junior Daniela Daggy won a close 5,000 by
22 of a second in 18:41.06.
Teresa Sherman Reichert, also a junior,
blew away the competition in the disc. Her
toss of 108-5 was 16 feet further than the next
best throw.
Kansas golfer Holly Reynolds' winning streak came to an end this weekend at the Lady Gamecock Invitational in Columbia, S.C.
Women's golf team places 12th at South Carolina invitational
The Jayhawks finished 12th in the 18-team tournament.
Reynolds, who won medalist honors for the Kansas women's golf team in her last four tournaments, finished in a tie for 13th place.
Reynolds, a junior, shot a 14-over par 230 in the 54-hole event at the Woodlands Country Club.
Kansas shot 973 as a team in the tournament,64 shots behind tournament champion Furman.
Sophomore Ann Holbrook tied for 55th place with a 245, and junior Tracy Belisle finished tie for 64th with a 247.
ished best for this year. Freshman Lynn Williamson placed 76th at 253, and senior Cathy Reinbeck finished 78th at 256.
The next tournament for the Jahawks is the Indiana University Invitational, which begins Friday in Bloomington, Ind.
Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports
10
Monday, March 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1. Kentucky 96
16. Rider 52
8. Utah 86
9. Pittsburgh 65
5. Wake Forest 81
12. Tennessee-Chattanooga 58
4. Iowa 82
13. NE Louisiana 69
6. Kansas St. 53
11. Tulane 55
3. Florida St. 82
14. Evansville 70
7. W. Kentucky 55
10. Memphis St. 52
2. Seton Hall 81
15. Tennessee St. 59
SOUTHEAST
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Kentucky 30-3
North Carolina 32-4
EAST
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(1.) UNC 80
(4.) Arkansas 74
St. John's 74
Arkansas 80
St. John's 85
Texas Tech 67
Arkansas 94
Holy Cross 64
Virginia 78
Manhattan 66
Massachusetts 56
Pennsylvania 50
New Mexico St. 55
Nebraska 79
Cincinnati 92
Cincinnati 93
Coppin St. 66
1993 NCAA FINAL FOUR NEW ORLEANS The final April 5
1. Michigan 84
16. Coast, Carolina 53
8. Iowa St. 70
9. UCLA 81
5. New Mexico 68
12. George Wash. 82
4. Georgia Tech 78
13. Southern 93
6. Illinois 75
11. Long Beach St. 72
3. Vanderbilt 92
14. Boise St. 72
7. Temple 75
10. Missouri 61
2. Arizona 61
15. Santa Clara 64
WEST
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Seattle, Wash.
Michigan 30-4
KANSAS 29-6
MIDWEST
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(1.) Indiana 82
(4.) Louisville 69
Oklahoma St. 63
Louisville 78
Okahoma St. 74
5. Marquette 62
Louisville 76
Delaware 70
California 82
Duke 77
Duke 105
S. Illinois 70
BYU 81
SMU 70
KANSAS 94
Ball St. 72
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Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansan regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise to a tenant on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or desirability.
our leaders are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open.
100s Announcements
卫
110 Bus. Personals
Need a little Sunshine
The Ete. Set up a bundle of handmade pendants, cords and semi-precious stones.
Assorted Bear fetishes.
95-184
The Ete. Shop
95-184
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care
841:2345 1419 Mass
We're always open
Bausch & Lemb Ray-Ban and Vuartret-France
Sunglasses
The Etc. Shop
209 mass. 843-0611
Lease up to 30 lbs. in 30 days for $80, 100% Guarantee.
832-6487
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
Kansan Classified: 864-4358 --
Watkins Health Center
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon-Fri 8 a.m. 4 p.m.
Sat 11 a.m. 13 o.p.
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon-Fri 4 30 p.m - 10 p.m
Sat 11 30 a.m - 4 p.m
Sat 11 30 a.m - 4 p.m
Custum Student
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
120 Announcements
BOARD OF REGENTS
NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS HAVING AN INTEREST IN THE REGULATIONS GOVERNING TRAFFIC AND PARKING ON THE ROADS, STREETS, DRIVEWAYS, AND PARKING
Notice is hereby given to all interested parties that on April 15, 2013, at 3:00 p.m. C.T.S. in the Parking Department Conference Room, 1901 Building Road, University of Kansas, KS 65008, be held concerning the adoption by the Board of Regents of regulations governing traffic and parking facilities on the roads, driveways, and parking facilities at the University of Kansas. The following are submitted as sub-
*procedures:
1 GENERAL REGULATIONS. The current regulations specify who is subject to these rules and regulations, that they are subject to the jurisdiction of hours of access to the central campus. The proposed amendment will change the method of application of the campus access pass from permanently applying a sticky to a review sticker.
2. DEFINITIONS. The current regulations specify, for the purpose of these regulations, the definitions of student, faculty, staff, visitors to and around the parking area, motorcycle parking, and motorcycle parking. The proposed amendment will clarify that those with valid handicap designation may park in any other unrestricted area.
A VISITOR PARKING. The current regulations specify conditions under which visitors may legally park at the University of Kansas. No amendments are proposed.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, March 29, 1993
11
4. PARKING PERMITS The current regulations establish procedures pertaining to parking permit possession amendments will change the method of application for vehicle permits from permanently applied stickers to resview hanger wavers, will add a separate permit category for the mirror hanger may be moved from vehicle to property for all vehicles to be will add a separate permit category for the mirror hanger may be moved from vehicle to property for all vehicles to be will change all reference of "dormitory" to "residence hall"; will eliminate section 4.3 Carpooling permit; and will add a new category of permit called "admission." 20 minutes for the purpose of loading and unloading children at campus day care centers and classrooms.
5. STUDENT, FACULTY, AND STAFF PARKING. The current regulations establish procedures by which parking permits for vehicles may be obtained from the office of all new employees. No amendments are proposed.
6. PERMIT FEES. The current regulations speci-
culate that a permit requires parking permits. The pre-
pared amendment states that the permit costs $85, the red permit to $70, the yellow permit to $35, the
Residence Hall (Residence Hall) permit to $15, and the
JRP permit will be eliminated. The JRP permit will be
eliminated. The charge for any hooded meter will be a
cost of $12. The meter cost is $10 a semester and $20 annually. There will be a clarification in 6.3 regarding where visitor per-
mits are collected.
7. CONTROL OF PARKING LOTS AND ZONES
There are restrictions for parking restrictions at the University of Kansas. The proposed amendment will change the current evening restrictions in lots 18, 18, 38, the morning restrictions in lots 2 and 14 will no longer have an amperal limit. Lots 2 and 14 will have added to lots 21 and the rectangular slab portion of lot 12 unit 12) at 30 p.m.; Saturday restrictions will be applied to lots 21 and 14; Sunday has a new restriction honoring only a Jawahyer
of the top level of the "IBM" portion of 106
and of the "IBM" portion of 122. The aforementioned
lens will open up at 5:00 p.m. to all other valid permits. Reference to dormitory
addresses must be obtained prior to the lens
will be removed to JRP. Lots 107 and 122 will
be removed to JRP.
VIOLATIONS. The current regulations specify that the vehicle must be in motion at the cost of such violations. The proposed amendment will add to Group I, #1 "No Valid Permit" vehicles that车辆 may be towed from posted locations.
9. PAYMENT OF FEES FOR VIOLATIONS The current regulations require that all vehicles with violations be paid for violations, net payment, what constitutes excessive violations and consequences of excessive violations and towing violations, in addition to any amendments will add that vehicles with Group I, #1 "No Valid Permit" violations in postwayed tow
10. APPEAL OF VIOLATIONS NOTICES. The current regulations establish the procedures for appeals from a charge of misuse of parking area. No amendments are proposed.
11. STATUTORY AUTHORIZATION The current regulations establish the authorization of the Board of Regents to promulgate regulations for the use of Kansas campus and to establish mimee fees for violations of the regulations. No amendments are proposed.
Interested persons will be given reasonable opportunity at the hearing to present their views concerning the existing regulations. Written comments may also be submitted prior to the hearing. Written comments or a request for a copy of the proposed regulations must be submitted in impact statement of such changes should be submitted to Raymond K. Moore, Professor, Civil Engineer, University of Kansas, 2064D Hwy. Jefferson, LA 76503. KS 6503
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2454. Headquarters.
MIRACLE VIDEO
$14.95 Adult Video Sale
910 N 2nth, 841-8803
910 Haskell, 841-7504
QUESTIONS? Call Bisskey, Gay, and Lesbian Peer Counseling. Free, confidential referrals through Headquarters (841-2345) or KU Info (864-3506). Calls returned.
Suicide Intervention-If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 413-2455 or visit 1419 Mass Headquarters Counseling Center
YOURE NOT ALONE! Biseux, Gay, and Lebian Support Group on tuesdays at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters (814-2354) or KU Info (864-3506) for confidential location.
130 Entertainment
Spring Break quad occupancy Dayton Beach room, limited space 2/15 FEB 798-1402
Live Comedy
Wednesday
March 31
AT
BENCHWARMERS
50 cent
draws
BENCHWARMERS 50 cent draws
BENCHWARMERS
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
APPLY NOW
NOSTARTING
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn $2,000
(No Shipping) Travel & Employment
the Caribbean, etc.) Holiday, Summer and
Carriage employment available No experience necessary
employment program call 1-263-0448-0488
c9756
NOEXPER. NEC great resume builder. Scholarships await, temp. pos. over春 Spring break-participant. Camp COUNSELR wants for private Michigan boys/girls camp. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water sports, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. HIIT or more. Seeger, 178 Maple, Nld. 6093, 7098-464-244.
staff/children's camps/northeast top salary, rm/bd/dunairy, travel allowance. Must have skill in basketball, baccalaureate activities, drama, basketball, baccalaureate activities, drama, drums, fencing, fielding football, golf gulf mechanics, hockey, nature, art, photography, piano, rocker, rollerblading, ropes, swimming, sailing, water skating, Support staff-kitchen steward/workers, bakers, cooks, badgers, maintenance, gardeners, Winata, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 19543 (814) 381-993, Women call Jennifer Wheeler at 841
Day or evening help needed. Apply in person only at Border Bandido, 1328 West 23rd
Cruise line level entry on board/landside positions available, summer or year round, great pay, excellent amenities.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT for International Student in 9-39.28 year, design and return information to students, coordinate programs,训和 supervision orientation leaders. Applications available in the Admissions Office.
Models needed pro $175-300 day & V/PIM
ext4 $175-300 day No exp required 341-900
ext4 $175-300 day No exp required 341-900
**Help Wanted:** First Christian Church is looking for loving helpers to serve Sunday most months beginning June 6. Hours are $ p.m. $hr. Please send resume to First Christian Church, Apt. 101, Power 5, 100 Kentucky, KS 65028. KS 65028
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make $2,000
off your salary. Travel internationally
english abroad Japan and Japan.
room and board + other benefits. No previous
training or teaching certificate required. For
prospective students apply online.
Lake of the Graters Summer Employment The Barge Floating Restaurant isexceeding application requirements with its salaries and tips great working conditions, and some food furnitur. Apply while availability is available.
models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" &
calendars. Please call
(816) 725-0088.
www.kansascity.com
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH
749-5750
Hawaii, Hawaii, Sunshine Yr round Great great treelearn. (612) 643-8498
**GOW HIRRING!!** Part-time. full-time all shifts
GOW HIRRING!! at the following EZ Shops
1118 Brownsville, J414W, J141W and 1000 W23R
nanny poses available nationwide including
florida, Hawaii, summer/yr. round. Great pay.
reel travel. (612) 643-4598
GW HIRING* Part-time, full-time all shifts
nanny position in KEU's EK Stars.
Did all of your money melt away during Spring Break?
$
THE LAWRENCE DONOR CENTER
can help ease your
problems by
offering $15 cash for the
first two donations,
$22 per week after.
816 W 24th
749-5750
ORIENTATION LEADERS for International Student Services. Temporary, part-time positions in August assisting international students adjust to new academic environments available in 2 Strong Hall Deadline. April 9
Rewarding, exciting summer for sophomore and older college men courses in water riding, water activities, natural science, and many outdoor programs at natural science Camp; P.O. Box 167; Florissant, CO 80056;
STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER J
Deadline 04/12/09. Salary $580-850/month.
Duties include the participating in program codi-
nage, developing the program and producing
reports and/or other specific output;
share responsibility for insuring that programs
are configured correctly; and requiring
in the solution of operational difficulties
required in the solution of operational difficulties encountered in executing programs; assists in the preparation of necessary test data and assists in preparation of necessary test data and organized testing schedule. To apply, submit a letter of interest to the Director, Roger, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60545, EO/AA UWKS.
Waterfront Job: WSJ-Siumen children's campers-men-and women who can teach children to swim, warm swim team, waterski (salmon) and kayaking, snorkeling, pool and lakes. Good salary, room & board, travel allowance. Men call or write: Camp Wanda, 5 in 8th Street, Parkwood, NJ 07324. 958-833-6983. 958-833-6983. 958-833-6983. Women call Jenny Wheeler at 841-850-6880.
utvars' a, 113 E. Wyoming, KaliSallp, MT 99011
Tennis job summer children - camp-northeastmen and women with good tennis background who keep in touch with the tennis board & room & board, travel allowance. Women call Jen尼f wheeler Wilea at 841-0806. Men call or write: Camp Winado, 5 Glen Lake, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 10454
Students earn extra money Set your own schedule Earn $100 or more a day Call 817-3749-8900
O
Motivated District Manager for property management company. Full-time experience preferred Send resume to P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 60444
Part-time unskilled factory work on
Packer Plastics Incorporated
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Resorts
Send Stamp for Free Details
NT $900.00
GREEKS & CLUBS
Each member of your frat sorority team, club etc. pick up the group and your group can raise $1,000 in a few days!
S1.000 AN HOUR!
Plus a chance to earn $1,000 for yourself!
weekends,starting Friday at midnight
arrange for an interview.
No cost. No obligation.
1-800-932-0528. ext. 65
225 Professional Services
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
and ending Sunday at midnight. Flex time
No cost No obligation
842-3000.ext.475to
TRAFFIC-DUTS
Fake ID and & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
possible. A student workteam will be formed to cover
interested please
DONALDG.STROLE
interested please call Packer Plastics at
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
these hours. If
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
FREE MONEY for school avail include $Financial aid scholarship grants. No GPA or income required. Book at Heading for EUROPE this summer? Jet them anytime for only $169 for East Coast, $229 from the West. (webmail@europe.org) ARHITCH (registrant in L.A. Go! & NY Times) ARHITCH (registration marked) 812-264-800
Promo Photos and Headshots. R&D Darkroom Fast Service. First Photography. 841-434-2341
Starving student desperately seeks work. Will help students reedereasely. Training. 795-826-1570 and ref. Rebecca 865-157-597
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
For free consultation call
235 Typing Services
Exporting by experienced secretary IBM Corp.
Expert testing for Microsoft. East Lawrences, Call Ms. Mattiian 8112-1219
Word Perfect Word Processing Neorchard Corners,
963 aches CAFTER 9p. 843-8586
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
sertations, research reports, rush content,
master's degree, Master's Degree 4044
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
812" ALU, CANN MTB FRAME, BB, HS, BS
70" ATM, 20" MTB, NT Components, $450
Dave 749 260
Fax machine 9600 bps plus auto voice/fax switch box and cleaning kit $175. MIDI interface plus cablage and Masteo software for MDSO5 $9, call Archee at 865-356 after 6 p.m.
Fernandes P-15 Amplifier. Convenient size 13" x
8" for 20 times or 30 times 150 best offer.
Call Bellamer at 847-926-2140.
A
861 Arkansas, good location. 2 bdmr apt upstairs,
furnished, modern conveniences, central heat &
air, protected space. Sublease immediately with
reduced deposit. Renier retain the difference
400s Real Estate
Available Aug. 1 2 bed apartment in renovated older house, walk to KU or downtown, wood floors, off-street parking, no pets $459 - 841-1074
Available August 1 2 Bed apartment in renovated older house, walk to KU or downtown, off-street parking, no pets $395 - 841-1074
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
1900 NAISMITH 3 & 4 B, 2 Bath. Lg rooms.
1900 NAISMITH 3 & 4 B, 2 Bath. Lg rooms.
storage, variable leaves 1-266-767-61
405 For Rent
4 Bdm Apt Lease now till July 31st. Low price
$500. Call to set app. #843-0117
843-4754 (call for appt.)
Boardwalk
ceiling san, water paid, no pets $59, 841-1074
Available Now rwmmed Rums. w/ shared kitchen
& bath facilities 1 block from KU w/ off-street
parking, no pet. Call 841-5500
- 2 bedroom (1&1/2 baths)
• 3 bedroom (2 baths)
• laundry facilities
• on-site management
- on bus route
BEAT THE CROWD! Everyone wants these apes: for August, but if you can throw June 1, you can get a pair of them. The best buildings at Hilda Hills Apus. 100 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO FEET: 841-880 or 862-935
-1 bedroom
Available house 1. Bedroom Apt. in charming older house, Walk to U or downtown. Houses with pool. Flower. Baths.
For home 4 HR Townhome, 2 baths, 1 garage
$60 per month with @water & dry. Avail-
ages $89.95 per month. Call 312-780-3112.
HEY KU MEd Med students, Rainbow Tower Apart-
ment, 501 W. 37th St., Miami Beach, FL.
Larry HU Library Avingt Limited. Air Condition-
er water pool,anauna, jacuzzi, & spa garage.
parking 238 Ravenhill K.C. V 365-572-4333. Airlift
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
(call for appt.)
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 6 days a week for your convenience
LUXURY TOWNHOME, 4 BR., 21st; bath,
microbrewish, microwave, fireplace, wet bar, 2 car
garage with opener, full basement, near golf
field and Lawrens Inn. Utilize our
utilities and deposit. 749-7207
weekends and between 6:30 and 10:30 p.m. on
weekdays for appointment. Keep tryng
MACENZE APTS ups, new leasing for Aug 1. Newly constructed luxury apts, close to campus. All 3 BR. microwave. washer & dryer. all kitchen appliance. WIFI. well insulated. energy efficient. Call 791-1681
at Aspen West Apartments, Studio. 28R 1yr lease,
no pets, water basin, on bus route. 860-258 for appl.
Rent/Lenew rm or 3 BR house. East Lawrence,
close to KU on bus route, recently renovated, dog
ok $175/month & up. Negotiable 865-3784
Room to rent in 84mpl amplelease till 31st July 1125
Room to rent in a 4bdrm apt lease till July 31st $122
+ / utilities Bq 843-0011
Naismith Place
28 IIRm $0.55
Jazz in use
Bus route 1
Private balconies Patios
Pd cable TV/PIs
Basketball court
Outside/25 IChr 641-815
Office Hours
5 IChr 10-12/24
Or for appointments
Southpointe Apartments
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing
Morp. Fixt call for appl. 843-6446.
Sublease 3 bedroom/2 bath Furnished apct. close to campus, avail. May 15-Aug 10.
Sublease for summer. Nice, clean. 3-4 bedroom
nowhouse, w/o pool. Info call 749-3264 ask for
information.
Summer & Fall Leasing Pursued & 2 bdmrs
from KU = off-street parking, no
call 641-583-9700
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
*Close to campus*
*Spacious 2 bedroom*
*Laundry facility*
*Swimming Pool*
*Waterbed allowed*
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Sumner Subway 2 BR Townhouse, 14k Hen
Furniture, appliances, great location,
regt negotiable 832-838
Sumner subway studio-apt at Trailrour. Avail-
ble May 1. On bus route $/600
or 832-838. Available.
Open Daily
1-5 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
& Introducing New
Eagle Apts.
S
Swan Management
• Graystone
• 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
TRAILRIDE APTS.
New signing leases for summer & fall
Call Sarah for your appointment at
843-7233
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic dates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0844. Stop by 1460 Tennessee.
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts. - furnished
and unturnished
•1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
•2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
WATER PAID ONLY APTS.
GREAT LOCATION Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed. Thurs.
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
(or other times w/appt.)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II-call for
info or appt.
Quail Creek
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
birds
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Wanted: Summer subleases for 3 bm²/2 bath
Southpointe Apt. good location, balcony on bus
route, pond & sand volleyball $40/mo OBO
Water pad C叫841 JHWK
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.. Inc.
meadowbrook
842-4200
The Perfect Apartment!
NOW
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and ready.
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
Sorry no pets
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NO LEASE $800 + 10 utilities Roommate to share
house, large yard, washer + dryer 842 206
phone: 516-274-3969 Email: lease@home.com
a b RH, Bath, close home on bus rt. Starts
May 1 2000 /mo + half ufl 843 326
How to schedule an ad:
Female roommates needed for summer or next year. New College Hill Condos. Close to campus. Washer/dryer in apt! Call Kathleen at 865-2830
Summer Subterm 2. Females to share large tibb
bdm apt $200 + $10 WID, wifd.865, 292-922
$200 + $10 WID, wifd.865, 292-922
Stay by the Kanoan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charge,
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- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
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The University of Dallas Kaiser, 119 Sauerstaff Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
www.universityofdallas.edu
Signature
By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
Land ho ho ho!
3-29
© 1980 Wiley & McGraw Hill Publishing
now Santa first came to the New World
Page 12
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
For some,break meant studying or at least trying
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
Although Jon Kruell stayed home in Lawrence for spring break, he still did some last-minute scrambling yesterday to find books for a report he had to write.
The Minnetonka, Minn., senior was a part of the student contingent that spent the week in Lawrence drinking, working — and doing little homework.
"Won't help it, won't hurt it," said Knell. "Never has,
never will."
He said he was not the only person that stayed in Lawrence and persevered during break.
He said he thought the break was important, but he did not think it would affect his grade point average.
he biggest challenge during break "Everybody I knew didn't worry about studying" Knuell said.
But Peter Ryan, Brooklyn, N.Y., junior, who worked 40 hours at Watson Library last week, said not every one who stayed in town neglected school work.
He said the library was busy all week, mostly with faculty members and graduate students preparing classes for after break.
As for Ryan, the break had a different purpose. "For me, it meant to catch up," he said. "I'm still behind."
He said catching up was difficult after last week's two Jayhawk basketball victories.
"Everybody was celebrating." he said.
Claudia Femenias, Santiago, Chile, graduate teaching assistant in Spanish, said she also spent the break catching up.
"It's not that I studied every day," she said. "But I did do some work."
"You really need a spring break. It's the right time of year."
But she was not so sure whether the break would help the grades of her students.
"That depends on how responsible the students are," she said. "I think it should help. But it's up to each individual."
Judy Denny, Stillwater, Okla., graduate teaching assistant in communications, also thought spring break could bring students good grades.
"It depends on how they look at it," Denny said. "I think some people get spring fever worse, and then it's all down hill. Other people look at it as the break it is and get rejuvenated."
KU to recognize Latin America
Economy to be topic for month's speakers
What once was Lawrence's weeklong recognition of Central America has expanded into a monthlong celebration of Latin America.
By Jess DeHaven
Kansan staff writer
central America Week, which began in 1981, expanded this year to become Lawrence's first Latin American Month because organizers wanted to broaden the focus of the festival. The KU organization Latin American Solidarity and the department of Latin American Studies sponsor the celebration
"We really have two reasons for holding the festival," said Marc Becker, Lawrence graduate student and coordinator of Latin American Solidarity. "We want to draw attention to Latin America and its problems, and we also want to have fun and celebrate the culture."
"Since then we've added other activities such as speakers and celebrations that reflect Latin American history and culture," he said.
Becker said Central America Week began as a commemoration of Oscar Romero, an archbishop from El Salvador who was assassinated in 1980.
Betsy Kuzesen, director of Latin American Studies and sponsor of Latin American Solidarity, said speakers were chosen to focus on one issue that was of importance to Latin American nations.
"We felt the economy was a major issue in many of these countries, and we invited speakers to campus that reflect that," she said. "It seemed to me that these would be topics of interest that we don't have a lot of expertise on here at KU."
Albert Fishlow, professor of economics from the University of California at Berkeley, will speak on the controversial topic of law and laws and the North American Free Trade Agreement. Anna Luza Ozorio de Almeida, an economist from Brazil, will
speak on the conflicting problems of development and preserving the environment, and Paul Doughty, professor of anthropology from the University of Florida, will discuss the drug trade and its effects on the indigenous people of the Andes.
The month also will feature a salute to Romero and last year's Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchu, a Guatemalan who campaigned for the rights of indigenous people.
Kenny Kincaid, Lawrence graduate student, said the event, which will feature readings and music, would celebrate the achievements of Romero and Menchu.
"With Romero, it's important to remember the past and those who gave up their lives for their causes," Kincaid said. "With Menchu, it's important that we remember the present and the future and that people are still struggling."
Other activities will include a concert by singer-satirist David Lippman and a reception for Central American exchange students.
David Lippman concert and rice and beans dinner: 6 p.m. Thursday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave, $5.
Month's events
Rigoberta Menchu/Oscar Romero Salute: 7:30 p.m. April 15 at Ecumenical Christian Ministries.
Albert Fishow, "Quality of Life Implications of the North American Free Trade Agreement for North America" 18 p.m. April 8 at 100 Smith Hall.
Latin American Culture Night and
brain for Central American students:
7 p.m. Friday at Ecumenical
Christian Ministries.
**Anna Luzia Ozorlo de Almeida,"Environmental Change and Sustainable Colonization in the Brazilian Amazon;Deforestation and Tropical Agricultural Technology" · 8 p.m. April 19 at Big Fight Boom, Kansas Union
*Paul Dougherty, "The Effects of the Drug Economy in the Andes on the Indigenous Populations": 8 p.m. April 26 at 100 Smith Hall.
High voter turnout expected
Third coalition to provide variety in Senate election
Kansan staff writer
By Brett Riggs
Candidates and the Student Senate election commission think having one more coalition than last year as well as two independent candidates for student body president could help increase voter turnout for this year's election.
Diane King, elections commissioner, said that she thought more students would vote this year because of an increase in election publicity by both the election commission and the coalitions.
Last year, 13 percent of the student body voted in the Senate election, which featured two coalitions. King said the winning coalition, Vision, won because it was the stronger coalition.
This year's elections may provide more even competition, she said.
having more candidates will provide more competition and better voter turnout.
The last time more than two coalitions ran in the Senate election was 1990, when five coalitions entered the race. About 21 percent of the student body voted in that election.
A. C.T.I.O.N!! presidential candidate Jason McIntosh said he thought more students would vote because they would be more aware of the issues.
This year's presidential candidates agree that
Because there are three coalitions, more senatorial candidates will be campaigning, which will reach more students. McIntosh said.
John Shoemaker, unite presidential candidate, said that more students could be reached but that it would be more difficult for coalitions to find a voter base.
"I don't think they will have as much influence as the coalitions," Austin said, "but they did get 500 signatures, so there is 500 people right there that will vote."
Cox said he thought the fact that more students were running showed that more students were concerned.
Ed Austin, FOCUS presidential candidate, said the addition of independent presidential candidate Bernard Cox also could affect voter turnout.
"Last year, the coalitions could find their voter base easier because there wasn't as much competition," Shoemaker said. "This year, no coalition has cornered the market on any issue or voter base."
STATE WRAP UP
Senate returns amended admissions bill to House
A proposal to set admissions standards at state universities for Kansas high school graduates still can pass this year, thanks to Senate supporters who acted quickly to save it last week.
The proposal would end the state's 78-year-old policy of letting all Kansas high school graduates attend any of the six Board of Regents universities.
They revised the proposal Friday into a bill that already passed the house and returned the amended bill to that chamber. They did it a day after the House rejected an admissions bill on a 61-61 vote. The bill before the House did not die but remained stranded on its debate calendar.
High school students would need to meet one of three qualifications: a 2.0 grade point average, a composite ACT score of 23 or a rank in the top third of their graduating class.
Legal blood-alcohol level to remain at.10 percent
The Senate Judiciary Committee adopted its subcommittee's recommendation March 22 that Kansas stick with 10 percent as the threshold at which drivers are considered legally drunk in this state.
An attempt by State Sen. Bill Brady, D-Parsons, and State Sen. Pat Ranson, R-Wichita, to lower the legal blood alcohol content level to 08 failed.
Brady and Ranson were members of the subcommittee that rejected reducing the blood alcohol content level to .08. They were outvoted 3-2 on the subcommittee and also lost the argument before the full committee March 22.
Also rejected a motion to send the issue of lowering the blood alcohol content in Kansas to an interim legislative study.
Briefs compiled by the Associated Press
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4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
FEATURES: A humble marker tells the tale of the Oregon Trail, Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.102.NO.126
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA $ ^{c} $
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1993
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Lawrence poverty rate highest in Kansas
College students cited as reason
by brau y frauser
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence has the highest poverty rate in Kansas among cities with a population of at least 50,000, according to a private study released by the Greater Washington Research Center earlier this month.
George Grier, author of the study, said the reason for the high poverty rate was simple.
Students.
Gueri said many cities where state universities were located had high poverty rates because the U.S. Census included college students in calculating those rates.
"Students are technically poor," Grier said. "Their incomes are low. That is especially true at state universities because they tend to not have as many rich kids in them. For example, Cambridge, Mass., is not the same thing."
Harvard University is in Cambridge. According to the study, Lawrence has a 24.1 percent poverty rate, far above the 13.1 percent national average. It is the 45th highest rate in the nation. By comparison, Overland Park had the sixth lowest national poverty rate, 2.8 percent.
The center's Committee on Strategies to Reduce Chronic Poverty compiled the study from 1900 U.S. Census poverty rates for 488 U.S. cities with populations of 50,000 or greater.
The federal government defines the nobility level as an annual income of
$9,130 or less for one person, $8,076
or less for a family of two, and $8,885
or less for a family of three. Of
Lawrence's 65,608 1990 Census popu-
lation, 13,928 people were below the
poverty level.
Many below the poverty level were college students, Grier said.
But Lawrence is not the only university city with a high poverty level. Grier said that three other university cities, College Station, Texas, home of Texas A & M University; Provo, Utah, home of Brigham Young University; and East Lansing, Mich., home of Michigan State University, were among the 25 cities with the highest poverty rates in the nation.
College Station and Brownsville, Texas, each had a poverty rate of 38 percent, the highest in the nation.
"A lot of people in these cities were
upset and said, 'We're not pot- towns,' " Grier said. "The answer is no, you are not, but the problem is that the Census Bureau doesn't make the distinction between college students and others."
Steven Fleeker, coordinator of the Lawrence/Douglas County Coalition for the Homeless, he thought Lawrence's large college student population helped keep the average hourly wage low in Lawrence.
"Students are willing to work for small amounts of money because they have supplemental incomes, such as schoolships, grants or money from parents," Fleeker said.
"Lawrence needs no more minimum-wage jobs. If you look in the paper, it's obvious if you work here in Lawrence, you're not going to get a lot of money."
Poverty level highest in Lawrence
Among cities in Kansas with populations of at least 50,000. Lawrence has the highest poverty rate. The figures are from the 1990 U.S. Census, with the national average being 13.1 percent.
1. Lawrence 13,928 24.1% 45
2. Kansas City 26,433 17.9% 147
3. Wichita 37,321 12.5% 281
4. Topeka 14,292 12.3% 283
5. Olathe 2,569 4.1% 465
6. Overland Park 3,142 2.8% 483
A
Source: 1990 U.S. Census data, analyzed by the Greater Washington Research Center
Making a buck, needing some luck
Derek Nelson/KANSAN
Companies like T-shirt opportunity
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Employees of Midwest Graphics, 500E, 23rd Street, keep the machinery running at top speed in an attempt to keep up with demand for Final Four T-Shirts. Since the Jayhawks landed a spot in the Final Four on Saturday, Midwest Graphics has produced 10,000 shirts.
Bv Brian James
Special to the Kanisa
Larry Sinks, president of Midwest Graphics, is glad the Jayhawks are going to New Orleans for the Final Four.
But while many people were celebrating the team's tournament success into early Sunday morning, Sinks was hard at work.
"I'm not sure how many T shirts we'll print up in all." Sinks said. "But I can tell you the pile of invoices on my desk is two inches thick."
After the game Saturday, Sinks called in all eight of his regular employees and family members to help meet the demand.
Merle Parks, president of Prairie Graphics, said his company would design and produce nearly 10,000 Final Four T-shirts.
But Prairie Graphics did not start printing the T-shirts until after Saturday's game had ended. Printing them before the fact, Parks said, was not worth the risk.
"Our thinking is," Don't count on things you can't control," he said. "To be safe, we assume they won't go so that we don't have big losses."
Even Chris Piper, a member of Kansas' 1988 NCAA championship team, is not willing to stake his business, Screen-It, on the team's postseason success.
"We don't do much speculative printing, "Piper said. "We get the designs for the T-shirts ready, and then if and when KU wins, we start printing."
When Kansas went to the championship game of the 1901 NCAA tournament, Screen-T printed nearly 10,000 Final Four T-shirts. Piper said he would be disappointed if his company did not wear those shirts at that when KU made the Final
He said that when KU made the Final Four, the t-shirt printing business was
a free.for.all
"Anyone who can lay ink on a T-shirt does them," he said.
Piper and Parks said that the NCAA had tightened restrictions this year.
Parks said T-shirt producers could no longer use the name of the Final Four venue or city, the words "Final Four" or "March Madness" or the date of the Final Four without paying a licensing fee to the NCAA.
Only 41 printers in the nation have been licensed for this year's Final Four by the NCAA. Parks said.
Piper said there were ways around the restrictions.
"We're able to use everything representing Kansas, of course," he said. "We can also do a play on words, use the number 4, say 'regional champs,' or use local descriptions such as Bourbon Street in place of New Orleans."
Mike Reid, manager of the KU书店s, said that earlier in the season he ordered KU Final Four T-shirts, caps, buttons, pennants and bumper stickers contingent on KU's success.
In 1991, the bookstores sold between 20,000 and 30,000 Final four shirts.
OUISIANA SUPERDOME
1993 FINAL FOUR
Yesterday, Kansas coach Roy Williams downplayed the significance of playing against North Carolina, where he was an assistant coach for 10 years.
"We've been folding a lot of empty boxes," she said. "We've even had a few out-of-state people, like from Alaska and Hawaii, calling us and ordering shirts."
Wanda Dark, manager of Jayhawk Spirit, said that Final Four T-shirts had been selling well.
Reid said this year he expects to order 15,000 to 20,000 shirts.
More coverage: page 7
GARDEN OF THE WORLD
Daron J. Bennett / KANSAN
Prairie Graphics co-owner Merle Parks puts final Fresh Four shirts into the dyer to set the ink after coming off the press. Parks says the designs were ready to be put on the shirts even before Saturday's game ended. His company has produced more than 5,000 shirts since Saturday's game.
Options limited for KU students wanting tickets
By Dan England
Kansan staff writer
If you are one of the many students who want to go to the Final Four at the Superdome in New Orleans this year, this may be your only option.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations, said that all of the 328 students who had applied for tickets before the Feb. 19 deadline would receive tickets.
Students who have not applied can get on a wairing list, but 109 students are already on the list. Kish said.
"I really don't think we are going to have 109 cancellations." he said.
The 328 student tickets will be a part of the 3,000 tickets allotted to KU by the NCAA University representatives, such as band members and those who work in the Athletic Department, are allotted 350 tickets. Faculty and staff receive 150 tickets and the rest goes to members of the Williams Educational Fund. Kish said.
Kish said everyone who applied had until noon today to confirm their tickets. The department calls those first on the waiting list for tickets that are not claimed by noon.
In order to discourage scalping, everyone must bring a photo ID when they get their tickets. Students should bring their KUID. Kish said.
Buyers must pick tickets up Saturday morning at gate F of the Superdome starting at 8:30 a.m. Kish said the best time to get the tickets was between 8:30 a.m. and noon. Game time is 4:42 p.m.
If he saw a stranger sitting in the student section, Kish said, the student who sold the ticket might be prohibited from buying season tickets for next year.
Darby Ritter, Wichita senior, received tickets from the lottery in 1991 but turned them down. He said he was too much of a diehard Jayhawk fan to miss out on going this time. Ritter attended the regional semifinals in St. Louis.
Beth Chenoweth, Olathe junior, applied for tickets but now will not be able to go.
but how will he go to school?
"I just can't afford it," Chenoweth said. "But I think it will be more fun on campus if we win, anyway. I'd rather run around."
cayt francis, Great Bend senior, attended the Final Four in 1981, when Kansas defeated North Carolina in the semifinals before losing to Duke in the championship game.
She will be making her second trip this year.
can be making her second," Francis said. "Hopefully, this time it will be much better." Francis said.
INSIDE
KATIE TAYLOR
Culinary populist
Commission candidates want an improved Lawrence
Once a short-order cook, Linda Mathias now fills a big order by feeding Oliver Hall residents.
See story, Page 3.
Rv Todd Selfert
Kansan staffwriter
The city of Lawrence is great in many aspects but could be improved in many areas.
That was the message given by all six candidates for the Lawrence City Commission in a public forum last night.
"We need to come out clean and admit that there are areas where we are behind other communities around us," said Sam Sheply, owner of Shepley Insurance Agency.
Sheplyre said the city could improve its traffic system by supporting the proposed $12 million Eastern Parkway, which would run northwest from Kansas Highway 10 and Nora Road to Seventh Street.
The city has raised $4 million and has lobbied in Washington, D.C., for
the remaining $8 million.
Doug Compton, owner of Compton Rentals, also said he supported construction of the parkway.
"It would remove traffic from our neighborhoods, and that makes things safer for everyone," he said.
Jolene Andersen, office manager for Ron Turner's American Family Insurance Company, advocated creating a citywide public transportation service.
Milton Scott, assistant director of student housing at KU, said the commission should involve more citizens in its decision making.
He said more input could have prevented the controversy created by the commission's decision to place medians on Iowa Street to prevent left turns onto University Drive and Stratford Road.
ing up with a solution," he said.
"This is an example of assigning people to a task force and not com-
The commission will reconsider its decision to place medians on its Street at its meeting tonight.
Bob Moody, president of the North Lawrence Improvement Company, said he supported initiating a curb-side recycling program.
"We have to develop a social conscience," he said. "I think the city commission could take an active leadership role in that."
"We need to make sure that all possible recyclables are kept out of our landfills," he said.
Bob Schumm, incumbent commissioner, said he also supported a curb-side recycling program.
Three of the candidates will win seats on the commission. The two candidates with the most votes will receive four-year terms. The third place financer will receive a two-year term.
SHELLY
Andrew Arnope / KANSAN
sam Shepley, Lawrence City Commission candidate, listens to a question from the audience while Doug Compton, another candidate, takes notes. Candidates Shepley, Compton, Milton Scott, Bob Schumm, Bob Moody and Jolene Andersen attended last night's public forum, which was sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
2
Tuesday, March 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University Daily Kansan (USBP 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6an045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6an044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Meet at Jaybowl at 7pm Wednesday, March 31 1993
Student Alumni Association
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STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
DEADLINE
Return NEW Applications to SUA Office by 5:00 pm on MARCH 31,1993
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents the
KUSO
University Symphony Orchestra
]
Brian Priestman, Conductor
Other works on the program include Les Preludes by Liszt and Siegfried Idyll by Wagner
performing Concerto No. 5 (Emperor)
by Beethoven
Claude Frank, Piano Solist
with
力
ON CAMPUS
3:30 p.m. Sunday, April 4, 1993 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
General admission tickets on sale in advance in the Department of Music and Dance Office, 452 Murphy Hall, or at the door: $6 public; $3 students, and $5 senior citizens; for reservations, call 913/8-644-3436.
V
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting at 9:30 a.m. today at 4020 Wescoe Hall for students interested in studying in Spanish-speaking countries.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brownbag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m today at the Rock Chalk room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Kris McCusker at 844-7317.
International Studies and Programs will hold a world-view lecture, "The Resistance of the French People," at noon today at Alcevo A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
International Studies and Programs, European Studies Committee and the Hall Center for the Humanities will hold a forum, "Migration, Nationalism and Human Rights," from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m., today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas University. For more information, call 864-4141.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 843-6250 or Laura Hanson at 842-6887.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 832-8337.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will hold a meeting
WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 55°/45°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 81°/54'
Chicago: 58°/41'
Houston: 76°/61'
Miami: 82°/65'
Minneapolis: 53°/38'
Phoenix: 75°/48'
Salt Lake City: 57°/35'
Seattle: 55°/40'
LAWRENCE: 63°/54'
Kansas City: 64°/54'
St. Louis: 69°/47'
Wichita: 64°/54'
Tulsa: 68°/58'
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Showers and thunderstorms, winds 10-20 mph from east.
High: 65°
Low: 54°
Cooler with rain likely.
High: 53°
Low: 40°
Colder with chance of light snow.
High: 40°
Low: 28°
Source: Michael Overton, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
TODAY Showers and thunderstorms, winds 10-20 mph from east.
Cooler with rain likely
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 844-4256.
Triathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Center pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
For more information, call Beth Powers at 864-4606.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 8:30 on night at Aceve in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Doug Hesse at 749-1255.
KU Republicans will hold officer elections at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call David Olson at 841-6249.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 30, 1993
Senate rescues qualified admissions bill
Committee to draw up compromise
By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A plan that would require qualified admissions at the state's Regents universities is still breathing.
A deft Senate action resuscitated
the admissions bill last week after it did not pass the House after a 61-61 vote. Senators voted to put the admissions legislation into another House bill that already had passed a House floor vote. The original bill focused on expanding the board of the Kansas State High School Activities Association.
Under the qualified admissions plan, high school students would need to meet one of three qualifications: a 2.0 grade point average, a composite ACT score of 23 or a rank in the top third of their graduating class.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
After the House tie, the bill did not die but was not rescheduled for debate.
The revised House bill now goes to a six-member conference committee comprising three members from each legislative chamber. The conference committee will meet soon to draft a
The meeting has not been scheduled.
compromise plan between both chambers.
When the bill leaves the conference committee it returns to the Senate and then the House for floor votes before it goes to Gov. Joan Finney.
Prior to the House vote, the Senate passed the qualified admissions bill, the first time the legislation had ever passed a state legislative body in its ten-year history. It also received historic support in the House by receiving 61 votes, the most votes such legislation has ever received.
State Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson who championed qualified admissions in the Senate, declined yesterday to say whether he thought the bill stood a better chance in the House on the back of separate legislation.
"Of course, it's the House that has the problem," he said. "I'm just giving them another method for passage. The ball is in their court."
One of the three representatives on the conference committee is Duane Goossen, R-Goessel, head of the House Education Committee. He has supported the qualification of admittedmissions. He, too, declined to make
any predictions other than to say he expected another close vote.
"It's likely to come to a roll call vote," he said, referring to the method the House confirms a close voice vote.
State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R- Lawrence, in favor of amending the admission legislation into another bill. She said she was not surprised qualified admissions was still alive this late in the legislative session.
The Legislature's first adjournment is set for April 7. The wrapup session is scheduled to begin April 28.
SHEPHERD'S HOT FOOD CENTER
Linda Mathias, who works at the cafeteria in Oliver Hall, has been a cook at KU's residence halls for about two years. She likes to talk to students so she can get their ideas on how to change and improve recipes.
Cook dishes up new recipes
By Will Lewis
Cansan staff writer
She appreciates students' comments and knows how to work with them.
If a sticker existed that read "How's my cooking?" Linda Mathias would stick one where everyone could see it.
Mathias, a cook at Oliver Hall, does not like the opinion that many students have of cafeteria cooks in residence halls. So she does her best to change it.
A resident from Israel filled out an evaluation form on a felafel dish Mathias once prepared. The resident said it was too bland. Mathias called the student and worked to perfect the recipe.
"Together, I think we've come up with a great authentic taste," she said.
Mathias landed her first job as a short-
order cook in Iowa when she was 17.
But her love of cooking did not develop until later, when she met her ex-husband.
could eat and eat and eat," she said. "Plus,
there really was a lot to do in Iowa."
Things started boiling when she moved to the Kansas City area in 1980. She worked at several restaurants, sometimes holding three jobs at a time.
When the Free State Brewing Co. 636 Massachusetts St., opened in 1989, she was asked to develop the menu. It has not changed much since.
But after working in the residence halls for about two years, she knows that change does not always have to be bad.
"Some of the recipes I can just read and tell they're not going to work." Mathias said. "Communication is a big key for me because it's hard to know what people are liking."
"What really stands out with her is her willingness to try new things and taking the initiative," she said. "If a recipe isn't just right, she'll adjust it."
Mathias' creativity increases when she is hungry and inspired by her own
Nona Golledge, Oliver's cafeteria manager, said she had seen Mathias' enthusiasm and attention to students' tastes.
Mathias also eats the food that she dishes out.
"I eat here every day," she said. "So I like to have a good selection. It's important to me."
Fire department demonstrates need for sprinkler systems
By Carlos Tejada Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kansan
An ordinance requiring greek houses to install fire sprinkler systems will probably pass the city commission tonight despite Greek concerns about the ordinance, Lawrence mayor Bob Schulte said yesterday.
"The fraternities and sororites present some special difficulties for residents, in terms of life safety, that other dwellings don't," he said.
At a fire sprinkler demonstration held by the Lawrence Fire Department yesterday afternoon, Schulte said the ordinance, which would require sprinkler systems in congregate housing such as greek houses, had received favorable attention.
Schulte said the sprinklers were needed.
However, while yesterday's demonstration extinguished a controlled fire, it did little to quell greek concerns about the ordinance.
"That is not a fair and equitable proposition as it reads," he said.
Craig Templeton, a member of Phi Gamma Delta's corporate board, said the ordinance unfairly singled out greek houses.
According to Sean Williams, also a corporate board member for Phi Gamma Delta, the added cost of a sprinkler system to membership dues would make克莱林 housing less attractive.
"The fraternities and sororites are basically student housing, and that puts them at an economic disadvantage," he said.
Road Sprinkler Fitters Local Union No. 699, which sponsored the demonstration, said a sprinkler system costs between 80 cents and $2.50 per square foot, depending on which system was purchased.
Apartmentes have an advantage, Williams said, because fire inspectors inspect buildings but not individual apartments. Greek houses seem to have more fire hazards because inspectors
Williams also said safety precautions made by houses since 1987, such as installing fire doors, exit lights and emergency lights, had made sprinklers unnecessary.
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief, disagreed. He said a fire inspection of all congregate housing turned up as many fire code violations as were found in 1987.
Increased dues shouldn't have much of an impact on Greek recruitment, Schulte said.
"I haven't heard of any vacancies in fraternity or sorority houses that have sprinkler systems,"
Williams said the situation was analogous to passing a law requiring all car owners to install airbags in their old cars.
Opponents plan to attend tonight's vote, but Schulte was confident the ordinance would
"We can provide a greater deal of safety, but at what cost?" he said.
"The sense of the commission is that the time has come to take some action," he said.
Kansan staff writer
Bv Brett Riggs
Education professor, 65, dies
Barrientes-Monzon, professor of educational policy and administration, died of complications from a heart attack Wednesday at St Francis Hospital in Topeka. Barrientes-Monzon, 65, resided in Lawrence.
Nancy Harper, Ph.D. candidate in educational policy and leadership, said, "Everyone spoke up." He was the Harvest
[Picture of a man]
van L. Barrientos-Monzon
said. "You knew he loved what he was doing, and he wanted to create that same excitement in his students."
Barrientos-Monzon was selected an Outstanding Educator of America in 1972 and received the first KU chancellor's teaching award in 1975.
He joined the KU faculty in 1966 as a research associate and visiting assistant professor in the School of Education. From 1968 to 1969, he directed the Inter-American Institute in San Antonio. He returned to KU in 1969, where he remained until his death.
He also received the chancellor's award for distinguished teaching in 1991.
He was born April 28, 1927, in Quezaltenzo, Guatemala, the son of Ricardo Barrientos and Olimpia Monzon. He came to the United States in 1963 with his family.
He received bachelor's degrees from the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala and master's and doctorate degrees in education philosophy from Michigan State University at East Lansing.
He was married to Adriana Ethelmira Arroyo Oct. 5, 1956, in Guatemala. She survives.
Other survivors include a daughter, Lili Barrientos-Monzon, Lawrence; a son, Rick Barrientos-Monzon, Sonoma, Calif.; and three brothers, Guido Barrientos, El Paso, Texas, and Sergio Barrientos and Tomas Barrientos, both of Guatemala City.
Memorial Services were held Saturday.
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Tuesday, March 30, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
Norplant not racist, but effective contraceptive
In December of 1990, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Norplant, the most revolutionary female contraceptive since the pill was introduced in the 1960s. After its approval, an editorial by the Philadelphia Inquirer suggested that mothers on public assistance receive inducements for using Norplant to help avoid unwanted pregnancies. The recommendation has now stigmatized Norplant as a racist genocidal weapon, aimed at lower-class women.
Norplant's six thin capsules release the hormone progestin which may obstruct ovulation for a maximum of five years. In approximately 10 minutes, the capsules are surgically implanted under the skin of the upper arm. Moreover, the capsules must be surgically removed in order to cease treatment. Effectiveness has been considered to be 99 percent.
Since Norplant must be inserted and removed by a medical practitioner, the contraceptive has been linked to involuntary sterilization methods of lower-class women that were practiced earlier in this century. Paralleling those actions today is the fact that 13 states have already considered Norplant as a prerequisite for public assistance, in exchange for financial inducements to not become pregnant. However, no legislature has passed.
Suggesting inducements of any kind for lower-class women is not sufficient proof that Norplant is genocidal. Norplant is a voluntary contraceptive. The client decides whether this contraceptive is right for her. If the client chooses Norplant and is dissatisfied with the device, it is then promptly removed. In addition, Norplant is available to middle and upper-class women of all creeds to facilitate preventing unwanted pregnancies. So long as Norplant remains a voluntary contraceptive method to all women, the device cannot be stigmatized as a racist genocidal weapon.
T. M. KNIGHT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Voters must give up pork for real deficit reduction
Communities' struggle to save their military bases from closure shows the plight of communities dependent on government dollars for economic sustenance, which is to say, all communities.
In sum, communities stand ready to move heaven and earth to keep their military bases.
It also underscores the plight of Bill Clinton and everyone who shares his struggle to balance the federal budget. There is always a constituency prepared to oppose federal spending cuts and rarely one prepared to fight for them. Not when it comes to specifics, anyway.
The point, however, is that Defense Secretary Les Aspin's job is to determine how much defense the United States needs, how much it can afford, and how best to deploy it — not how to save domestic jobs or strengthen local economies.
The irony, of course, is that among those willing to tax or public in-debt themselves to ensure that the government keeps funding a local installation are probably a good many people who also want Clinton to balance the federal budget.
Many probably agree that among the ways Clinton should do that is by closing unneeded government facilities, and many probably would prefer federal spending cuts to federal tax increases.
Doubtless there's such a project in every congressional district in America.
We can't help wondering, however, how anyone in Washington could ever end deficit spending so long as the people who send them there keep asking them to perpetuate it.
The American Hattiesburg, Miss.
Kansan editorial board:
Kris Belden, Greg Farmer, Vered Hankin, Jeff Hays, Val Huber, T.M. Knight, Kyle Kickhaefer, Stephen Martino, Jolinda Mathews, Colleen McCain, Chris Moeser, Simon Naldoza, David Olson, Jeff Reynolds, Chris Ronan, and Michael Taylor.
APPEARS WE
HAVE HERE
TRACE RESIDUES OF
THE ENVIRONMENTAL
VICE PRESIDENT.
OHIO
HAZARDOUS
WASTE
INCINERATOR
NOW
OPEN!
TOLYS
UNIVERSAL PRESS SYND
CLINTON SAYS ITS
JUST A TEST BURN
People tested for HIV can receive counseling
Last week Cecile Julian wrote a column about anonymous HIV testing, and how she could not grasp how someone could cope with being told they were positive. Julian's empathy is notable. I wonder how many people have ever tried to understand the experience if they have not lived through it.
But Julian is not informed. In all of the testing sites I am aware of, a trained test counselor interviews each person being tested, anonymous test or not, about past and current risk behaviors and preventative steps. The test's limitations and implications are explained. And the person is advised to think about how his/her life will change, and how he/she will behave, after learning the results. He/she is advised to think of support systems, of treatment needs, of insurance, of whom to tell and whom not to tell. And, when the results are given, that counselor is there to reinforce the education, re-examine the behaviors and attitudes of the person, and, if necessary, provide for immediate counseling and next-step planning.
GUEST COLUMNIST
PATRICK DILLEY
Julian asks what goes through someone's mind between being tested and obtaining the results. Fear, no matter what risk behaviors were involved. Hope, that the time you weren't cautious would not result in testing HIV-positive. Fear, of losing your friends, your job, your apartment, your life. Hope, that you're just paranoid. Fear, that you're not just paranoid. That's the thought most
people come back to: fear.
Julian mistakenly believes that the difference between an anonymous HIV test (where you use a fake name) and a confidential one (where the results are listed in your medical records) is that professional help is only available if a confidential test was administered. Professionals are there for either anonymous or confidential testing recipients. The difference is that anonymous tests allow only you to know the results of your test. Confidential tests record that information forever.
Julian refers to a proposed law in Kansas that would limit the number of anonymous test sites (between one and five for the entire state). She thinks this would be a good thing. It would not.
The law would require almost all tests to be reported to state health agencies. Julian believes that this would not be a problem, since "every one understands the value of privacy, and no medical record can be released without the owner's sigma-
ture." This, too, is wrong. Insurance companies routinely deny or drastically lower benefits to people who are HIV-positive. Landlords routinely throw tenants out in the street. Employers routinely try to fire employees. This is illegal, but it happens. Breaching confidential records is illegal, but it happens.
What if someone in Hays tested positive? His doctor would record it. Then, it would be reported. How long would that person have until his condition were known around town? Think about the abenation, the loneliness, the fear that he would live with, in addition to being HIV-positive. It should be his decision whom he tells, how he tells and when he tells — not the state's.
People choose the anonymous test not because they fear that they cannot cope with the result, as Julian suggests. People choose anonymous tests because they fear how others will treat them if they don't "carry around that terrifying knowledge by themselves because they couldn't trust anyone else."
Legislators and health officials want Kansas to enact this law because passage of the law would qualify them for more federal funds for AIDS treatment. A great goal, but not at the expense of personal liberty and the determent of getting tested.
Patrick Dilley is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in higher education — student affairs and co-director for the Center for Sexual Health Education.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Pro-life can mean
As anti-abortion feminists, we would like to thank Ann Jurcyk for her series of illuminating articles about abortion. We are incensed at how "feminists" say we cannot be pro-life and pro-woman concurrently, for abortion is clearly not prowoman, for abortion was the most woman was to break free from the status quo and promote freedom of thought, not to hide the truth and stigmatize those with different ideas. Thank you again, Ann,
for taking a stand for what is right,
for is a rare thing to see these days.
Rebecca L Rogers
Salina freshman
Erin Baumgartner
Andover freshman
pro-woman also
Story on Phelps portrayed truth
Perhaps I misinterpreted the feature story "Children on the Line for God," but I thought this detailed look at Fred Phelps' grandchildren, namely Nathan Phelps-Poer, was covered objectively. It demonstrateu the disgusting way that Fred Phelps gets his message across — exploitation.
I did not think that by printing this story the *Kansan* was expressing an anti-homosexual message. True enough, it probably didn't offend the Phelps, but how could the reporter have gotten the interview by offending Fred? Furthermore, the people who wrote letters to the editor protesting the article should have know this is the sick truth, not a flowery tale about the Phelps clan.
Karmel Addis Harveyville sophomore
Karmel Addis
Kelli Oliver Religion is wrong focus in coverage of Muslims
Muneera Naseer
The recent explosion at the World Trade Center in New York City has brought several issues to light. As Muslims, this event was just as unsettling to us as it was to non-Muslims. We fear that the arrest of the Muslims in connection with the bombing may perpetuate the myth that Islam encourages violence. Our religion teaches us that peace and compromise are the best ways to solve problems. It is an injustice that Islam has been equated with violence in the past. We also fear that this may widen the gap between Muslims and non-Muslims in the United States and that it may characterize Muslims as terrorists. We would like to emphasize that there is a large, ethnically diverse Muslim population living right here in the United States. Many are U.S. citizens who vote, pay taxes and are active members of their communities.
BENEDETTE BERLIN
MARIA GREGORIANA
BENEDETTE BERLIN
Too many times, Muslims are portrayed as gun-slinging, stone-throwing, violent extremists. These are usually the images that we see of Palestinians, Libyans and Iranians, among others. We hardly ever see these people in times of peace. The Muslim world is brought to our attention mainly in times of war or conflict. For example, rarely do we hear of the peaceful coexistence of Muslims and Jews, yet these situations do occur worldwide. Also, the Muslim efforts toward peace and their acts of generosity often are overlooked.
We also are concerned about the emphasis of the suspected bomber's religion. Often, when a Muslim commits a violent crime, religion is highlighted. This is not the case with non-Muslims. When a non-Muslim commits a crime we never know if that person is a Catholic, Protestant or Jew, nor is it pertinent for us to know. This should be the case for people of all religions. We need to stress that nowhere in our Holy Quran does it state "thou shalt commit terrorist acts." Our religion stresses peace and compassion just as Christianity and Judaism, among others, do. When judging a religion, one should look to the teachings of that faith, not to its followers. People are not perfect.
We are in no position to decide whether the suspects are responsible for the bombing; that is for the courts to decide. People are innocent until proven guilty. The media has a responsibility to the public to let suspects stand trial in the U.S. court system, not in the media itself.
Muslims want to live in peace just as much as anyone else. We want a better future for our children and a better society in which everyone has the right to express his or her beliefs. Muslims are striving for the same goals as non-Muslims are.
One of the great things about the U.S. is the freedom of religion, but what use is this freedom to anyone, if they are being stereotyped?
Munera Naseer is a Karachi, Pakistan senior majoring in journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
Editor
Kell Oliver is a Tonganoxie senior majoring in business administration and accounting.
GARET FANNER
Editor
GAYLE OSTERBERG
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILK SHEET, Technology coord
STEVE PERRY
Asst Managing ... Justin Knopp
News ... Monique Guisalain
... David Mitchell
Editorial ... Stephen Martino
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**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position. **Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer Flint Hall.
Mystery Strip
MY BOYFRIEND AND I
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By David Rosenfield
WHY DON'T YOU
DUMP HIM AND
FIND YOURSELF
ANOTHER GUY?
WHAT? AND RISK
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A path to the past
Oregon City, Ore.
Oregon Trail
Lawrence, Kan.
Independence, Mo.
Kathleen Stollie
Special to the Kansan
A
although cracked and weathered and overlooked by many, a humble marker just north of Lindley Hall tells the tale of the Oregon Trail and its significance to the KU campus. Although much has surely changed, it's not tough to envisage the Trail which travelers encountered 150 springs ago.
The Oregon Trail, the main cross-
country throughfare to the Northwest from 1843 to the 1860s, stretched 2,000 miles from Independence, Mo., to Oregon City, Ore., including a 172-mile passage through Kansas and a climb atop Lawrence's Mount Oread.
Coming into view at the crest of Sunflower Road just west of Watson Library is Blue Mound, a treeless, indigo mound emerging from the Wakarusa valley southeast of campus. The topographical anomaly, now known as Mount Bleu, was one of the most-noted landmarks in the journals of Trail travel. Today the mount is covered in foliage but still is clearly visible from the Hill.
"Blue Mound was a notable landmark," says Barbara Burgess, an assistant professor of journalism at Washburn University who received her doctorate in American Studies from KU. Her doctoral dissertation focused on the journals of women trail travelers. "Some people would climb it, if the weather was nice and if they had time when passing through."
vived the exodus from the Midwest to the Pacific Coast.
there was danger, of course, and there was illness," she said, "but there was illness in the cities, too."
The Wakaunisa River, which runs just south of Lawrence until it buits up with the Kaw River further east of town, was the first major waterway the travelers encountered in Kansas, Burgess said. But, despite such hardships, including the tedious task of negotiating wagups up and down steep river banks, most sur-
cities, so who left behind wagon ruts, as they headed down what is now Jayhawk Boulevard included fur traders, California-bound gold miners, missionaries, explorers and families. Because of the federal government's urging, families sought land to homestead.
Though nobody knows precisely where the Trail itself crossed campus — and it's unlikely there was any precision to its path — Steve Jansen, director of the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., said one account placed the Trail's ascent just behind Fraser Hall, southeast of where the Chancellor's Residence presently is, near 17th Street. Another branch of the route, he said, is believed to have crossed at the north end of campus, near where Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Cornin Hall stands today, along 11th Street.
Approximately 100,000 travelers passed through the Oregon Trail's Kansas corridor, then known as the Independence Road. In an excerpt for a book she is compiling, Burgess had said that the caravans of covered wagons would depart from Independence sometime in early May, after the emigrants felt confident that the prairie grasses had grown tall enough to support the livestock traveling with them. For early Trail travelers, few resources, other than those provided by the land itself, existed around Lawrence, which was not founded until 1854.
From Lawrence, the Trail jutted on westward, passing through what is now Topeka, St. Mary's, Westmoreland, Blue Rapids and Hanover before crossing into Nebraska territory. Today the Trail can be traced through six states including Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Idaho and Oregon.
MEDICAL UNIVERSITY OF HERITAGE
FINAL HELICE / KA
The marker on the north side of Lindley Hall reminds people of the pioneers who traveled the Oregon Trail from Independence, Mo., to Oregan City, Ore.
'Unforgiven' leads field with four Oscars
And the Oscar goes to
The 65th annual Oscar presentations were made last night. The major award winners included;
Best picture
Unforgiven
图
Best director
Other nominees
"The Crying Game"
"Howards End"
"Scent of a Woman
Clint Eastwoo
Clint Eastwood
"Untorgiven"
Other nominees:
Martin Brest
James Ivory
Neil Jordan
Robert Altman
Best actress
Other nominees:
Catherine Deneuve
Mary Jane Pfeiffer
Susan Sarandon
Best actor
"Howards End"
Thompson
Al Pacino
Source: CNN
Other nominees:
Robert Downey J.
Clint Eastwood
Stephen Rea
Denzel Washington
"Scent of a Woman"
Host supporting actress:
"My Cousin Vinny"
Marisa Tomel
Best supporting actor
Other nominees:
Judy Davis
Washington
Vanessa Redgrave
Miranda Richardson
Gene Hackman
"Unforgiven"
Author nominee
Jave Davidson
Jack Nicholson
Al Pacino
David Paymer
The Associated Press
"Pacino's throat was dry, and mine was really dry," said Eastwood in accepting his directing prize to a standing ovation. He had never even been nominated before.
"Unforgiven" led a diverse field of winners with four Oscars. It brought a supporting actor award to Gene Hackman for his portrayal of a sadistic sheriff. It also received the award for film editing.
Sean M. Tevis / KANSAN
LOS ANGELES — Clint Eastwood's brooding Western "Unforgiven" won the Oscar as best picture and brought him the directing prize last night. Al Pacino, another veteran who had never won before, took the acting award as the embittered blind veteran in "Scent of a Woman."
Emma Thompson, the free-thinking intellectual who marries into money in "Howards End," was named actress, while Marisa Tomei, Joe Pesci's feynest girlfriend in "My Cousin Vinny," was a surprise winner as actress.
"Indulge me for a minute, because I'm not used to this," he said in the midst of a rambling speech.
You broke my streak," said Pacino, who had been nominated six times in past years without winning.
Pacino, one of the industry's most respected actors, strode to the stage to a standing ovation.
howards End," a stately family saga that was nominated for nine awards, also won for art direction and Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's screenplay adaptation of E.M. Forster's classic novel.
Another best picture nominee, "The Crying Game," won the best original screenplay award for Neil Jordan's sexually provocative story about love and terrorism.
Hackman, who received his second Oscar, thanked Eastwood during his acceptance
speech.
"(He) made it all possible for me and everyone else in the film. It was a wonderful experience," he said.
hackman won as best actor for the 1971 film "The French Connection."
In accepting her award, Tomi said, "This is such a great honor to receive this in a year when we recognize and celebrate and honor women."
The theme of the 65th Academy Awards, televised live by ABC to a worldwide audience estimated in advance at 1 billion, was "Oscar Salutes Women and the Movies."
Tomei, virtually unknown until "My Cousin Vinny," beat some of the world's most acclaimed actresses, including Judy Davis, who had been favored for win for her role in Woody Allen's "Husbands and Wives."
"Aldadin" Disney's smash animated film, brought the Oscar for best original score to Alan Menken, while he and Tim Rice won the best song award for "A Whole New World." Menken and his late partner, Howard Ashman, had won Oscars two of the previous three years for Disney's "The Little Mermaid" and "Beauty and the Beast."
"A River Runs Through It" picked up the Oscar for cinematography, while the award for best sound went to "The Last of the Mohicans."
"Bram Stoker's Dracula," directed by Francis Ford Coppola, picked up awards for costume design, makeup and sound effects editing. The prize for visual effects went to the black comedy "Death Becomes Her."
"Indochine," at $20 million the most expensive French film ever made, was honored as best foreign picture.
as best to showcase Billy Crystal, host of the show for the
Continued on Page 6.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAN
MARCH 30, 1993 PAGE 5
KU Life
Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
Lectures and Seminars
*Losing Weight Sensibly*
11 a.m., today, first floor
Conference Room, Wat-
tion Memorial Health Cent
kins Memorial Health Center
"Sexually Transmitted Diseases" Information Table.
1:30 p.m., same location
Environmental Colloquium: "The Rise and Fall of the Appropriate Technology Movement, 1955-85," by Carroll Pursell, Case Western Reserve University. 4-8 p.m., Friday, Hall Center Conference Room
"Rose Pesotto: Biography of a Labor Activist, 1896-1965," presented by Ann Schofield associate professor of American Studies and Women's Studies. 3:30-5 p.m., Thursday Hall Center for the Humanities Conference Room
Concerts
Doctoral Lecture-Recital:
Alexandra Mascolo-David,
piano: 5 p.m., today,
Swarthout Recital Hall.
E
Spring Concert: KU Symphonic Band; Robert E Foster, conductor; Peter Schickele, guest conductor. 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Free
Chamber Music Series; New World String Quartet with Phyllis Pancella, mezzo-soprano; World premiere of Lowell Liebermann's "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking, Opus 41,"
8 p.m., Friday, Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets: Public $15 and $13, KU and K-12 students $7.50 and $6.50, senior citizens & other students $14 & $12
Master's Recital: Ron Montgomery, trumpet;
4:30 p.m., Saturday, Swarthout Recital Hall.
Free
Spring Concert; University Symphony Orchestra, Brian Priestman, conductor, Claude Frank piano soloist, 3:30 p.m., Sunday, Crafton
Preyer Theatre
Tickets: Public $6, senior citizens $5, students.$3
Student Recital: Chin-In Chu, composition, 8 p.m., Swanky, Sawhort Recital Hall, Free
Theater
English Alternative Theatre
"The Homecoming," by Harold Pinter
笑
8 p.m., Thursday through Saturday and 2:30
p.m., Sunday, Swarthout Recital Hall, $5
General Admission
6
Tuesday, March 30, 1993
A Step Ahead
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KULIFE
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Courses are offered at a variety of convenient times, both day and evening, in eight week, five week or short term formats. If you'll be working this summer, there are numerous class choices to fit your work schedule.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pacino wins Oscar in best actor catagory for 'Scent of a Woman'
Continued from Page 5.
fourth time, made his usual hilarious entrance, this time riding on a giant-size Oscar statue pulled by Jack Palance. It was Palance who upstaged Crystal last year by performing one-handed pushups after he accepted his supporting actor award for "City Slickers," in which they starred together.
"The Crying Game" attracted the most pre-Oscar discussion because of its graphic style and plot surprises. There had been special interest in whether its cross-dressing co-star Jave Davidson, a loser in the supporting actor category, would wear a tux or gown for the occasion. Davidson chose an androgynous outfit of a long black frock coat over tight pants and boots.
PICTURE: "Unforgiven," Clint Eastwood.
Here is a complete list of Oscar winners at last night's 65th annual Academy Awards ceremony:
ACTOR: Al Pacino, "Scent of a Woman."
ACTRESS: Emma Thompson,
"Howards End."
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Gene Hack
man. "Unforgiven."
music
SUPPORTING ACTRESS. Marisit
Tournel "My Cousin Vinny."
DIRECTOR: Clint Eastwood,
"Unforgiven."
FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM.
Posey "Indorahne."
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY. Neil Jordan.
*The Creator Game*
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Ruth Pawer ibahvala, "Hedges End."
ART DIRECTION: Laciana Arrigua and Ian Whittaker, "Howards End."
Rousselot, "A River Runs Through it." COSTUME DESIGN: Eiko Ishioka, "Bram Stoker's Dracula."
BRAUD CAMERAS
DOCUMENTARY FEATURE. Barbara Trent and David Kasper, "The Panama Deception."
DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT: Thomas C. Goodwin and Gerardine Wurzburg "Educating Peter" EMI EDITING: Joel Cox, "Unfor-
FILM EDITING: Joel Cox, "Unfor-given."
MAKEUP: Greg Cannon, Michele Burke and Matthew W. Mungle,
"Bram Stoker's Dracula."
ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE: Alan Menken, "Aladdin."
ORIGINALSONG: Alan Menken and Tim Rice, "Whole New World" from "Aladdin."
ANIMATED SHORT FILM. Joan C. Gratz, "Mona Lisa Descending a Staircase."
LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM: Sam Karmann, "Omnibus."
SOUND- Chris Jenkins, Doug Hemphill, Mark Smith and Simon Kaye, "The Last of the Mohicans"
SOUND EFFECTS EDITING: Tom C. McCarthy and David E. Stone, "Bram Stoker's Dracula."
VISUAL EFFECTS: Ken Ralston, Doug Chiang, Doug Smythe and Tom Woodruff, "Death Becomes Her."
Previously Announced Oscar Recipients:
JEAN HERSHOLT AWARD: Audrey
Hepburn for her UNICEF work.
JEAN HERSHOLT AWARD. Elizabeth Taylor for her support of AIDS research.
ACADEMITY (TECHNICAL) AWARD OF MERIT Chadwell O'Connor for development of the fluid-damped camera-head.
GORDON E. SAWYER (TECHNICAL) AWARD: Erich Kaestner for technical contributions to the motion picture industry.
HONORARY AWARD: Italian filmmaker Federico Fellini for lifetime achievement.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, March 30, 1993
7
Final Four rematch awaits 'Hawks
Similar styles mark Kansas North Carolina
When Kansas senior guard Adonis Jordan first played against North Carolina, he said he ran into a slight problem.
By David Dorsey
By David Dorsey
Kansan sportswriter
"At the same time, I know what they were going to do."
"When I called a play, they knew exactly what I was going to do," Jordan said.
Similar philosophies, offensive plays and defenses will clash again at 4:42 p.m. Saturday at the Superdome in New Orleans, when Kansas plays North Carolina for the second time in three years in the semifinals of the Final Four.
But half the time, the problem would turn into an advantage.
Martin Altstaedten / Special to the KANSAN
Kansas coach Roy Williams, who served as an assistant coach under Dean Smith at North Carolina for 10 years, will face his mentor for the second time. But Williams said that the second meeting between them should not be blown out of proportion.
Kansas beat North Carolina 79-73 two years ago in the semifinals in Indianapolis — the coaches' first meeting as opponents.
"I really want to put to rest as much as I can that Roy Williams versus Dean Smith junk." Williams said yesterday at a news conference. "I am very proud of my background and very proud of Coach Smith and what he meant to me, but it all boils down to Kansas' players against North Carolina's players."
Men's basketball KU
Kansas coach Roy Williams talks about the Jayhawks' Final Four match up with North Carolina. At a news conference yesterday, Williams said more emphasis should be placed on the players than his ties to the North Carolina program.
Williams said that watching North Carolina play Cincinnati in the East regional final was difficult. In fact, he said, he walked away from the TV when the game went into overtime. But his emotions about the upcoming game, he said, would be like any other.
"Once we get into the arena, my emotions aren't any different than they would be if we were playing against a Bobby Knight team." Williams said. "I think Coach Smith would be disappointed in me if I would have any different feelings during the game that would take away from my coaching and the job that I was supposed to do.
"The only time my emotions were any different the last time was when the second technical was called. I don't care what anybody says. The man didn't deserve it."
Smith was called for a second technical foul late in the 1991 contest and was ejected from the court with the outcome of the game already decided.
Kansas senior guard Rex Walters, who sat out the 1991 season after transferring from Northwestern, said that he saw similarities and differences between the two coaches.
"The one thing they have in common is that they both care about their players and put their teams above everything." Walters said. "But they're not exactly alike. Coach Williams has been really hungry. He's out to prove something. Coach Smith is a lot more
Four Jayhawks — Jordan, Patrick Richey, Richard Scott and Steve Woodberry — and six Tar Heels — George Lynch, Eric Montross, Derrick Phelps, Brian Reese, HenkRod and Pat Sullivan — return for the second meeting.
Jordan said that Kansas did not plan on changing any of the signals or
plays, despite the Tar Heels' knowledge of them.
"We're going to play our own game," Jordan said. "There might be a little more free lance on offense, which is the type of game I like."
The Jahayhks enter the Final Four as a No. 2 seed, North Carolina, Michigan and Kentucky enter as No. 1 seeds from their respective regions.
1 two years ago, we were in the same situation, and we came out on top" Jordan said. The Tar Heels were a No. 1 seed while the Jayhawks were a No. 3 seed in 1991. "Two Final Fours out of four years. I'm on cloud nine right now."
Kansas will leave for New Orleans on Thursday. They will practice at noon on Friday in the Superdome.
Jayhawks end strong season
Seven swimmers receive honors at NCAA tournament
Kansan sportswrite
By Matt Doyle
[The five men's and two women's swimmers who participated in the championships received All-American honors.
The success Kansas swimmers achieved during regular season meets continued in the recent NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships.
Swimming
Sophomore Frankie Hanson and freshman Katie Chapeau were the only NCAA qualifiers from the women's team, which won the Big Eight Conference Championship. The team finished the regular season two weeks ago with a No.11 ranking at the women's championships in Minneapolis, Minn.
Hanson and Chapeau are the first two Kansas women swimmers to simultaneously earn All-America honors since 1989 when Barb Prangen and Barbara Ann Smith were honored.
Hanson finished seventh in the 1.650-yard freestyle event with a time of 16:31.52, which was a new school
record for the event. Her finish also was the best by any Kansas women's swimmer since Tammy Pease's sixth place finish in the 50-yard freestyle at the 1985 NCAA Championships.
Chapeau broke her own school record in the 100-yard backstroke with a time of 55.46 seconds, which put her in 11th place. She set the earlier record in the preliminary round with a time of 55.49 seconds.
Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf said that Chapaue and Hanson both continued to improve at the national championships.
The Jayhawks finished 10th with 83 points while the Cornhuskers finished 20th with 69 points.
The men's team did something at the men's championships last weekend in Indianapolis that it could not pull off during the season: beating Nebraska.
"This was the first time we finished better than Nebraska in a long time, and I am happy with that," Kemp said. "To take a team of five and finish 16th
at the national championships was just great."
Sophomore Marc Bontrager and junior Scott Townsend earned All-America honors in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle events. Bontrager took sixth place in the 50 freestyle with a school record of 19.60 seconds and also placed 14th in the 100 freestyle. Townsend placed ninth in the 50 freestyle and 16th in the 100 freestyle.
Bontrager said the experiences encountered by the men this year should help them prepare for next season.
"This year we thought we had a better team than Nebraska, but we lost to them by 100 points at the Big Eight meet," he said. "We'll learn from our mistakes this year and apply them to next year."
One person Kempf will have to replace is senior Zhawn Stevens, who was an All-American in the 400-yard individual medley after a 15th place finish.
"You do not bring in people to take the place of a Shawn Stevens or Ed Riddle." Kempf said. "Those guys do not get replaced easily."
Riddle and junior Curtis Taylor earned All-America honors as participants on the third place 200-yard freestyle relay team, which set a school record with a time of 1:18.82
The Associated Press
Major league announces minority involvement plan
NEW YORK — Responding to pressure from civil rights groups, major league baseball yesterday announced a series of initiatives designed to increase minority involvement by the 28 teams.
The plan was immediately denounced by the Rev. Jesse Jackson as inadequate and misleading.
The executive council, in the wake of the outcry that followed derogatory remarks by Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott, issued a seven-point plan aimed at bolstering minority hiring in front offices and the use of businesses controlled by minorities.
"There's teeth in this program. It's comprehensive," said executive council head Bud Selig, calling it a "very significant and serious group of initiatives."
Jackson, a leading critic of baseball's hiring practices, released a letter he sent March 18 to White House chief of staff Thomas McLarry. Jackson threatened pickets next Monday outside Camden Yards in Baltimore, where President Clinton is to
throw out the ceremonial first pitch.
The plan called for teams to:
The plan called for teams to include minority candidates throughout their organizations "within a reasonable time frame."
- attempt to attract minorities as investors and have "appropriate minority participation" on their boards of directors.
seek minority-owned vendors, including doctors, lawyers and bankers.
insist non-minority vendors be equal opportunity employers.
make new efforts to attract minorities as fans.
have their employees undergo sensitivity training "unless clearly unnecessary."
increase community and charitable activities.
The commissioner's office says 17 percent of front-office employees are minorities, up from 2 percent in 1987. Baseball's seven-man equal opportunity committee, which drafted the report, rejected the establishment of quotas. Jackson has demanded specific goals and timetables.
BRIEF
Kansas City shut out
in exhibition contest
17
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Shortstop Rico Roscoy committed two errors in the ninth inning, allowing the Toronto Blue Jays to break a scoreless tie and top the Kansas City Royals 3-0 yesterday.
The Associated Press
Track teams anticipate better season
Bell scored the final run on Angel Martinez's single to right. Jeff Montgomery was charged with the loss.
After Paul Molitor led off the inning with a single and John Olerd walked. Rossy made a throwing error on Derek Bell's grounder, loading the bases with one out. Ed Sprague hit what could have been an inning-ending double play grounder to Rossy, who dropped it.
Meantime, Royals manager Hal McRae announced that Kevin Appier would be the opening day starter Monday against Boston.
The Royals also placed left-handed pitcher Dennis Rasmussen on the 15-day disabled list because of a nerve irritation in his left foot.
With the help of five individual titles, the men's team scored 50 points, six more than Texas Christian University and 14 points ahead of SMU at Saturday's meet.
Men, women win first outdoor meets of spring season
After the men's and women's track teams had what Kansas coach Gary Schwartz called a disappointing performance at the Big Eight Conference Indoors, both teams already have won their first outdoor meet, the Southern Methodist University Invitational.
The women's team scored four victories and led the field with 49 points, beating the University of Texas-Arlington by four.
By Blake Spurney
Kansan sportswriter
Indoor meets do not have the discus or javelin throw, events that the Jay hawks have performed well in.
"I think both teams will be a little stronger outdoors because of the differences of events," he said.
Schwartz said that he was optimistic about the new season.
Spring schedule
Junior Dan Lalich said the javelin
and junior Teresa Sherman-Reicher
The Kansas men's and women's track teams participated in their first outdoor meet of the season last weekend at South Point. A list of the rest of their meets follows.
April 2-3 Texas Reliays, Austin, Texas
April 10 John Jacobs Invittional
Norman, Okla.
April 14-17 Kansas Reliays, Lawrence
April 22 Drake Reliays
April 24 Moores, Iowa
May 2 Minnesota Invittional
Mneapolis, Minn.
May 17-18 Big Eight Championships
Boulder, Colo.
June 2-5 NCAA Qualifying Meet, TBA
June 2-5 NCAA Championships
New Orleans
Junior Keeley Harding clears the bar during practice. Harding won the high jump at Southern Methodist last weekend.
KANSAN
took the discus title at SMU.
Schwartz also said that he typically geared the distance runners toward having their best performances outdoors.
Junior Julia Saul won the 5,000-meter run at the conference meet, but she said she was looking forward to having a better spring.
Last year, the women's team enjoyed one of its best outdoor seasons with a third-place finish in the Big Eight Conference Outdoors. The men's team placed sixth.
"I think they both have the ability to be ten four teams," Schwartz said.
The return of many injured athletes should help Kansas in the outdoor season.
Schwartz said the women could again place third if sophomore spinner Natasha Shafer returns from a hamstring injury. She won both the 55 and 200-meter dashes at four indoor meets.
SPORTS EDITOR
a leg injury but vaulted to a victory last weekend.
the Jayhawks also returned junior Jon Handy, a middle distance runner, and freshman spinter Gene Coleman.
Junior pool vaultte John Bazzoni missed the indoor season because of
However, sophomore Kristi Koster, a middle distance runner, is out for the year. The defending conference outdoor champion in the 800-meter run is suffering from injuries to her calves. She will have surgery in two weeks.
DAVID MITCHELL
Media owe Jayhawks respect
The national sports media seem to be perplexed trying to figure out why the Jayhawks' feathers are ruffled by the weather, and they have received in recent weeks.
ESPN analyst Dick Vitale has jumped on and off the Kansas band-wagon more times than he's said, "Oh, Baby!"
CBS analyst Mike Francesca picked Kansas to bow to Ball State in the first round. The Jayhawks won 94-72.
Walters has never been one to keep his thoughts about media criticism as a secret, but sophomore center Greg Ostertag might have said it best.
During the third-round game against California, all CBS commentators could talk about was Jason Kidd, the Golden Bears freshman quarterback. Kansas won 93-76 as senior guard Rex Walters scored a mere 23 points.
Welcome to the club, Bernie Lincicome.
"Mike Francesca and Dick Vitalte don't know what they're talking about," he said at Saturday's rally. Welcome to the club Bernie Linczi.
Temple in the championship game?
Bernie, wake up buddy.
Lincicone wrote a scathing column in Sunday's Chicago Tribune. He was not content to write that Kansas could not win the national title.
"Kansas has as much chance against North Carolina or Cincinnati as a doughnut in a cop car," he wrote. "If Kansas happens to stumble into some kind of blessed miracle and get into the final game, Michigan or Temple will turn the Jayhawks upside down and dust the floor with their nose hair."
Lincicome's point, if he has one, is that the Jahawks have been whining about the lack of respect they have received. However, the point he misses is that Kansas has every right to resent Mike Francesca, who has as much chance making it into the basketball hall of fame as a doughnut in Francesca's car.
It is true that Kansas was disap-
pointing at times during the regular
season. The Hawks were shocked by
Long Beach State 64-19 Jan. 25 at
Allen Field House. Kansas was 5-3 in
February.
I know I was critical of Kansas as it struggled to its third straight conference title. I was especially skeptical after the Long Beach State loss.
Perhaps analysts had the right to doubt the Jayhawks before the NCAA Tournament after a loss to Kansas State in the Big Eight Tournament.
In but in recent weeks, the Jayhawks have made me a believer. Walters is playing the best basketball of his career. Senior point guard Adonis Jordan has run the offense like a pro despite a nagging leg injury.
However, the national critics have not acknowledged that the Jayhawks turned things around. Kansas has won eight of its last nine games. Kansas survived what was without question the toughest of the four roads to the Final Four.
Lincicome seems to think that Kansas has made it on luck — an interesting theory considering that Kansas defeated Indiana, the only No. 1 seed that won't be in New Orleans.
"The Jayhawks are . . . a large collection of endless effort, making up in opportunity what is missing in skill," he wrote. "Any team unembarrassed to put an ox like 7-foot-2-inch Greg Ostertag on the same floor with the fluid and graceful Calbert Cheaney deserves points just for having a sense of humor."
Unfortunately, for Cheaney, the game is decided by points not fluid gracefulness. This is the Big Dancer not "Dance Fever." In fact the Big Ten's all-time leading scorer, was 0-3 against Kansas during his career.
Uniclife must have also missed the last 1:30 of the game when Cheaney missed one shot and had another blocked by Eric Pauley.
Pauley's backup, that ox Oystertag,
le Kansas with six rebounds.
Though Kansas has the worst record of the Final Four teams they have proven that they are for real.
Jordan told the fans at Saturday's rally to keep believing.
"A lot of people were doubting us," Jordan said. "A lot of folks said the Jayhawks were going home in the summer." "We're we're on our way to the Superdome."
Hey, Berry. I've got a doughnut that says Kansas will make you eat your
Sports editor David Mitchell is a DeSoto senior mentor in journalism.
8
Tuesday.March 30.1993
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'Hawks set for home opener
Team finishes California trip to face UMKC
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team will hold its home open today, playing host to Missouri-Kansas City in a double-header.
The Jayhawks, ranked 13th, will try to improve their 9-5 record. The first game is scheduled to start at 2 p.m. at Jayhawk Field.
Softball
ku
The team completed a tour of Southern California on Sunday, posting a 4-3-1 record for the trip.
Coach Kalum Haack said the team was ready to get home and play on its own field.
"I am anxious to get some games under our belts." Haack said.
"It's tough playing on the road for an entire month."
Haack said the women needed to play with more competitive fire if they hoped to come away with two victories against UMKC. The team experienced fatigue during the second half of the California trip.
"If we play the way we played the second half of the road trip, they (UMK) will have the opportunity to beat us." Haack said. "If we play like we did in the first half, we'll be all right."
Kansas' West Coast road swing began in Fullerton, Calif., with a match up against No. 12 Massachusetts. Kansas defeated the Minutewomen 7-0. Junior pitcher
Stephani Williams picked up the victory, moving her consecutive scoreless innings streak to 31%.
The team moved up the West Coast to play a doubleheader against DePaul in Northridge, Calif.
In the first game, the Blue Demons fell to the Jayhawks, 8-0. Williams remained razor sharp as she collected her first no hitter of the season.
However, DePaul found its hitting stroke in the second game as Kansas came up on the short end of a 4-3 game.
Kansas then played No. 7 California State Northridge in what Haack said was the Jayhawks' peak performance of the road swing. At the end of the 15th inning, the two teams were knotted at 1-1. The game was called because of darkness.
Kansas then went back to Fullerton to take part in the Pony Invitational Tournament.
The Hawks began the tournament much like they started the road trip by
defeating a tough California State
Fullerton team 3-0.
Haack said the team had begun to feel the repercussions of being on the road after the California State Fullerton game.
"As the week went on, we became tired," he said. "I even became tired just coaching."
Kansas battled through its weariness, handing Western Illinois a 7-6 defeat. But Haack's squad dropped its final two games, losing to Washington, 4-2, and Texas A&M, 3-1.
Senior left fielder Ty Saxby said that the team needed to increase its intensity level as Big Eight Conference play neared. 2
"We need to stay focused and concentrate for the entire time we're on the field," she said. "Hopefully the (UMKC) games will get us back on track for Big Eight play."
Kansas will begin conference play Saturday when it travels to Oklahoma.
1980
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An informational meeting will be held Mon., April 12, in rm 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall Interview sign-up will begin April 12, at 8:00 a.m.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUPPORT AIRLINE FROM THE NATIONAL AIRLINES IN BROOKLYN, NY. Provide customer service for the U.S. Airlines Embraer Company (U.S.A.) 127 North Spruce Avenue, New York City, and the U.S. Marine Corps (U.S.M.C.) 132 South Spruce Avenue, Annapolis, MD. Apply online at www.marine corps.com/careers. **THANK YOU FOR YOUR EXCELLENCE**
Congratulations Graduates!
REWARD YOURSELF! Join GM's Graduation Celebration!
$500 $500
1-800-964-GRAD
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS
store Get $500 Off From GM!
You've worked hard, accomplished your goals and earned your diploma. Now it's time to get ready for the GM College Grant Program. It's a great time to "Get to Know Geo," "Tell the Heartbeat of America," or "Discover the Strength of Experience."
If you are above to graduate, have recently graduated from a two- or four year college, or are a graduate student, you may qualify! You can receive a $500 certificate good toward any new Chevrolet, Chevy Truck, Geo or GMC Truck purchased or leased from a participating dealer, if you quality and finance through GMAC. Best of all, this special discount is available *in addition* to most other rebates and incentives.
take A Test Drive! Get A Free Gift!
To receive your $500 certificate, details on receiving your free gift for taking a test drive, and other program information, please call.
Graduates Get $500 Off From GM!
If you are eligible to participate in the GM College Grad Program, you can test drive any Chevrolet, Chevy Truck, Geo or GMC Truck. You'll love the experience and receive your choice of a leather portfolio, electronic data bank or compact disc with our compliments, while supplies last.
Participate Today!
Financing Options That Are Right For You!
Financing Options That Are Right for You
Once you've selected your car or truck, GMAC makes it easy to find the financing option that's right for you... from traditional purchase to SMARTLEASE™ by GMAC or our new option. GMAC SMARTBUV™
1-800-964-GRAD
TRUCK
CHEVROLET
participating Chevrolet, Chevrolet Truck, Geo or GMC Truck dealer for qualifi
(Otter Expires April 30,1994)
COLLEGE SU
PROGRAM
Geo
GMC TRUCK.
GMAC
GENERAL SERVICES
The
Etc.
Shop
WEST MOVED
928 Mass
The SMART SHOP
Etc.
Shop
928 Mass
Ray·Bani
WESTERN &
BAUCH & LOME
to match your
---
shop 928 Mass
Ray-Ban
HOLIDAY & CARE
Daily Re-affirmation
Our bodies are being renewed continuously, and they are influenced
by the pattern of our thoughts. We can choose life-affirming thoughts
to make ourselves better.
From Brookdale Kellogg, 416 Lincoln
From Unity and K-Unity, 416 Lincoln
On Sale N.O.W.
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF WOMEN
Off Our Current Book Selection On
Women's Studies Month
龙
Jayhawk Bookstore Only At The Top Of Naismith Hill!
Classified Directory
200s Equal to
100s
Announcements
101 Personals
102 Personal
103 Personals
104 Entertainment
105 Lost and Found
2005 Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
225 Staff Support
235 Typing Services
300s
Moon
Classified Policy
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 for color, race, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any陪
vertirement for housing or employment that disci-
nties against any person or person based on them
because of disability, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
卫
New Channels
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Loose up to 30 bbs in 30 days for $30. 100% Guarantee.
ee: 832-6487
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Recycle the Kansan
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care
841-2345 1419 Mass
We're always open
Watkins Health Center
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Mon-Fr. 4:30 p.m - 10:30 p.m
Sat 8 a.m - 11:30 a.m
Urgent Care (after hours charge)
Mon-Fr. 4:30 p.m - 10:30 p.m
Sat 11:30 a.m - 4:30 p.m
Sun 8 a.m - 4:30 p.m
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Tuesday, March 30, 1993
9
120 Announcements
for anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns,
call 801-754-2640.
MHACKE VIDEO
$14 Adult Video Sale
90 W 2nd St
1909 Haskell #4, 7604
**QUESTIONS:** Call Biscayne, Gay, and Lesbian groups at 310-697-2840; through headquarters (914-2345) or KU Info (864-2345).
Suicide Intervention If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 411.2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
130 Entertainment
YOURE NOT ALONE! Biexual, Gay, and Lesbian Support Group on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. Call Headquarters (814-2345) or KU Info (864-3506) for confidential location.
Live Comedy
Wednesday March 31
AT
BENCHWARMERS
BENCHWARMERS 50 cent draws
Leaving Town?
AIRLINES
Don't wait Call Today.
On-campus location in
831 Massachusetts.
- Summer Travel Plans
Airline Tickets Home
the Burge Union and
Maupintour
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
男 女
200s Employment
APPLY NOW
1ST STARTING
205 Help Wanted
Cruise line entry level on board/landside positions with a Master's degree, great paid position (paid 129,729-748).
CRUISER NOW HIRING - Earn $2,000 +/
CARIBBEAN, etc. / holiday, Summer and
career employment available No experience necessary.
For employment program call 1-268-6468-068
day or evening help was needed in person only
i.Burder Bangido, 1928 West Appl.23rd
staff children's camps/northeast top salary, rm/bd laundry, travel allowance, child care, fitness center, archery, basketball, bicycling, crafts, drama, drums, fencing field, football, golf guitar, drummers, juggling, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, suction cups, seating, scuba, tennis, water, waistbands, wood. Support staff/kitchen steward/workers, bakers, cooks bus drivers, maintenance technician
NO EXPER NEC great resume build. Scholarships avail, temp. pos, over Spring Break-partner. Job location: Boca Raton, COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan boys' girls summer camps. Teach, swimming, canning, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, SALARY $10 or more. Contact: Jeffrey Seager, 788 Maple Hill, NL, ID 326-784-4244.
Fame! Fortune! And Flexible Hours! Need
Time! Call Special Delivery 853-248. Also fun
time! Call Flexible Hours! 853-248. Also fun
time! Call Flexible Hours! 853-248. Also fun
time! Call Flexible Hours! 853-248. Also fun
time! Call Flexible Hours! 853-248. Also fun
time! Call Flexible Hours! 853-248. Also fun
time! Call Flexible Hours! 853-248. Also fun
GRADUATE ASSISTANT for International Student Services. Halt time monthly appointment for new students, coordinate students, train and supervise orientation leaders. Applications available in our website.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
Help Wanted: First Christian Church is looking for loved adult to provide children on Sunday morning. Send resume to First Christian Church, Attn: Jerry Powers, 1000 Kentuckie
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT • Make £1,600
+ per month teaching basic English or French;
+ provide training andMany provide room and board + other benefits. No previous training or teaching certificate required. For prerequisite requirements, call (855) 343-9277.
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NARBIOMEDICAL CENTER
GREEKS & CLUBS
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
GREEKS & CLUBS
$1,000 AN HOUR!
Each member of your fraternity sorority club etc patches on your shirt group can raise $1 000 in a few days!
Plus a chance to earn $1,000 for yourself!
1-800-932-0528, ext. 65
Kansas and Burge Union part-time jobs available. Prairie Room Host/Hosties, Custodian/District Manager, Cashier, Cashier and Food Service; Chef, Chef and Advertising and Office Assistant KBO Bookstore-Kansas Union, KU Conferences Special Events Clerk Job, Kansas University Board, Personnel Office Level 5. Kansas and Burge Union Must work hourly for each job. Kansan and Burge Union Personnel office EOE. Kansas and Burge Union Personnel office EOE.
Did all of your money melt away during Spring Break?
$
THE LAWRENCE DONOR CENTER
can help ease your problems by offering $15 cash for the first two donations, $22 per week after. 816 W 24th 749-5750
---
Lake of the Orsaks Summer Employment The Barge Floating Restaurant is excepting applications for many positions in salary and tips great working conditions, and some food furnished. Apply while库存 is available.
able. Contact Frank Bachelere 314-965-5788
Needed models needed $175-500 or TV & Film/PI
costs $175-200 day. No exp required 419-9009
Models wanted for "The Girls of Kansas City" &
"The Men of Kansas City" calendars. Please call
Townsia @ 816-758-0988
Motivated District Manager for property management company. Full-time experience preferred Send resume to P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 60044
Nanny positions available nationwide including Florida, Hawaii, summer $/周 Great pay
O
Packer Plastics Incorporated
ORIENTATION LEADERS for International Student Services. Temporary, part-time positions in August assisting new international students adjust to life at KU. Applications available in 2 Shrs
Sallivan s, 1132 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 98011
Tennis jobs-summer children a camp-northeastern and women with good tennis background who can teach children to play tennis. Good safety, good coaching. Camp staff wired wheeler A41 8580. Men call me; visit Camp Winadu, 5 Glentan Mamaroneck, N Y 10543
Part-time unskilled factory work on weekends,starting Friday at midnight and ending Sunday at midnight. Flex time possible. Astudent work team will be formed to cover these hours. If interested please call Packer Plastics at 842-3000,ext.475 to arrange for an interview.
STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER I
Deadline: 04/12/08. Salary: $93,500/month.
Duties include participating in program coding.
Assist with the preparation of reports and/or other specific output;
share responsibility for insuring that programs perform as per specifications; assist as necessary in preparing programs encountered in executing programs; assists in preparation of required program documentation; assists in preparation of necessary user data;
assist in planning and coordinating application and a current resume to Anita Roster, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045. OE/AA
Students earn extra money. Set your own sched
eum. Earn $100 or more a day. Call 314-734-5800
Summer Jobs Outdoors. Over 1,000 Openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Resorts,
Cewski
Waterfront Jobs WSJ West children's camp-theater-been men and women who can teach children to swim, coach swim team, waterkiers (calor) swimming, lifesaving, pool and lake clubs. Good salary, room & board travel allowance. Call or write. Camp Winadia 510-287-9930. Women call Jenifer Wheelat 841-650-8081. Women call Jennifer Wheelat 841-650-8081.
225 Professional Services
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided ed. 841-7749
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
FREE MONEY for school avail include Financial aid, scholarship and grants. No GPA or income reqn. write to ESMS Co P O | P 340 Law 349, KS 68002. Heading for this offer only $199 for East Coast, $229 from the Midwest (when available) with AIRHITCH (Reported in a book entitled 'President's trusted travel' 212-844-300). Prima Photos and Headshots B&W Darkroom Fast Service. First Live Photography. 841-4234
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUTS
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civ matters
The law offices of
The law offices of DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
Starving student deeply seeks work. Will help in landscaping, yr exp and ref. Rebecca 866-1727
Expert typing by experienced secretary. IBM Correcting Selectric 115 50 double-page page. East Lawrence Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219
IBM Perfect Performer Correcting Yearward Corrected Word Processing applications, term papers, word processing, editing, composition, rush writing, Main Desk (Desk 382).
Available Aug 1; birm apartment in renovated
building; washroom, laundry room, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups,
dishwasher, washing machine.
1904 NASHTMTH 3 4 4 B.R. 2 Bath Lg. rooms.
1905 NASHTMTH 3 4 4 B.R. 2 Bath laundry,
storage, variable losses. 1-686-7997
-
691 Arkansas, good location 2 bdm apt upstairs,
furnished, modern conveniences, central heat &
air protected parking. Sublease immediately with
the difference. Retain reserves with the difference
749-241 or 515-301.
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
300s
Merchandise
PALM ISLAND
4 Bdmr ApL Lease now till July 31st. Low price $500. Call to set appt. 845-0011
Fax machine 680ps bpi plus auto voice/fax switch box and cleaning kit $175. MIDI interface plus cable and Mastores software for DMSO $90 call Archeie at 865-360 6pm.
Barn
921 'DAU' LANN MTB FRAME, BH, HS, PS
749 '187' 20 *MTB MT, XT Component* $250
Dale AU97
Fernandes FA-15 Amplifier Convenient size 13 x 18
Antenna 6 ft. (180 cm) $150 best offer
Call Bremner at 842-8040
305 For Sale
405 For Rent
Holiday Apartments
Boardwalk
& GARDENELL
400s Real Estate
in renovated older house, walk to U. or U.
downown. W. ACE, private or, off street
road.
Leasing for Summer
• 1 Bedroom $340
• 2 Bedroom $400-415
• 3 Bedroom $625-650
• 4 Bedroom $800
• Recently constructed
• On bus route
• Dishwasher
• Nice quiet setting
Leasing for Summer & Fall
HEY)KU Med Students, Rainbow Tower Apart-
ment, Luxury LHI Rise Living. Limited Entry, Hoe &
Water paid, pool, wauna, jacuzzi, & sp garage.
KAIS University, 86166 Aixes 86165 Aixes
from KL Medical, BSI-9949.
Available August 1. 3 Bedroom Apl in charming alley house, Walk to 2nd on downstairs
Available August 1, 2 Bedroom apartment
BEAT THE CROWD Everyone wants these ape's. They live in the 3rd rest room, be ahead of the 2R rest unfurn, in the new buildings at West Hills Apts. 1000 Emery Rd. Great location near campus. NO PETS. 841-3800 or 576-9484.
Renovated kitchen, claw-foot tub, wood floors,
ceiling sand, water paid, no pets $359-841-1074
Available Now furnished KWs / w shared kitchen
room, new furniture, KWs / w out-of-school
parked, no pets. Call 841-5500
LUXURY TOWNHOME, 4 BR. 2½ bath.
microwave, dishwasher, refrigerator. 2 car
center ramp. full basement. two
cars. 30' x 18' office space.
utilizes. application and deposit. pp
9/297 weekends and 6:30 and 10:30 p.m. on
weekdays.
MACKENZIE APFS. now leasing for Aug 1. Newly constructed luxury apts, close to campus. All 3 rooms have washer & dryer, all kitchen appts. 2 deck chairs, well insulated, energy efficient. Call 794-1166
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
For lease 4 BR Townhome, 2 baths, 1 car garage
dryer, 1 bedroom, dryer. Available at 943-892-6831.
Alicia L. Telephone at 943-892-6831.
210 Mount Hope Court#1
843-0011
2-BR from $85
Jazuzu room
1-night hotel route
Private balcony/Panics
P-4 cable TV/PTVs
Bateman resort courtyard
Courtyard Suite
O&STaff 254.0 CDs, 61-84
Office Hours
5:15 to 9:30 or 2-5pm
Or call appointments
Naismith Place
Naismith Place
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. for your convenience
- on bus route
· quiet location
· 1 bedroom
· 2 bedroom (1&1/2 baths)
· 3 bedroom (2 baths)
· laundry facilities
· on-site management
843-4754 (call for appt.)
Room to rent in 4 bdrm apt lease till July 31st $125
+ utilities Call 843-0011
Rent.Lease rm or 3 BR house. East Lawrence,
close to KU, on bus route, recently renovated, dog
ok $175/month & up. Negotiable 865-3748.
Brown to rent on and烂尾 lease J014k $138
Southpointe Apartments
916 W. 96th St. Lot 2
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leaving
Mon-Friday for call (app. 843-6446).
Sublease 3 bedroom/2 bath Furnished ap, close to campus, avail May 15-Aug 10
Bald Eagle
Quail Creek
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly live, fantasies. Call 749-0871 or 841-
0848. Stop by 1406 Tennessee.
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Worst Tree APARTMENTS
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts. - furnished
and unfurnished
·1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
·2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$375 to $450 per month
WATERDONALLE APTS.
WATERPAIDONALLAPTS.
OVERLAND LOCATION.
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
GREAT LOCATION-Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
S
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Swan Management
• Graystone
• 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
SUMMER SU-LEASE W' OPTION FOR YR
RENTAL 1234 Vermont Apt 1, 2 bedrooms,
outside deck, close to campus, air conditioning in 2 rooms, $555/mo Call 841-5480
Affordable Price!!
Sublease for summer? Nice, clean. 34-bedroom
townehouse, w/o pool. Meet call 749-8592 ask for
phone.
841-5444
Summer & Fall Leasing Furnished & 2 bdm
Skiing & KU KU w/o off-street parking, no
call 1414-8154
office 611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
24th & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 br apartments at an Affordable Price!
430 Roommate Wanted
EDDINGHAM PLACE
TICKETS:
Mon Wed. & Fr. 12:00 - 2:00 p.m
Tues. & Thurs. 6:00 - 8:00 p.m
Summer Sublase 2 BR Townhouse, 14k庚房. Pursue all appliances, great location. Spectacular home with pool and large yard.
No Appt. Necessary
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II-call for
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat
Please call Kelly for appt.
TRAILRIDGE APTS.
New sign留言 for summer & fall
Call Sarah for your appointment at
843-7233
Summer sublease studio apst. at Trafairie Available May 1. On bus route $300/mo
www.trafairie.com
Each apartment feature
Weather and water
Microwave
Gas heat central air
Large bedrooms
Small bedrooms
On Kid'suite
Carpark available
1 bedroom $40 $65
2 bedroom $40 $70
3 bedroom $52 $85
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and you're welcome!
meadowbrook
42-4200
info or appt.
The Perfect Apartment!
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling up quickly!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
Sorry no pets
Female roommates needed for summer or next year. New College Hill Condos. Close to campus Washer/dryer in apt! Call Kathleen at 865-2830
Wanted. Summer subleases for 3 lbm/2 bath.
Southpount Apt. Good location, balcony, on bus
route, pool & sand volleyball $40 mo OHU.
Water pdl Cap 841-JIWK
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
NOW
Summer Sublease One female roommate to share
with other roommates. Room rent $359/month.
Rent May 1 1200/0m² + half hall 843-336
May 1 1200/0m² + half hall 843-336
Summer Sublease: 2 Females to share large 35
bdt apt $200 /1 w/D, Widp.865-2922
How to schedule an ad:
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Calculation Rates:
Stop by the Kaucanis office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Adx obtained in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
- by my. I shall submit *law, certificate, or a book*. You may print your classification order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to test have it billed to your *MasterCard* or *Visa* account. Ads that are billed to *Visa* or *MasterCard* qualify for a friend on unused days until they are cancelled before their expiration date.
**Conducting tests.**
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines that ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is *c* per day. Then multiply the total cost of the total number of days the ad will run.
BIND box numbers:
The advertisement may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
When cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser a account will be closed. refunds on cancled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available.
1X 1.95 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X
1.85 1.50 1.90 1.00 0.70 0.70 0.45
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.85 0.60 0.50 0.40
1.76 1.00 0.70 0.80 0.65 0.55 0.35
1.67 1.10 0.70 0.80 0.65 0.55 0.35
Rates et per line per day
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to
Classifications
105 personal
110 business personales
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Glassmaster
140 lost & found 350 for sale
295 help wanted 348 auto sales
295 repair services 368 miscellaneous
295护理服务
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Total ad cost:
Name: ___ Phone:
Address:
Name:_
Date of begins: Total days in paper.
Total of work: Classification:
Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard
(Please make checks payable to the University Dallans Kansan)
Furnish the following you are charging your d:
Account number:
Expiration Date;
Master Card
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of Dalkey Manassan, 119 Staffer尉 Fint Hall, LAwareness KS. 680454
http://www.university-of-dalkey-manassan.edu/
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Sure... you can buy him... But I take it you never heard of a Tennessee baller
10
Tuesday March 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WE'VE MOVED!!
Ruth & Kids Discount Floral
is NOW located at 953 E.23rd!
Come visit NEW! store or call: 832-0704 for fast delivery!
Rose
Come visit our NEW!
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
...
PLACE AN AD FREE!
Ω
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
2 good-looking, in shape SWMs looking for 2 good-looking SWMs to pass the time with. Enjoy drinking, partying, & staying up until all hours of the night. Ski girls need not apply *Call r01234*
Attractive SWM dark hair & eyes, *6* 290 ls seeks honest, emotionally mature, and caring woman w/ desire to meet a clean cut, caring, and dedicated man w/ Traditional values. Call box
Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open minded, and all that other good stuff. Seeking one intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dionian vassus. Box #10329
He Brillo Shidul Black hair - a bad knee. I tend to clear my throat a lot. I only have one shirt, and sometimes my voice cracks; but I can make people understand in taking an invitation, call box, call 10202.
Kimete? If that gets your attention then keep readin-
g, SWM 28, sandy blonde, green eyes, bright smile,
dark eyelid, dark eyelid, dark eye-lid single
white female, who is attractive and open-minded,
but sometimes feels like a fish out of water, Cali.
SWM. Smart, smart, honest, open, gentle, good lookin', moral guy seeking an honest, moral girl, moral guy for friendship or dating, moral girl like Paul Sumner, moral girl like the Opera? Bea's days? Say if you, if you thought you'd never answer a personal ad, call me I never thought I place one! Call Box
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778
♂
WOMEN
SEEKING
MEN
2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both under 25, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet me w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down to earth. Like long walks, movies, talking on the phone, can scare you to scam to get us rich quick. Call box #20142
DCWF. 40-ish. Addictions are out of self-honesty, insight, communication, and faith in. Non-smoking, non-drinking, vegetarian, creatine, bodybuilding, and caregiving; working with good sense of humor, considering building caring relationship with S/DCWM with similar interests and values. Children and pets ok
Single Hispanic female 18 years old cutie petite, long brown hair recently broke up between her ears and her face, male between the arms of 18-23 who enjoys walking, jogging, weight lifting, dancing and partying call box s
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
Gay white male seeks flings and possible relationships with other gay white males. All interesting couples with other gay males.
∞
cars repaint.
GWM. It is hard to understand why so many other
people find it interesting to look there to share
things with and do a lot of different things together.
So spring is right around the corner and so is beautiful weather, so get out of the rain. Put a big smile on your face to make us feel so alive. I do not smoke. You have to be a non-smoker. light drinker and have a sense of humor. If you read down, give me a call. Box 80044
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White L Lesbian
B Black L Hispanic
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open-minded, and that other all good stuff. Seeking 1 intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dionysian quest. Box #3006.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Snaffar Fint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You place an and in the Laptay Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number record to receive a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan,
you call a free 800-number to listen
to the messages people leave for
you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
1. Check out an ad
2. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
To check out an ad
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mail-box number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voices prompt will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. if you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
Photos compare past with present
Group of geologists retrace 1923 journey to study Grand Canyon
By James J. Reece
Korean staff writer
In 1923, about a dozen men in five 16-foot wooden boats waged a 225-mile battle against the rapids of the Colorado River.
Kansan staff writer
The group, including KU geologist R.C. Moore, took more than 80 photographs of the Grand Canyon in search of a dam site. In 1991, staff members from the Kansas Geological Survey retraced the journey hoping to photograph the canyon from the same vantage points and identify geological changes in the canyon.
by flood waters.
The result is "The Canyon Revisited: Photographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expedition," a photograph display at the Museum of Natural History. The display opened Saturday and runs until Sept. 26.
"The idea is to use the new photographs to look for changes that have taken place since the original photographs were taken," said Rex Buchanan, assistant director for publications of the Kansas Geological Survey.
Changes range from minor erosion to the movement of massive boulders
But some scenes have shown little change in detail, such as rocks and plants resting in the same location as they did 88 years ago.
Buchanan said the 1964 completion of the Glen Canyon Dam, which is upstream from the photograph sites. This allowed the change in the canyon features.
He said the dam decreased flooding, allowing plant growth on the banks of the river. The dam also kept sediment from flowing downstream, causing beach erosion.
Those changes obscured many camera sites and made it difficult to reproduce photographs, Buchanan said. But the help of survey geologist Donald Baars, who has about 25 trips down the Colorado River, made it easier to find the 1923 photograph sites and reproduce 45 of 80 pictures
Baars said hazards of the journey ranged from the usual risk of white-water travel to the unusual risk of pik canyon rattlesnakes.
But photographer John Charlton said the risk was nothing compared with that of the 1923 expedition.
"Prior to the construction of the dam, it was a life and death proposition to go down the river," Charlton said.
He said the 1923 group was delayed for three days because one of its boats capsized.
Crews work during break
By Jess DeHaven
Kansan staff writer
While students are enjoying themselves on spring break, KU and Lawrence crews were hard at work on repairs and around campus.
City and campus crews have faced projects ranging from potholes to continuing construction. The crews used the break to catch up on maintenance work.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said his workers spent much of the break patching up potholes near Memorial Stadium.
Tom Orzulak, maintenance manager for the Lawrence public works department, said the city also had been hard at work on pothole repairs. He said work was done on 11th and 12th streets and on West Campus.
Unions, said the lobby area of the Kansas Union should be complete by the end of April.
The construction has forced the Union's candy counter and information center to sell candy and stamps out of a popcorn cart in the lobby.
Pat Beard manager of building services for the Kansas and Burge
"The candy counter and information center should open on Thursday, and it will be in about the same location for construction began," said said.
starter Muckey, assistant director of facilities operations, said that core samples from Wescow were drilled to determine what was causing the swelling and that results of the test were expected in about three weeks.
The ongoing problem of swelling floors on the bottom level of Wescoe Hall also received attention.
Crews also worked on waterproofing at Snow Hall and painting in the Smith Hall auditorium.
BRIEFS
Workshop to cover election guidelines
The Student Senate election commission will be holding a candidate workshop at 7 onight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
Missouri law requires that Diane King, election commissioner, said the workshop would address campaigning rules and regulations for the election, which will be held April 14 and 15.
"We will answer all of the candida tates' questions and spell out everything in the rules," king said.
King said that the workshop would specifically address the guideline handed down by the office of the executive vice chancellor, which prohibits campaign posters and materials from being exhibited in campus classrooms.
King said that presidential, vice presidential and senatorial candidates for the spring election were encouraged to attend. She added that any student interested in the election process also could attend.
Foundation names KU as site for research
The National Science Foundation has named KU's department of electrical and computer engineering as an NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduate site for the summers of 1993, 1994 and 1995.
The program will bring 10 under-
graduate students from around the nation to the University for a 10-week program.
Projects will include artificial intelligence, electromagnetics, high-speed networks, intelligent design and radar systems.
According to an NSF review committee, KU's department of electrical and computer engineering was chosen to play host to the program because of its research base, faculty strength, recruiting plan and long history of involving undergraduate students in research.
"We are pleased and excited about this grant," said Carl Locke dean of engineering. "It will allow the faculty to work with a group of bright undergraduates in their research projects. The students, in turn, have a unique opportunity to further their education and learn about research."
Compiled by Kansan staff writers Jess Dehaven and Brett Riggs.
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SPORTS: Kansas center Eric Pauley is looking forward to his matchup with North Carolina center Eric Montross, Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 102,NO.127
ADVERTISING:864-4358
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1995
NEWS:864-4810
At Home With The RUMSEY BOYS
Ramsey
OF NASHVILLE
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
One is studying history. One is studying business communications. But they both are learning about life and death from where they work and live in a funeral home.
By Ben Grove
T
he phone in Scott Weiser's bedroom is wired to a wall buzzer. He muffles it with a blanket. But when it sounds in the middle of the night, he still wakes
Daron Bennett / KANSAN
"It just about gives me a heart attack," he says.
KU juniors Weiser and Staples don't live in an apartment or a residence hall or a house. They don't have friends over much, and they certainly don't host wild parties.
Down the hall, his roommate, Matt Staples, rolls over when the buzzer calls — grateful when Weiser is on duty. When Staples took this job, nobody told him about the night calls and the dead bodies.
Ry
Scott Weiser,
Kansas
City junior,
stands near
the limoue
outside the
Rumsey
Funeral
Hall
Driving the car is one of
Weiser's
duties.
Matt
Staples,
Eudora
junior, sits in
the foyer at
Rumsey
Funeral
Home, 601
Indiana St.
Staples and
Weiser plan
to live and
work at the
home until
they
graduate.
(2)
They are the Rumsey Boys, two in a long line of KU students who have lived and worked at Rumsey Funeral Home since it opened in 1920.
Daron Bennett / KANSAN
In return for free housing and a modest salary, Weiser and Staples drive mourners to grave sites in the Rumsey limo. They remove flowers after services and vacuum the foyer and chapel. They chat with families during visitation hours.
They also spend alternate nights on call. So sometimes, Weiser or Staples — whoever is on duty — climbs out of bed at 2 a.m., stumbles to the hearse in the basement garage, and leaves to pick up a body.
There is no time too odd to die, they say.
*Story continues.* Page 6.
New fire code mandates sprinklers for living groups
Kansan staffwriter
By Todd Selfert
KU fraternities and sororites will have to install automatic sprinkler systems by the year 2000.
That was what the Lawrence City Commission decided last night when it passed the Uniform Fire Code with local amendments.
The sprinkler system provision was one of the amendments.
"The best protection you can provide is sprinkling," said Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain. "If we were to have a significant fire in one of those houses, we'd lose people."
According to the ordinance, congregate living residences like fraternity and sorority houses and Naismith
CITY COMMISSION
Hall must install sprinklers within seven years. Sprinklers must be installed sooner if renovations are made to 25 percent or more of the building's total square footage.
Newly built congregate residences now must include sprinkler systems in their construction.
Gail Anderson, treasurer for the Alumni Association Board of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, said the ordinance was unfair to fraternities and sororites.
"This single out one type of student living group," Anderson said. "This doesn't take into account other places students live like apartments."
Other residence halls were not affected because they are located on state property and were not within the city's jurisdiction.
McSwan said the fire code included apartment buildings that were three stories or taller. But he said that, in the event of a fire, apartment buildings did not pose as big a threat to life as fraternity and sorority houses.
"There are more open spaces in fraternity and sorority houses," McSain said. "More people are exposed to fire because of that."
Board member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, said the increased costs of installing sprinkler systems would make it hard for fraternities and sororites to compete in the student housing market.
"People have a misconception that the people in fraternities and sororities are rich," Williams said. "That's not true."
"Without a doubt, this will put some of the organizations out of business." Esau said. "It's difficult to raise money and if they don't have strong, supportive alumni, they are going to
John Esau, a Corporation Board member for Delta Upsilon fraternity, said the increased cost would hurt some fraternities and sororites more than others.
Sean Williams, alumnus and House
John Nabandian, vice mayor, said he understood Esau's argument.
have trouble.'
the underbelly boss did great.
"I think the description that this action is unequal treatment or discriminatory is accurate," Nabbandian said. "But these types of residences are at higher risk than others."
The commission had discussed a five-year time limit, but decided that the extra two years would allow the congregate residences a better chance to raise the needed funds.
Lawrence Fire Marshall Richard Barr said in a memo to McSwain in January that estimates to install sprinklers in fraternity and sorority houses ranged from $16,000 to $35,000.
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
KANSAS LEGISLATURE Budget passes House Bill would increase tuition 10 percent
By Bell Grove
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Board of Regents budget passed the Kansas House of Representatives yesterday in much the same shape it left the Senate.
But not before a debate on where the money from next fall's tuition increases should go.
State Rep. James Lowther, R-Emporia, proposed an amendment to the Regents budget bill that would put one-fifth of a tuition increase for out-of-state students in the hands of the universities instead of into the state's general fund budget.
Lowther's amendment failed 47-72. The budget bill would raise tuition 10 percent for out-of-state students at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, and Wichita State University. The Board of Regents had asked that non-resident tuition increase by 8 percent — the same increase in-state students would pay. But the Senate upped that proposal to 10 percent.
"Yes, we should charge more tuition to out-of-state students," said State Rep. Bill Reardon, D-Kansas City, "but I don't think we should increase tuition for those students and if it takes that money and put it in the general fund for a whole variety of things we spend money on."
The state's general fund pools money for many of the state's agencies.
State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, who is head of the House Appropriations Committee, spoke against the amendment, saying the action was not just a reallocating of funds.
Ironically, just before the debate, the house passed a bill that State Rep Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said made the amendment's passage impossible. The bill reduced state tax burdens on certain commercial, industrial and natural resource entities in the state. Charlton, a member of the House Appropriations Committee, said that after passing the tax cut bill, the general fund was strapped.
"What the House did was close off any increases in any budgets," Charlton said.
The Regents budget contained many of the same proposals that the Senate passed, including a 2.5 percent salary increase for faculty and student employees and a 3.5 percent increase in other operating expenditures for the Regents universities.
The House bill also included a.5 percent increase in retirement benefits for faculty. The Senate bill deleted a retirement increase from the Regents' request.
The budget bill now will be reviewed by the Senate, and a conference committee probably will be appointed today to work out any differences on the bill left between the two chambers, Charlton said.
INSIDE
BARNES & NOBLE
Even better than the real thing
For Shawn Johnson, Peck junior, a Rock Chalk Revue role as a 1940s-style disc jockey led him off the stage into the real thing — for Lawrence's KZOT radio.
See story. Page 3
Commission seeks to solve traffic flow problem
City reconsiders plan to install medians along Iowa Street
By Todd Selfert
Kansan staff writer
Motorists can still make a left turn from Iowa Street onto University Drive or Stratford Road — at least for now.
The Lawrence City Commission decided last night to rescind a decision it made March 2 to place a median on Iowa Street that would have prevented left turns onto the two side streets.
Citizens from the area asked the commission to reconsider its decision because
they were concerned about having limited access to Iowa Street.
The commission based its decision to construct a median on a recommendation from a task force formed to study traffic-flow problems in the area just north and west of the KU campus. The task force studied several solutions to the area's traffic problem, including placing a stop light at one of the intersections and creating a left-turn lane on Iowa Street.
"We are operating on the assumption that traffic in this area is going to continue to increase," said Steve Bruner, a resident in the area. "If you believe that, then you can see that a median isn't the answer. People would still travel in the area. We'd just be passing the problem onto someone else instead of dealing with it."
Bruner said the area's citizens also were concerned with the possible difficulties a median would present to emergency vehicles.
Bob Schumm, a city commissioner, said the commission needed to keep the entire city in mind when making its decision.
"We need to realize that we are dealing with more than one intersection," Schumm said. "I'd like to think that our commission is sharper when dealing with situations like this, but we failed on that in this case."
Mayor Bob Schulte said that he had contacted a Lawrence ambulance service and officials with the Lawrence fire department. They had said that there would be no response problems if a median was placed on Iowa Street.
Schurum said he thought the city should
hire engineers to examine the traffic-flow problem and find a permanent solution
The commission voted to direct its staff to contact JBM Consulting Engineers and obtain a list of possible services the firm could provide.
In other business, the commission
The same firm conducted a study of the intersection of 15th Street and Engel Road in September.
adopted an ordinance that allows the city to regulate the placement of electric power lines and
- rejected applications for sign variances from Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa St., Hillcrest Professional Building, 930 Iowa St. and the Westheffer Company, 1235 N. Third St.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
17 West 9th - Next to Undercover
842-7423
COTTON
Island
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6044, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Film Hall, Lawrence, K6045.
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OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brown bum lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information call Kris McCusker at 846-7317.
ON'CAMPUS
■ Undergraduate Anthropology Club will show "Popol Vuh," an animated Mayan story, at 5 p.m. tomorrow at 633 Fraser Hall. For more information call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
Armchair Generals will meet at 6 p.m. today. For more information call 864-7118.
Japan-America Club will hold a conversation group and brown bag lunch from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information call Ben Tomkins at 855-0116.
Oread Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quaker) will meet for worship at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel. For more information call Kate Fawcett at 864-6299.
Womyn's Concerns will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer
- Students for Literacy will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Alceo A in the Kansas University. For more information call Lymne at 841-0583.
Room in the Burge Union.
KU Libertarians will hold a lecture, "The Worldwide Free-Market Revolution," at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information call Sam Imhotep at 841-1488.
Triathlon and Swim Club will hold swim practice at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Center Pool. For more information call Sean Roland at 865-2734.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:39 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information call John Dale at 864-1108.
- Amnesty International will hold a letter writing meeting from 8 to 10 p.m. tomorrow at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
ON THE RECORD
A wallet, credit cards, a tape recorder, a bike wheel and cash, valued together at $172, were taken Monday from a residence in the 1300 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police reported.
A pair of sunglasses, a baseball glove, eight boxes of basketball cards and clothing, valued together at $1.200, were taken either Thursday or Friday from a vehicle in the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
3
Survey examines spending habits
By Will Lewis
Kansan staff writer
A survey released last night by the University of Kansas' Small Business Development Center could help Lawrence businesses more effectively market their products to KU students.
According to the survey, students tend not to shop in Lawrence because there is not as much selection and the prices are higher than in larger cities such as Kansas City and Topeka. But convenience prevents most of them from making trips for goods a habit,
especially for groceries, alcohol and personal goods.
The center, a non-profit program or the School of Business that aids in Lawrence small business growth, issued about 1,300 surveys to students through their instructors in late February. Of that number, 228 students returned the survey.
Although not all the surveys were filled out, Mike O'Donnell, director of the center, said the information still was useful.
"It's not by any means a scientific type of study," he said. "We're just presenting a snapshot of KU students.
Given that we had a fairly high response rate,we had a pretty good cross-section of people."
The survey provided information on where the bulk of students' money went, frequency of certain purchases and coupon usage.
efitted her after representatives from the center brainstormed for ideas on how to improve her marketing strategy to KU students.
"Ive received some exciting ideas on marketing for the KU students." Wenger said. "This information is new to me and I was very pleased to have it."
Scala Jordottin, a public relations assistant at the center, said students were in need of support.
Representatives from Lawrence businesses, including Emprise Bank and Minuteman Press, attended the "Marketing to University Students" seminar, where they were allowed to ask for suggestions on how to improve their businesses.
Shirley Wenger, an Emprise Bank representative, said the meeting ben-
"Businesses have such a vital interest in where students shop and what medium they use," she said.
Where does all of your money go?
$$
Results of a survey conducted by the Small Business Development Center show how KU students spend most of their time. 228 KU students were interviewed.
Amount spent each month on . . .
Amount spent each month on . . .
Clothing $34.50 Sports $7.32
Gifts $7.66 Discount $13.96
Books $15.07 Alcohol $26.27
Fitness $2.79 Movies $20.84
Electricity $10.51 Personal $17.48
Food $42.14 Groceries $69.52
Storm brings tornado, pea-size hail to area
Dave Campbell KANSAN
By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer
A string of storms stretched across the Midwest last night and dropped pea-size hail in Lawrence and a tornado in DeSoto. 15 miles east of Lawrence.
A Johnson County Sheriff's officer said the tornado was reported at 6:15 p.m. It tore the roofs from several residences and damaged several outbuildings. The department received no tornado-related injury reports.
Joe Heim, a member of the KU Weather Service, said a low pressure system moving slowly east was responsible for the tornado and the chain of tornado warnings from northeast Kansas, which included Douglas County, into parts of Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi and Alabama.
Heim, Clarence, N.Y., graduate student, said the Douglas County sever storm warning ended at 6:46 p.m., but not before pea-size hail fell in
Lawrence. The hail started at 5:50
pm and fell for about 40 minutes.
Golfball-size hail fell in Bonner Springs, Lenape and Basehor, he said. Hail of the same size ravaged campus in March 1991.
Hem said the pea-size hail would have caused minor damage compared to the 1991 storm but that did not stop many students on campus from taking action to protect their cars.
Around 6:15 p.m. motorisists clogged the parking garage at Jayhawker Towers to escape the hail.
"It was beyond full," said Laura Humvall, Leaad sapophom.
Marcus Reid, Leaweenw junior and parking department employee, said drivers who were trying to avoid the storm filled the parking facility and the garage at Gertrude Sellars Pearson and Corbin residence halls.
"It scared everybody," Reid said. "Everybody was looking for underpasses."
[Black and white photograph of a man sitting on a grassy field, wearing a military-style vest with a fur collar and a cap. He has a long beard and mustache.]
Rachel G. Thompson/ KANSAN
Piggy-back nap
A man enjoys the mild weather at Potter Lake while his son sleeps peacefully on his shoulders and back. Later in the afternoon, a storm front with severe thunderstorms moved through the area.
WARNER BROS. PRESENTS
Shawn Johnson, Peck junior, reads the Lawrence weather for KZT0 radio 97.5 FM, Johnson was offered the disc jockey job at KZT0 after playing a DJ in Rock Chalk Revue. Drinking soft drinks and answering the request line helps keep Johnson awake during his midnight to 6 a.m. shifts.
Stephen Pingry / KANSAN
Rock Chalk role leads to job
Radio station offers student position as DJ
By Dan England
Kansan staff writer
recruiting Johnson.
Shawn Johnson's bad singing voice helped him get a job as a disc jockey.
After playing one in the Phi Kappa Psi-Chi Omega production at Rock Chalk Revue, Paul Schmidt, Topeka senior and former director of operations management at Lawrence's KZT radio 95.7 FM, recruited Johnson for the real thing.
"He really seemed to enjoy being a DJ, and he sounded like he had a good radio voice," said Schmidt, who resigned from the station after
But Johnson, Peck junior, had to be convinced even to try out for the play. He said he decided to be the DJ because it was the only part in the play that did not require any singing.
"I'm not much of a vocalist," he said.
Schmidt approached Johnson after the production and asked him if he would like to work as a DJ for the station.
"I was really shocked that I could be a DJ without being qualified, but now I'm having a blast with it," Johnson said. "It's definitely the best job I ever had."
Johnson said he thought that he didn't inject enough life into his character during rehearsals, so he rented the movie "Grease," in which one of the characters was a vibrant DJ. Although he did not copy the DJ in the movie, he said it helped him
get a feel for his character in the play.
"I tried to use a Casey Kasem-type voice for my character," Johnson said.
Kasem was noted for hosting the weekly Billboard radio program "American Top 40" before moving to his own show.
Johnson does not emulate anyone for his current job, however. He described his style as "a little crazy."
"I'm never one to just talk on the radio," he said. "I try to be a little hyper."
Johnson works two nights a week from midnight to 6 a.m. He said he would play whatever people requested, from easy listening to pop.
Scott Parks, a Lawrence senior who works for KZTO, trained Johnson for the job. Parks said he told Johnson to relax and not to say anything that would offend the station's target audience of females between the ages of 35 and 55.
"I told him to be Mr. Pleasant and that when he gets on the air to pretend that everyone listening to him is a friend," he said.
Johnson doesn't have to pretend. He said friends listen every time he is on the air.
"I have a contest where I give away movie tickets every night I work for people who are listening," he said, "and last week was the first time one of my friends didn't win."
Johnson said that the first time he went on the air, he forgot to turn the volume up on the microphone, and about 13 friends called in to tell him they could not hear his voice.
"I was really nervous," he said, "but after I got going I thought it went just fine."
NATALIA DAVIDSON
Beth Hedva is a licensed Marriage, Family, and Child Counselor and certified hypnotherapist who blends ancient wisdom teaching with modern psychology. In this new book she reframes the experience of betrayal as a spiritual event in one's life, advancing the concept that betrayals are fertile ground for personal growth.
The Mt. Oread Bookshop Welcomes You to a Reading, Question/Answer Session &
Booksigning With
Beth Hedva, PhD,
Author of
Journey From
Betrayal to Trust:
A Universal Rite of Passage
Celestial Arts Publishing.
Wednesday,
March 31st
11:30 am
to 1:00 pm
Kansas Union Bookstore
Level Two, Kansas Union
8:30am - 5pm M - F
10am - 4pm Sat
12noon - 3pm Sun:
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MR READ
BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STA
STA TRAVEL
STA STUDENT TRAVEL 1-800-777-0112
STA TRAVEL
the world's largest student & youth travel organization.
841-5499
MANE TAMERS
Baltimore, MD 21204
Baltimore, Suite 3, Insurance, KS 66044
Open Mon.-Fri. - Evenings ks.com
Minister Conrad Muhammad
The National Youth Representative of the Honorable Louis Farrakhan SPEAKS!
Date: Sat. April 3,1993
Place: KS Union
Ballroom (on campus)
Time: 7 pm SHARP!
Subject: "Why the U.S. Gov't Fears Black Youth and the Role Black YouthMust Play in the Year 2000" sponsored by: Black Student Union and BMOT
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IN OUR OPINION
University should ban smoking from buildings
On March 11, the University Council voted unanimously to ban smoking from all campus buildings. Residence halls and privately owned
buildings are the only exceptions. An action long overdue, the proposed ban's final fate now rests in the hands of Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, who will make his decision soon after considering all other options.
Close to 30,000 students attend the University of Kansas, but only a small minority of that population smokes. It is appalling how adverse an effect smokers can have on the rest. To add to the already overwhelming evidence that points to second-hand smoke as a major health risk, a report by the Environmental Protection Agency released in January revealed even stronger evidence to reinforce the argument. The report included classifying second-hand smoke as a carcinogen. It also cited lung cancer due to secondhand smoke as directly responsible for the deaths of 3,000 non-smokers nationwide over a one-year period.
The report concluded that smoking contributes to 53,000 deaths a year. Clearly, when people choose to smoke in a campus building — whether it be in a hallway, lobby or stairwell — they are doing more than endangering their own health. They are also putting their fellow students and faculty members, who walk through these areas to and from classes, at risk.
The issue of smoking on campus has brought about many efforts to find some compromise. As it stands, smoking is allowed only within specially designated areas in campus buildings. But with the rise in complaints about second-hand smoke this year, it is obvious, even to a smoker on the Council, that the only viable solution is to ban smoking completely. The smoker proposed the ban.
With the increase in complaints of second-hand smoke, the overwhelming vote of the board in support of the ban and the already irrefutable evidence of the health risks involved, a clear message should be conveyed to all smokers regardless of Ed Meyen's decision: if you do choose to smoke, please respect others and smoke outside.
SIMON NALDOZA FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
KU football needs the Crimson Crew
March 15th issue of the *Kansan* Vered Hauk expresses her distaste for KU football Crimson Crew. The Crimson Crew is the recruiting hostess program for the KU football team. The sexism has arisen due to the recent media exposure received by other similar organizations around the country. Being Kansas football players we possess the insight into the Crimson Crew that your article lacks. Our direct exposure to this program and others allows us to say that R.D. Helt runs the recruiting program in a professional manner that others seem to lack. We understand your concern with the degradation of women, but having firsthand knowledge of our justification for your fail to see an arrest, First and foremost, Crimson Crew is not an escort service and R.D. Helt is not running a house of ill-treatment. The young women in the Crimson Crew are not harlotts that you make them appear. These ladies have a genuine interest in the improvement in the Kansas football program. These ladies give the young recruits a chance to spend time with a person whose interests
are not specifically football, as well as giving them a chance to get a woman's perspective of college life. In regard to the summer ambassador program, what is not stated in your article is the fact that these student-athletes commit to a university in early February. Creating the need for information about the school well before the summer time. What was not stated in your article is the fact that the recruits are shown around by football players as "hosts" as well. This eliminates the need for male Crimson Crew members since these young athletes are surrounded by males 90 percent of their visit to our university. And as for the comments about the post card, a large percentage of people find their future companions at college, a photograph of a bunch of men would not attract male athletes just as a picture of females would not attract females. Also, if the member of the Crimson Crew is performing a service to the KU football team, then your column is a service to the students and faculty of KU. If that is true, then the football team performs a service for much of the state. It appears to us as if we are all just a bunch of performing monkeys.
■ Dick Holt
Wichita sophomore
■ Brian Rodeno
Castle Rock, Colo., sophomore
GAS TAX
NEW PROPOSED CIGARETTE TAX
PORK BARREL POLITICS
SOLICITING COURTS
TAXES ON SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS
SLON ACTION ON ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS
TAX AND SPEND
MILITARY CUT-BACKS + LAY-OFFS
DELAYS IN HEALTH CARE REFORM
HIDDEN SPENDING- IN NEW "Economic Recovery Plan"
The American People
M. JRYIN
"I believe he is on his 'Last Straw' Mr. Clinton, Sahib"
Beware all who enter, 'The Pile' houses all the semester's ghosts
The Pile. You know what I mean — that stack, that glob in the corner of your apartment, office or dorm room. By the middle of the semester it is quite considerable, full of bills that were due a month ago, opportunity to get an extension, the long past application date and letters that are begging for response.
STAFF COLUMNIST
ANN
JURCY
Spring Break. The promise that The Pile will be overcome and will never grow again. The promise of refreshment, catching up on sleep, studying, slow food, conversation, exercise and correspondence.
Reality. The Pile will grow again. By the semester's end all the post-modern clutter and the baggage of self-actualizing will pulsate forth: the pressure, the bags under the eye, the skin on the scum ring, the overdraft notices and the expired coupons will take root in the fecundity of The Pile.
For instance, you quickly clear off the table for study space because your desk is laden with the research equipment that old roommates stop by for that dinner you one her, so the table gets cleared off quickly for a couple of place settings and a bowl of pasta.
That is, unless you are among the rare breed that still remembers and practices their New Year's resolutions. Or unless you are rare individuals like Simone de Beauvoir or Benjamin Franklin. Yes, de Beauvoir, we have a reality both they devised in impeccable time management skills. And, more importantly, they were able to put them into practice.
Simone de Beauvoir managed to shorten her four-year university program by one full year by an obsessive
behavior she had developed. According to her regimen, de Beauvoir made extensive lists to the point that every moment of every day had a prescribed function. For example, she had an ongoing "Books to be Read Category" subdivided in to "Duty" and "Pleasure." This system included a space to note whether this read was worth it or a waste of time. She took passages to be memorized for the times she might be going by Metro or bus — no time wasted. (Of course, according to her own account, Sartre's entire room was a constant "pile," but that's another story.)
Regretting the leisure of his youth, Ben Franklin advised a similar course of action to his son. This type of counsel is best given to us in *Poor Richard's Almanac*, a collection of some most pityly pigment mudges directed at underachievers; he writes that they do well says *SayToday itself* so late the wise did yesterday." Franklin would also make extensive "to do lists" and review them frequently to see how each moment could be more efficient.
I understand this idea. Having too much to do can be rectified by overlapping—doing two or three things at once. Memorize irregular French verbs while doing lift lifts for saddlebags and brushing your teeth. When you master this ambulatory feat, add listening to "All Things Considered." In other words, even your dreams are more obviously productive. Of course, if this becomes dangerous or overbearing, there is the more conventional approach.
I've read enough time management books to know that they all bolow down to a few simple axioms: figure out what is important, figure out how to get it, break it down into steps, prioritize those steps, and then do them. And, for good measure, learn how to say no. In other words, if it's not on your list don't do it. Pretty simple, right? At least on paper.
Just make sure this paper does not get eaten by The Pile. It has a life of its own and has been know to eat children.
Ann Jurcyk is a Kansas City, Kan., graduate student majoring in liberal arts.
Airdrops won't help, but they're nice
There's just no pleasing some people. Your heart can be in the right place, but they still complain.
An example is President Clinton's decision to airdrop food and medical supplies for trapped Bosnian Muslims who are being ethnically cleansed by the Serbs.
Critics say that most of the stuff we drop for the Bosnian Muslims is landing where the Serbs can get it instead. Well, even if that's true, would they be going to there until the snarrels eat it? As the real goes says: "Waste not, want not."
COLUMNIST
MIKE
ROYKO
And they complain that even when the Bosnian Muslims manage to find some of the packages, Serbian snipers shoot them. While that seems harsh, it's all a part of the ethnic cleansing process. Is it our fault that there's a shortage of regular dry cleaning establishments in Bosnia?
Finally, the critics moan, even if every relief bundle landed smack in a Bosnian Muslims' parlor, there still wouldn't be enough supplies to help more than a fraction of the unfortunates. That may be true, but you can say the same thing about the lottery,
vet millions of people play it.
All the criticism is probably true, but the gripers are missing the whole point. It is the sentiment that counts.
The airdrops are our way of saying: "Get well quick." Well, maybe that isn't the message. It could be: "Hope you are feeling better, either. Not with the enthusiasm for ethnic cleanliness that the Serbs have been showing."
I've got it. What we're saying to the Bosnian Muslims is: "We're thinking of you." Yes, that's it, and a fine sentiment it is.
So why didn't the White House just send a card instead of doubling sup-
pies that will wind up in the hands of the Serbs, who don't have time to unpack them anyway, they're so busy cleansing them all those Bosnian Muslims?
clearing an those obstacle. So we've done about all we can under the circumstances. We've sent our respects, our regrets, our condolences. Even as the world's most powerful nation, the only remaining bona fide, verified and certified Super Power, we have our limitations. We can't be the world's riot squad, SWAT team or bouncers.
About all we can do is express regret and, if they are determined to go insane, let them go at it. In some parts of the world, they've been doing it for centuries. And they'll be doing it 100 years from now, if any of them survive.
have you ever really listened to Serbs and Croatians debate the issues? They quickly hop back 25 years, then 50, then 100. If you listen long enough, you'll wind up hearing about a Serbian caveman named Ugh starting it all when he threw a rock at a Croatian caveman named Ach. Or maybe it was Ach who threw the rock at Uigh.
Or get in the middle, if you are suicidal enough, of a debate between an Irish Catholic and an Irish Protestant. Or an Israeli and an Arab. Maybe God is, but I don't believe it because by now he would have whacked them all on the hindquarters with his mighty swift sword.
And it's going to get worse before it gets better, if it ever does. That's because the collapse of the Soviet Union has a downside.
As bad as communism was, it gave all those states, satellites and ethnic groups something they could share: the misery of Soviet oppression.
But with that gone, its former victims have a bright new opportunity. They can now say: "At long last, we are free of Soviet oppression. So what are we waiting for. Let's start oppressing each other."
So we're going to be sending out a lot of greeting cards. It's not much, but it is better than making house calls.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
KANSAN STAFF
GREG FARMER
GAYLE OSTERBERG Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET_ Technology coordinator
Educators
Asst. Managing Justin Knupp
News Monique Guislain
David Mitchell
Edithland Stephen Martine
KC Trauner
Compus David Mitchell
Sports Mark Rowlntins
Photo Lynne McAdon
Features Tamar McAdon
Graphics Dan Schauer
Wise Tiffany La Haurt Hurt
Assoc. Editorial Assistant Editor
Assoc. Campus Chris Mooser
Asst. Campus Christian Laue
Assoc. Sports Stacy Morford
Assoc. Sport David Barkowski
Assoc. Dance Dave Ranney
responders
Vicki Bode ... Mark Button
Jess Deaven ... David Dorsey
Matt Doyle ... David England
Ben Grove ... Mark Krafer
William ... Frank McCleary
Terilyn McCormick **Brady Prauser**
Jim Reece **Brett Rigga**
Todd Seifert **Blake Spurney**
Jay Williams **Era Wolfe**
| Heather Anderson | Copy Editors |
| :--- | :--- |
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| Tiffany Laush Hurt | Joe Harder |
| Noelle Kastens | Chris Johnson |
| Allison Ward | Christian Lane |
| Tim Mankis | Tim Mankis |
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| Tracy Triche | Corby Shawe |
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Scott Anderson...Shelly Solon
Andrew Amone Jason Auld
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BILLTHOMAS Production
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campus sales mgr ... Brad Breon
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Promotions ... Mark Dornish
Confidence Assistant ... Laura Guth
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Jennifer Blowey ... Kim Brown
John Canton ... Amy Casey
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Retail Account Executives
Linda Boedeker Tflicla Bumpus
Kate Burgess Ken Cule
Jason Eherly Jennifer Romone
Justin Barbring Stephene Greenwood
Josh Hahn Tamille Johnson
Allison Kaplan Sue Kratsky
Robin King Jessica Lawn
Brett McConnell Chris Mierskry
Mike Murray Keri Rathban
Ed Schagher Judith Standley
James Van Der Walle
Campus Account Executive
Rebecca Boresow
Kriety Enlow
Mellissa Jenkins
Laura Manka
Russet Hass
Regional Account Executive
Nicole Abbott
Carlbs McWilliams
Jennifer Laillard
Troy Tawarver
Interns Mendi Stauffer ...
KU LIFE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
5
WEIRD
Lead Story
In the series of stock-picking contests run by The Wall Street Journal, in which professional stock analysts match wits with Journal employees who throw darts at company names on the stock market tables, the dart throwers trail, 18 to 15. Results of the latest contest, announced March 4, saw the dart-throwers' "portfolio" gain 15 percent, while the professional analysts' stocks fell by 26 percent.
Unclear on the Concept
School officials in Suffolk, Va., suspended an 11-year-old boy in January after he broke the school's rule against carrying weapons onto school grounds. The boy's weapon of choice was a toy gun charm, 1/4 inches long, purchased for a quarter from a vending machine. Administrators
said they expelled the boy because he wielded the toy as if it were a gun.
In February, an arbitrator ruled that officials at Fort Campbell, Ky., must reimburse a civilian employee who had been suspended from work without pay for five days for illegally using a government truck. The government had proposed to suspend him for 30 days, but reduced that to five. However, the arbitrator ruled that the law requires a minimum suspension of 30 days, and thus, the government must reimburse the employee for the improper five-day suspension.
The New York Times reported that the Environmental Protection Agency, when asked to officially respond to a congressional report charging that the agency uses too many outside contractors, paid a contractor $20,000 to write the response.
New Housing Starts
New Housing Starts Next month, near Harrisburg, Pa., former welder Violet Hobaugh, 76, will begin her second year of residence in a 5-footby-5-foot tree house, according to a report from the Knight-Ridder news service. The state Department of Transportation cut down an adjacent tree to widen Highway 22, and Hobaugh fears that if she leaves the tree, the state will fell that one too. Hobaugh said that the tree protects her house from cars that careen off the road.
In February, Antioch, Calif., artist William Leroy, 39, declared the Eucalyptus tree he had been living in during a week-long protest, to be his official address. Several days later, he began
receiving mail there from supporters, who have joined him in urging that the city not destroy the tree. Leroy can be reached at 604 1/2 Eighth St., Antioch, Calif., 94509.
As of early March, police in Newcastle, England, had not captured the "Hole in the Wall Boy," who they believe to be about 13 years-old. He lives in tunnels and air-conditioning ducts and emerges to rob and terrorize residents of a local housing project.
The Associated Press recently reported that Ernest Dittemore had completed 18 years of sleeping in a 4-foot-by-10-foot hole in the ground on his property in Troy, Kan. When his house burned down in 1974, he began to
spend nights in the hole. When neighbors bought him a trailer to live in, he moved his possessions into it but continued to spend nights in the hole.
In December, a court in Oslo, Norway, ruled that Oslo University did not have to admit a 39-year-old astrophysics major to class until he bathed. The man has been living in a cave near the campus for 14 years. He sued the university for $470,000 for denying him access to an exam, claiming that the case was about his right to decide how to live and not about whether he smelled bad or not. The court said that it was the latter.
The Los Angeles Times reported in February that station KCBS-TV carelessly edited two drug-sale
Least Competent People
news stories, one of which might have led drug dealers to retaliate against a woman who had agreed to be interviewed on TV only after the reporter promised to protect her identity. However, the broadcast left several clues, including the interviewee's first name, age, occupation, the color of her hair, the inside of her apartment and a view from the apartment's window. Three days after the broadcast, a Molotov cocktail was thrown through the window.
The Diminishing Value of Life
In January, a 39-year-old man was gunned down by a friend in his home in Dayton, Ohio, after an argument over whether light or dark liquor was better and who could drink the most. Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
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1.
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Wednesday, March 31, 1993
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Hydrologist bases weather predictions on sun's intensity
Last night's thunderstorm may have dampened the evening, but it also saved Charles Perry's reputation.
Perry, a hydrologist at the United States Geological Survey office, 4821 Quail Crest, has been predicting that this spring would be plagued by thunderstorms and highly variable temperatures. He also said that this would be a cold, wet winter for the Midwest, the Northwest and the East Coast.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
By Traci Carl Special to the Kansan
And with mud slides in Southern California in December, several unusually heavy snowstorms in the Midwest and the hurricane-like snowstorm on the East Coast in March, Perry has all the bad weather anybody could hope for to back up his predictions.
Perry, who has a doctorate in meteorology and has taught atmospheric science classes at KU, bases his predictions on a theory of his own: That the sun's intensity controls the weather by heating ocean currents.
The sun's intensity from year to year is not strong enough to affect the earth's temperature directly, he said. It affects the ocean temperature, which creates precipitation and then lower temperatures because the sun's heat is stored more effectively in the ocean than in land.
Bad weather a good sign for theory
"It's probably the sun driving the whole weather system," Perry said.
Four years ago, the sun heated the Pacific Ocean with increased intensity. These warm currents took about four years to reach the California coast. Now that they have, Perry said, they are like a pot of hot water on a stove.
"The tropics pick up most of the heat, and most of the tropics is ocean," Perry said.
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Charles Perry, a hydrologist at the United States Geological Survey office, said he believed the weather depended on the heating of ocean currents.
"We don't really have that many measurements on the redistribution of the heat in the ocean on a whole," he said. "We know what the surface currents are."
“There's a lot of warm water out there," Perry said. "I would expect a lot of severe weather this spring."
But other scientists aren't getting their raincoats out yet, he said. Perry said that his theory was still just a theory and, although he will publish a paper in the April issue of World Mete-
It is also hard to pinpoint one single factor that causes weather because there are so many different theories and factors, Braten said. This year, scientists have blamed the eruption of the volcano in volcanic Mount Aeolius and El Niño on the current off the coast of Peru, he said. But even these effects are unclear.
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Global temperature increased dramatically from the early 1900s to the 1940s, dropped until the 1970s and have steadily increased since 1980.
"How they've actually affected the weather is anybody's guess," Braaten said.
The sun's intensity has increased and decreased with this temperature trend. Perry said that indicates that the amount of heat it receives with the increase in global temperature.
"The only way you can prove it is to put some physics with it," Braaten said.
Perry still is willing to put his reputation on the line with new predictions.
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Ocean temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea take about two years to reach the United States, Perry said, and the snow in Kansas this winter was caused by a 1991 peak in the sun's heat cycle. The wet weather that broke California's drought was caused by a 1989 peak.
Little is known about the ocean's heat distribution, he said.
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But Perry has more examples than this year's weather to back up his theory.
Dave Braaten, assistant professor of atmospheric science, said that Perry had been successful in finding statistical evidence to support his theory, but he also needed calculations to support the statistical evidence.
Perry can even find data to support the idea that the sun's activity affected weather thousands of years ago.
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The sun spots are becoming fewer and Perry predicts dry, hot conditions on the West Coast for 1996. He said there may even be a drought.
"It's really the atmosphere and where it's turning that affects our air temperature," Perry said.
The resulting increase in precipitation keeps the weather cooler, he said. The sun's intensity varies from year to year, but not enough to notice directly.
Some scientists may say he's lucky, but Perry is going to continue to stake his reputation on his theory.
If the sun is cooler, there is less precipitation and drier weather. Perry
orological Association, many scientists were still skeptical.
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"The sun is affecting climates at all time scales," Perry said.
Perry uses sumps, visible cool spots on the sun, to judge the sun's intensity. Scientists know that the more spots on the sun, the hotter it is, but they cannot explain why, he said.
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REMEMBER1993...
BE A PART OF HISTORY IN THE MAKING!
The Kansas and Burge Unions will be placing a 1993 Time Capsule in the cornerstone of the Kansas Union in October 1993 dedicated to the current KU students in appreciation for funding the renovation. It will be scheduled to be opened in the year 2050. We need your suggestions for items to be placed in the time capsule!
GUIDELINES:
Items should represent a facet of current KU student life. All items need to fit into a 12" long x 12" diameter capsule. Items should be in good taste
Please write your suggestions in the space provided:
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS - 1993 - TIME CAPSULE
PHONE #:
NAME:
KUID:___
CLASS: Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior Grad Faculty Staff Alum
SUGGESTIONS & REASONS WHY:
Other___
Return to the SUA Office, Level 4 of the Kansas Union by 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 14, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
7
Home With The RUMSEY BOYS
URAC
Story continued from, Page 1
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
S
tapes got the job at Rumsey through his high school counselor in Eudora. He jumped at the opportunity.
But there was more to the job.
He'd have plenty of time to study in a peaceful environment with no room and board expenses, he figured. He'd drop the phones, keep the place tidy.
"There wasn't any mention of having to deal with dead bodies at all," he says. "I was rather shocked. I didn't know what to say."
Weiser eats ice cream with every meal except breakfast, garnishing it with peanuts, judice, chocolate sauce, bananas and peanut butter.
Actually, Staples has had only two "really bad calls."
He once had to pick up a drowning victim who had been in the water a week.
But the worst, he says, was a man who shot himself in the head near the Wakarusa River in Staples' hometown.
"We had to walk down a hill, and we was muddy," he says. "We were in our suits. We had to put him in a body bag and put him on top of guys to lift him up and get up the hill."
"Actually, it's quite amazing that I've only had two calls like that, that were bad. Having been here three-and-a-half years, I feel pretty fortunate."
On death calls. Staples and Weiser don't deal much with the families. That's left to the funeral directors. The students try to keep an emotional distance, at least on first meetings.
But some times are harder than others.
One of the high schoolers died recently, he says.
"It's weird to go to out a call, and you see people you know." Weiser says. "There are a lot of high school kids that work at the grocery store that I see, and a lot of them have been through here lately."
"I recognize them, and they come up to me and ask me how I'm doing. They're still getting over their grief, and I'm someone to talk to. It gets old after a while, I guess. I mean — death — geez, there's other things to talk about. But I don't mind. That's what I'm here for — to help them out."
Of the three upstairs bedrooms, Staples is the biggest. Weisher the smallest. The other is full of empty casket models.
Weiser and Staples alternate workdays and weekends. One of them is always there after five, when the funeral directors head home. When the students are on call, they cannot leave the house at 601 Indiana St.
Sometimes a funeral director is showing a family through the casket room just after Weiser steps out of the shower. To avoid an awkward moment in the hall, Weiser hides out, shivering, until the coast is clear.
"That's the worst," Staples agrees. It is an unusual living arrangement they admit.
B
oth weiser and Staples study a lot. Weiser studies business communications. Staples is a history major.
Hot water radiators pop and bang
Hundreds of books — classics, history, philosophy, religion — are stacked in neat piles along the walls in Stanley's room.
upstairs. At night, they are the only sounds.
"I've grown accustomed to this life," says Staples, who gets mostly As and a few Bs. "There wasn't anything else for me to do. I didn't want to take another place to live or another job, and I realized that if my goal was to excel in my school work, that this would be the ideal place to work."
Staples often studies in his bedroom. The funeral home has no living room, no dining room. The home's airy foyer is decorated in mauve and grays. Weiser watches television at night in an office adjacent to the small, spotless kitchen with gold-flecked, mint-green counter tops.
Weiser's cookies have become popular with the mortuary staff. He cooks far more often than Staples, both agree.
But he never makes dinner anytime before a funeral service.
"If there's a family here, you don't want the smell of chicken in the air,"
The downstairs chapel is around the corner. Most nights, a body lies there in state.
"Most people, if they thought about sleeping in a funeral home, they would be quite discomforted about the presence of a corpse. 'Staples save.'
But he's used to it.
t first, dealing with death and dying was almost too much for him. Staples says He once thought about leav
A
ing, but Rumsey fit the studious lifestyle he sought.
In high school, Staples spent the weekends cruising Main Street and get drunk. It's what everyone did in Eudora, he says. He got Cs and Ds in school. Several times, the principal suspended Staples and his friend — once for stealing their biology teacher's keys.
"He kind of suspected us," he says. "We were the rowdy individuals in the class."
During the summer before his senior year, he realized he was sick of partying. Staples wanted more than what many of his classmates planned
— staying in Eudora after graduation.
So he quit hanging out on Main and turned to reading, mostly Stephen King novels. When fall came, he was ready to become a serious student.
Dave Hallenbeck, a Rumsey funeral director, remembers a conversation another funeral director had with Staples shortly after he arrived.
But there was still a little hell-raiser in him.
Staples remembers, too, and nods as he hears the story.
The way Hallenbeck tells it, the funeral director told Staples. "One thing I want you to know is that, when you're at the funeral home, you won't wear an earring."
Staples quit wearing it a few weeks after moving to Rumsey.
"It's pretty much sealed up now," he says.
Hallenbeck also remembers the first time Staples met with the funeral directors.
"He came in here with his sandals and jeans and his T-shirt all rolled up."
"I was not wearing sandals," Staples says for the record. But he does recall his informal appearance, and he stares down, shaking his head, snul-
Hallenbeck says living at Rumsey gives college students a far greater sense of maturity.
"Oh, boy. That was so foolish.
"We have a lot of college kids that come here, and they barely know how to boil water. Our full-time staff really tries to play a part in the lives of our college students. We take quite a bit of pride in our Rumsey Boys. We jokingly say we make men out of boys. The guys that have been here left a lot more mature and a lot more steadfast in their life goals and ambitions."
The funeral home has had well over 100 Rumsay Boys live there since they first offered the job 73 years ago. Some have stayed for their entire college careers. Others have stayed only a few weeks.
Weiser and Staples plan to stay until graduation.
They are part of a tradition.
Matt Staples, Eudora junior, and Scott Weiser, Kansas City junior, make tea in the kitchen. Weiser, who cooks most of his own meals, calls himself the Betty Crocker of the funeral home.
om Morris, vice president of Downing and Lahey Mortuary in Wichita, remembers the 1980 school year he
spent living and working at Runsey. After that, he lived in a fraternity house.
"It gives you more of a sense of responsibility and more of a respect for the business," he says of his time at the funeral home. "You've got to be able to treat people with respect and in a dignified way. A lot of people think of college students as wild and rambunctious, and in a funeral home you can't really be that way."
Many of the guys — there never have been women — who come to Rumsey have families who have been in the funeral home business. Weiser was one. And many Rumsey Boys have gone on to funeral home careers.
But Weiser and Staples have no such plans. Ask them if they think more about death than most people do, and they laugh.
They know they do.
"Unless they find out that I work in a funeral home and then they do. Maybe I just naturally draw that from people. Like a guy who walks around and forces people to think about death."
"It's inevitable." Staples says. "When you pass by a corpse in a coffin you have the choice of thinking about it or not thinking about it. Usually, I do. I don't know how much other college students think about death."
It is, he admits, kind of bizarre
taples also admits that he would have been a much different person had he lived in residence life. Life
at Rumsey has made him much more conservative. At KU, he's never had much of a chance to socialize.
"That's one of the disadvantages to living here," Staples says. "If you consider your social life important, you really have to go out of your way to join an organization or meet someone."
much with friends because of the life he leads.
Friends don't call much because they're afraid of interrupting business.
"And many would consider that a cost. And it is, indeed, as far as I can tell," Staples says.
"For the average college student, you can see that this is not a place where you could have a lot of friends or be friends like this is McCollium." Staples says.
Besides history, some of Staples other favorite subjects are religion and philosophy.
He finds a connection between some of the things he learns at school and some of the thoughts he has at the funeral home. During funerals he stands at the door, mostly just thinking as he watches people come in.
Thinking "about life and what are the most important things."
But both Staples and Weiser can separate themselves from death, thoughts of it, and the families they deal with when they are working.
Death is hardly a subject that consumes their thoughts during their off-hours. Or sometimes, for that matter, during their working hours.
Sometimes Weiser cranks the radio when he's alone in the hearse, drumming on the steering wheel and singing along. He's drawn curious glances from other drivers, he says.
"I went to pick up the family, and when they got in the car the radio was blasting. Actually, they thought it was kind of funny."
He says he doesn't date or go out
One time he left the stereo on when he shut off the ignition.
But there is never a complete detachment, especially during the
services.
"When I deal with a family, I'm a totally different person." Weisers say. "But sometimes you'll watch a family during the service, and you'll just about start crying. I almost have to leave the room sometimes."
True, after so many funerals and so many families, both students have been somewhat desensitized to the grief they see week after week. But when they put on their black suits, their concern for the families they comfort is real, they say.
Being considerate is their work
S
basis.
tapless and Weiser both say that their work at Rumsey is just a job. They just happen to deal with death on a daily
"It's just trying to answer the question 'Why are we here?' in a philosophical way. That question will always be connected with death. Ive always had a sort of disposition towards at least asking the question 'Why?' I really believe that if more people did that, they'd find more meaning in their lives." Staples says.
Weiser thinks about dying sometimes. He knows that after he takes a body to the crematorium, only one other person will see it: "I think. Wow, after this person will be gone, back to where they came from. Back to dust."
...
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
WILLIAM HOLLINGTON
Staples talks with Fleda "Short" Yost, whose husband, AI, is a Rumsey funeral director. Fleda Yost occasionally helps out at the home.
M
Above, Stapies has a lot of time to study during the nights he is on call. He and Weisner work alternate weekends, when they are required to be at the house 24 hours a day. Right, Covering his head in defeat, Weisner gives up studying for the night. Weisner, who is a member of ROTC and works two jobs, also finds time to be involved on campus as a Student Ambassador giving campus tours.
DJ
Doug Hesse / KANEAN
8
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
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KU interns study Capitol
Students work in Washington for class credit
By Terrilyn McCormick Kansan staff writer
For Hamiah Richert, Boulder, Colo.
senior, going to school on the Hill
does not mean M. Oread but Capitol
Hill in Washington, D.C.
Richert and 10 other University of Kansas students are working in Washington this semester earning academic credit as interns. They are working as part of the Washington Semester Program.
The program, established by Burdett Loomis, professor of political science and government, is in its 10th
year at KU and is open to all juniors, seniors and graduate students.
"The internship has an educational component of getting real experience that students just can't get on campus," Loomis said.
Students are responsible for finding their own internship and paying KU tuition, transportation and housing. They receive 9 to 12 credit hours for their work in Washington.
The internships include working in a senator or representative's office, a lobbying firm or for a special interest group.
Richert works in the office of Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan. His job as a congressional assistant entails being a receptionist, a tour guide and a researcher on four different areas of legislation.
Richert researches and talks to special interest groups on behalf of Glickman in the areas of animal rights,
postal issues, Washington, D.C.
statehood and fine arts.
"My favorite part of the job is meeting with the lobbyists and special interest groups," she said.
Richert works about 45 hours a week and often has work to take home. She must stay informed about bills on the floor of the House of Representatives because part of her job is answering the phone and talking to Glickman's constituents about current legislation.
"There is an endless amount of information to be digested each day," she said. "Every day learn something new. It is like college, but better."
Richert said that working for a Democratic representative was exciting because of Clinton's election.
It is very exciting to be working here with all the changes taking place right now," she said.
NOW focuses on lobbying efforts
By Jess DeHaven Kansan staff writer
Lobbying for the removal of a clause in a Kansas rape law and opposing a new abortion bill have been the main focuses of the KU chapter of the National Organization for Women this semester.
"Basically, the law now says that sex is not rape when a woman is unable to confess if she is under the influence of drugs of alcohol," Witt said. "That's just not right."
Shelly Witt, Chapman sophomore and organization had been supporting a bill in the Kansas Legislature that would remove a clause from the existing rape law that allows a woman's voluntary consumption of drugs or alcohol to work against her in court.
Julie Cline, Park Ridge, ill., juni and NOW member, agreed and said the bill had an important impact or KU students.
"Alcohol shouldn't even be part of the consideration in rape, "Cline said. "We're college students, and let's face it, we all go out and drink."
"It puts a woman in a situation where she has to be afraid every time she goes out and drinks, and that's absurd. If they're going to have a law like that, they should put warnings on beer cans."
Stephanie Guerin, Lenexa sophomore and NOW con-president, said women on campus should be concerned about the law.
"It's easy for us to have one drink too many," Guerin said. "With the law as it is right now, it will be difficult to bring
a rapist to justice if a situation like that hammers."
Bills to amend the law were introduced and passed in both the House and the Senate and will undergo another vote in each before the change is adopted.
NOW also is working against legislation that would make it more difficult for a woman to obtain an abortion in Kansas.
Cline said that in addition to changing the definition of fetus viability, the age at which a fetus can survive on its own, the bill would require a longer waiting period before an abortion. A woman would also have to submit more information to get an abortion, including the number of past abortions and if a husband had consented to the abortion.
By Frank McCleary Kansan staff writer
GLSOK sells jewelry to raise funds
pride," she said
Jennifer Papanek wears a ring with all the colors of the rainbow.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is selling "freedom rings," which have six colored bands: purple, blue, green, orange, red and yellow.
Papanek, GLSOK member, said the rings were an unofficial symbol for gays and lesbians across the nation.
"They are a national emblem of gay
The rings, which are sold with a chain so they can also be worm around the neck, are helping to raise funds for this year's Gay and Lesbian Awareness week, April 4 through 9. The group will continue to sell the rings during that week.
GLSOK receives the rings from a distributor in California and the rings have been sold across the country for about a year, Papanek said. This is the
first time the KU group has sold them on campus.
The rings are not exclusively for members of the KU organization, Papanek said. Friends, family members and people who support equal rights for gays, lesbians and bisexuals have bought them. But it's not exclusive to only them, she said.
"Anyone who thinks basic human rights are important could wear them," Papanek said.
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Wednesday, March 31. 1993
9
WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Soldiers convicted in rapes
Serbs to be executed for part in war crimes
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — a military court convicted two Serbs of war crimes yesterday and sentenced them to death by firing squad for atrocities that included raping Muslim women and slitting the throats of prisoners of war.
No date was set for the executions of Borislav Herak, 22, and Sretko Danjanovic, 31. Defense attorneys said they would appeal.
The commander of U.N. peacekeepers urged Bosnian authorities to turn the case — Bosnia's first war crimes trial — over to an international tribunal to avoid infilming ethnic passions.
World NEWS
Herak confessed to killing 30 war
---
prisoners and civilians including a dozen voiced Muslims he first rased
Danjanovic claims he was tortured into falsely confessing to five murders and two rapes. The only evidence against him, his lawyer complained, is Herak's testimony.
The five-man military court convicted both soldiers of crimes against civilians and genocide, based on Herak's testimony that he and Damjanovic killed people during so-called "ethnic cleansing" operations to purge Muslims from villages the Serbs took over.
Herak also was convicted of crimes
against prisoners of war, based on his confession that he slit the throats of three POWs.
The trial, which opened March 12, was the first attempt by Bosnia's Muslim-led government to prove in court its claims that Serb nationalists carried out widespread atrocities during the savage, 12-month-old war.
Herak, during two days of testimony, demonstrated how he slit the POWS' throats and described a massacre of 150 villagers. He said orders to rape Muslim women came from the Bosnian Serbs' ton leader.
He recounted a series of gang-rapes in which he and other soldiers would take turns having sex, then drive the vehicle to the forest where a mountainside forest and shoot her.
Herak described how he grew up in Sarajevo, getting along well with his Muslim neighbors until war broke out last April.
Shootings prompt Israeli ban
The Associated Press
HADERA, Israel — Gunmen shot to death two Israeli traffic police officers sitting in a squad car yesterday, and the government struck back by barring the West Bank's 1 million Palestinians from entering Israel.
Police blamed militant Arabs for the predawn slayings.
Israeli lives in March. Twenty-six Palestinians also have been killed this month.
The assassinations at an intersection near this town in Israel's heartland appeared to escalate a wave of Arab attacks, which have claimed 13
"I understand the pain, the worry,
the rage." Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said. "We are indeed going
through a difficult period of escalating
Palestinian terrorism."
Flanked by an Israeli flag and speaking in somber tones, Rabin said on national TV that he had ordered the reinforced in the occupied territories.
ans from the occupied territories would no longer be allowed into the sovereign territory of Israel until further notice.
Pakistani said the tough measure of sealing the occupied territories and barring 120,000 Pakistani from entering the hotel would damage peace prospects.
Rabin said that after today Palestini-
In Washington, White House spokesman George Stephanopoulos said, "We're obviously concerned by the escalating violence on all sides."
Yeltsin may hold counter referendum
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Reformist lawmakers yesterday advised President Boris Yeltsin not to hold his own referendum as he plots his strategy in a battle with parliament.
But Yeltsin's chief of staff, Sergei Filatov, said the president might hold a plebiscite anyway to counter an April 25 referendum on his leadership that was approved Monday by the Congress of People's Deputies.
After the president's narrow escape
from an impeachment attempt by hard-line lawmakers, many of his supporters seemed uncertain about how to proceed.
The four-day emergency session of Congress, which ended Monday, failed to end the fight between the president and the parliament. Although Yeltsin's opponents fell 72 votes short of the 689 needed to remove him in a vote Sunday, they did succeed in eroding his powers.
Bitter attacks on Yeltsin have become a habit with the 1.033-mem-
ber body, which is dominated by members elected before the Soviet Union dissolved. Many oppose Yeltsin's free-market reforms and Western-oriented foreign policy.
Filatov, told the newspaper *Ivestia* that the Congress could not block the president from carrying out a parallel referendum. It would ask voters to approve the basic principles of a new constitution that would strengthen the presidency and replace the Congress with a smaller, bicameral legislature.
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THE WORK ETHIC
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SELF GOVERNMENT
PAY YOUR OWN WAY
NOT!
Do any of these phrases sound familiar? Like values Kansans might proudly claim for their own?
At least, not as far as the majority of the Kansas Legislature has demonstrated to Classified State Employees for a long time now.
BUYING POWER that has fallen steadily for over a decade
ARECLASSIFICATION STUDY delayed for years beyond its original deadlines
I CREATESH STATE CONTRIBUTION TOKPERS.
RISING HEALTH INSURANCE PREMIUMS with little oversight of the provider by appropriate State agencies.
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Abortion funds considered
Plan would let taxes be used
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The White House plans to end the ban on federally financed abortions for poor women, which critics say would hurt the economy. "The attack" of abortion,
Both sides predicted a heated battle in Congress.
White House communications director George Stephanopoulos said yesterday that Clinton would not include the ban when he sends his fiscal 1994 budget to Congress next week.
For 16 years, the ban, which originated in Congress, has been written into the budget. It bars federally paid Medicaid abortions except when
National NEWS
here is a threat to the woman's life.
The policy shift was welcomed by the National Abortion Rights Action League, which said current law short-changes poor women.
"The issue here is fairness and equity," said NARAL President Kate Michelman. "It's one of ensuring that we do not have a two-tiered health care system — one for poor, low-income women and one for those of us with means."
According to NARAL, 9 percent of women of reproductive age get their medical care though Medicaid.
tution had no estimate on what repealing the ban might cost.
Hydie, who drafted the bill that banned federally financed abortions, predicted Clinton would seek to make abortion a "mandated benefit" and warned that would make it more difficult to enact his health care package.
Clinton's action sparked intense speculation about the broader issue of whether his health care proposals would be as "a basic benefit" for all Americans.
Stephanopoulos said the adminis-
White House aides declined to comment on how abortion would be handled in the president's health care package. However, Clinton said a day after his inauguration that he would present a plan that guarantees all Americans "access to quality, affordable health care — including abortion services."
New treatment slows cancer
he Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Scientists have developed the first medicines intended to stop malignancy by disarming a rogue cancer gene, an approach that could help control many forms of tumors.
learned in recent years that mutations in several genes are critical steps on the path to malignancy. When these normal genes go bad, cells lose control over their growth, resulting in cancer.
The new treatment is intended to block a cancer-causing gene, a so-called oncogene, which appears to play a role in cancer of the breast and pancreas, among other organs.
Although the ultimate cause of cancer is often a mystery, scientists have
The latest approach is intended to short-circuit this process by attacking an oncogene, known in scientific shorthand as neu.
on people within a year.
mark Greene of the University of Pennsylvania, who developed the approach, said it has shown great promise in tumor-prone lab animals. He said that he plans to begin testing it
Greene said that his animal studies provided the first demonstration that one could prevent genetically driven tumors.
The neu oncogene makes a protein called P185, which plays a role in triggering cells' uncontrolled growth. Greene's strategy is to fashion an antibody that locks onto this protein and renders it harmless.
Greene, whose team discovered the neuonucleus nearly a decade ago, said it was involved in about 30 percent of breast cancer.
Clinton eyes Gov. Cuomo for Court
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Gov. Mario Cuomo is President Clinton's first choice to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Byron White. The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday.
Others are in the running for the nomination, and the president hasn't made up his mind. He didn't have to lead the pack, the paper said.
Clinton frequently has said that Cuomo has the qualities he wants on the Supreme Court.
"He is a legal scholar who also understands the impact of the law on real people's lives," Clinton said last year.
The president has been pressured to appoint a woman or a minority; however, White House aids believe the president will have a chance to appoint at least one or two more people to the court, the Journal said.
The Jewish Democratic Council has pushed the president to name a Jewish candidate, said Rahm Emanuel, the White House political director. Hispanic and African-American groups also have made their recommendations known, the paper said.
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MARCH 31, 1993 VIDEOCONFERENCE
Women of Color
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IN HIGHER EDUCATION:
A provocative and insightful look at the critical issues relevant to the status of women of color, a frequently overlooked segment of our higher education community.
Too Invisible, Too Silent, For Too Long
TOPICS WILL INCLUDE:
· Equity issues • The academic, social and professional environment for women • Women in leadership positions • The glass ceiling faced by women of color • Student experiences • And much more
This videoconference serves as the finale for the month-long observance of Women's History Month. You won't want to miss this unique, timely discussion.
THE MICKEY MOUSE AND BESSIE DOWDY
Dr. Gloria R. Scott
Prs., Bennett Coll.
PANELISTS
AND GUESTS
WILL
INCLUDE:
W. J. B.
Dr. Evelyn Hu-DeHart
Prof. of History
Univ. of Colo. Boulder
Dr. Juliet Garcia
Prex., Univ. of Texas
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Dr. Vera K. Farris
Prel. Stuckton St. Coll.
Ms. Janine Pease-Windy Boy
Prel., Little Big Horn Coll.
T. W. F. R. A.
Dr. Jadwiga S. Sebrechts
Exec. Director
Women* + Coll Coalition
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Dr. L, Jay Oliva Pres., N.YU.
10
Dr. Elizabeth Higginbotham
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Alys Felicette Ramsey
ACP Fellow, Asian Draft of
Carol Randolph
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
11
Jayhawk football team gets fresh start
Players begin spring practice prepare for'93
By Matt Doyle Kansan sportswrite
Kansas coach Glen Mason will use 15 of those days in the next three and a half weeks for practice sessions in preparation for the season.
There are only 150 days remaining until the Kansas football season starts at the Kickoff Classic in East Rutherford, N.J., against Florida State.
"We view the start of spring practice as the start of our preparations for the 1993 season," Mason said yesterday at a press conference at the Adams Alumni Center.
The Jayhawks will begin spring practice today and will conclude
D. C. RANDALL
workouts with
the annual
spring football
game at 1 p.m.
on April 24 at
Memorial Stadium.
Glen Mason
Kansas posted an 8-4 record in 1992. The Jayhawks capped the season with a 23-20 victory
a 120 Victory
against Brigham Young in the Aloha
Bowl.
Mason has set goals he wants to accomplish in spring practice. One of those goals is to evaluate personnel.
"What a player has done in the past is not negated, but we will start over," he said. "This especially will help guys who haven't been in the position to play before."
Quarterback Fredrick Thomas is
meachplayer.
one such player. Thomas, who will be a junior this
fall, enters spring practice as a candidate to replace three-year starter Chip Hilleary in the position. Thomas saw action in seven games in 1992, including substantial time in the 22-17 loss at Missouri when he replaced an injured Hilleary.
"He played with a lot of confidence, and he was a winner," Thomas said. "It was helpful playing behind him and learning a lot of stuff that he knew."
knew
Brian Schottenheimer and Asheki Preston will challenge Thomas for the quarterback position this spring.
"I feel very good about the quarterback position," Mason said. "We have more depth and competition at that position than any time that I have been here."
before here.
Thomas said he hoped the experience he gained as Hilleary's backup last season would help him
Quarterback, a redshirt freshman, is regarded as the team's best passer. He earned high marks for his
work on the practice squad last fall.
"It will be a very competitive spring at that position because we want to see all those guys compete." Mason said.
There are five starters returning on offense: receiver Ashaunai Smith, tight end Dwayne Chandler, guards Hessley Hempstead and John Jones, and center Dan Schmidt.
Seven starters return from the defensive unit, which Mason said played the type of defense in 1992 that made them successful in the Big Eight Conference.
The Jayhawks lose seniors Dana Stubbiefield and Gilbert Brown from the defensive line, but Chris Maumalanga returns for his senior season to anchor the line.
Maumalanga earned second team All-Big Eight honors in 1992, despite missing the last two regular season games with a knee injury.
"Chris played very, very well last season," Mason said. "The only th
Chris needs to do to become a top notch performer is to play consistently."
Mamalanga said the knee injury, which limited his play in the Aloha Bowl, has healed 100 percent, and should not limit his play this season.
"The knee feels great, and I don't foresee any more complications relating from the injury," Maumalanga said.
However, injuries will keep linebacker Larry Thiel, defensive end Ty Moeder, defensive lineman Steve Douglas, running back Darwin Anderson and offensive lineman Brian Rodeno out of all spring drills.
Linebacker Dick Holt, cornerback Dorian Brew and safety Marlin Blakeney will take part in conditioning, but will not participate in any contact drills.
Offensive lineman Hessley Hempstead will participate in all drills this spring after returning from a knee injury he suffered in the Aloha Bowl.
34 KU
Kansas senior center Eric Pauley guards Gary Trost of Brigham Young. Pauley will match up with second team All-American Eric Montross in Saturday's game against North Carolina.
Finesse will face fury in Final Four
Pauley, Montross prepare to battle under the boards
By David Dorsey Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Eric Pauley foresees a big-time challenge awaiting him this weekend in New Orleans.
New Orleans That challenge is North Carolina's 7-foot, 240 pound junior center Eric Montross, a second team All-American who averages 15.6 points, 7.8 rebounds and 36 minutes a game
Pauley, 6-10 and 230 pounds, averages 12 points, five rebounds and 25 minutes a game.
minutes a game.
The two will meet for the first time at 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, when Kansas plays North Carolina in the NCAA Final Four at the Superdome in New Orleans.
"He's a lot bigger than I am, he's a lot stronger than I am and he takes up a lot more room than I do," Pauley said. "I'm looking forward to the challenge, and I'll try and do my best."
and try to get him.
Although they're both centers, Montross plays primarily with his back to the basket. A 62 percent shooter from the field, most of his shots are either layups, dunks or jump-hooks.
Pauley's shot selection is similar, but he has been able to consistently hit medium-range jump shots this season.
"He's added a great touch to his jump shot," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "He can go out on the court and make jumpers from 15 to 18 feet.
"What that does is make the other team's big guy come out and guard him. That opens up their defense and allows us to score more inside."
Pauley, who has started at center for two seasons after transferring from Cypress Community College in California, said he had difficulties adjusting to Kansas.
"It was hard for me because it was my first time away from home." Pauley said. "At first, you don't understand what Coach expects from you. Then, after learning the system, it made things a lot easier."
Pauley said he felt the change in his self-confidence midway through last season.
Tale of the tape
Kansas center Eric Pauley will match up with North Carolina's second team All-American Eric Montross in the Final Four semifinal.
| | Pauley | Montross |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Height | 6'10" | 7' |
| Weight | 230 | 240 |
| Scoring | 12 ppg. | 15.6 ppg |
| Rebounds | 5 rpg | 7.8 rpg |
| Minutes | 25 | 36 |
| Shooting | 55% | 62% |
| Blocks | 27 | 46 |
hit last year, my confidence went up," he said. "I knew the plays well and knew what was expected of me."
season.
"About the time the Big Eight season
knew what he was doing.
Williams is almost as familiar with Montross as he is with Pauley. Williams was an assistant coach for the U.S. Olympic Development Team last summer. The team competed against the U.S. men's Olympic team, and Montross worked against NBA centers David Robinson and Patrick Ewing.
Ewing.
"Eric did a great job for us against the Dream Team," Williams said. "He also played so well down the stretch last year and that gave him a lot of confidence."
Kansas sophomore center Greg Ostertag, who averages 13.5 minutes a game as a backup for Pauley, will provide the starter assistance.
protect us.
"We're not the biggest team in the world," Williams said. "We've got just two guys on our team that are over 6-8, so it's important that we get good play out of those guys."
Pauley said that he and his teammates would remain focused on their upcoming task of trying to beat the Tar Heels.
"Coach is not going to let us wander," Pauley said. "He's going to keep our minds on track. There's only four teams left, and we've got work to do. We're not happy with just making it. We want to go as far as we possibly can."
NEWMAN'S NOTES
Dave NEWMAN
Jayhawks look sharp for Final 4
NEW ORLEANS BOUND: From Naismith Drive to Bourbon Street, the Jayhawks are heading down to the bayou for the Final Four. Should the Jayhawks continue to play as they have been so far in the tournament, they will not be defeated.
GREAT SCOTT: With the whole team playing well and almost everybody coming through in clutch situations, it is hard to praise individual performances. However Rex Walters was absolutely all world in the first three games. There is also no way you can overlook Richard Scott's performance against Indiana. It seemed like every one of his seven baskets was crucial at the time. If these performances are equaled in New Orleans, especially those of the front line, we will be welcoming home the new champions on Tuesday.
GOOD KNIGHT INDIA!: Even though their season is finished, Calbert Cheaney and the rest of the Hoosiers shouldn't feel too bad. After all, they played a good game. Unfortunately for them, the Jayhawks were simply incredible. The thing I can't figure out is why Kansas was a five-point underdog. The Jayhawks should have been giving you five points, Bobby.
SMALL EIGHT: After its second pathetic performance in the NCAA tournament, the Big Eight has proven that when it comes to basketball it is really just the Jayhawks and seven tweetybirds. The Big Ten and ACC were the toughest leagues this year.
HOMEBOUND HURLEYS: One may have been the driving force for Duke during the last four years and the other may be an up-and-coming player at Seton Hall. But I have one question for them now.
how are those potato chips tasting?
The Hurley brothers, Bobby and Danny, will both be watching this one at home after their teams suffered second-round upsets.
BRAWLERS IN THE BIG APPLE:
The nasties of the New York Knucks make the old Bad Boys of Detroit look like a bunch of pansies. Who cares about Foreman vs. Morrison? If the promoters really want to sell those outrageously high pay-per-view prices, they will put Kevin Johnson and Greg Anthony in the ring.
SHOT DOWN: Hats off to the Kansas baseball team for taking four of five games from the nationally ranked Oklahoma State Cowboys last week. Kansas entered the top 25 at No.18 this week.
HUSKED: And finally, congratulations to the men's swimming team for finishing higher than Nebraska for the first time in recent memory. Kansas took 16th at the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships. Five members of the men's team and two Kansas women brought home All-America honors.
Dave Newman is an Englewood, Colo. sophomore majoring in journalism.
Pitcher was drunk when killed in wreck
The Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — Cleveland Indians pitcher Tim Crews was legally drunk when his speeding boat crashed into a dock on a darkened lake, killing himself and teammate Steve Olin and injuring teammate Bob Oleda, investigators said yesterday.
Medical Examiner Thomas Hegert of Orange County said a 0.14 reading could be the equivalent of six to seven beers in a person the stature of Crews, who was 6-foot tall and weighed 195 pounds.
tall all. Col. Bob Edwards, law enforcement director for the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, called the matter an "alcohol-related accident." He added that the commission did not anticipate filing any charges.
Bob Ojeda, the crews had a blood-alcohol content of 0.14 percent. According to Florida law, the 0.10 mark is considered intoxication. Neither Olin nor Ojeda was deemed legally drunk.
cations that the boat was going near top speed of about 65 mph, but Edwards said yesterday that it was impossible to determine maximum speed.
Olitis's blood-alcohol content was placed at 0.02 percent and Jöeda's at 0.06 percent, indicating they had drunk considerably less than Crews.
ing dry charges
Edwards and Li. Bruce Cooper, in charge of the investigation into the March 22 accident on Little Lake Nellie, said evidence indicated the 18-foot bass boat was traveling in the dark at more than 25 mph.
"Those were good, honest, solid men," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said. "It doesn't alter the fact one way or the other. Those guys are still dead. The hurt is still there. And I think enough is enough."
Investigators earlier said there were indi
Hargrove met with the team to update the players on the investigation yesterday after the Indians' fight-filled 6-5 loss to Cincinnati in Winter Haven.
Autopsies conducted in Orange and Lake counties determined the cause of death for Crews and Olin was "blunt force trauma to the head." The nature and location of the injuries indicated that the players did not see the dock.
Second baseman Carlos Baerga discussed the questions raised about drinking and driving
and driving
"That's something that everyone has to think about," he said. "It happened to Tim, it can happen to anybody."
Ojeda told investigators he had not seen
the dock, which investigators said was 171 feet long.
Investigators found unopened cans of beer in an ice chest, a nearly full bottle of vodka and an empty beer can on the boat.
The players were enjoying an off-day from spring training at nearby Winter Haven and had gathered at Crews' lakeside ranch with their families. Crews, Olin and Ojeda decided to go fishing in Crews' Skeeter bass boat.
water bass boat
Oedia told investigators that the players had been on the water for about 15 minutes when the crash occurred.
"Mr. Ojeda said they had made several passes around the lake and were returning to the launch area near Mr. Crews' home to pick up two other fishermen when they struck the dock." Edwards said.
struck the dock. Below the Investigators said the boat traveled 145 feet after breaking three of the dock's pilings and three cross braces.
The dock owners face no liability because there are no laws mandating lights or reflectors on private docks.
nights or reflections of funerals were held last weekend for Olin, 27, and Crews, 31, Ojeda, 35, is recovering from surgery for a lacerated scalp. He was released from a Clermont hospital last Friday.
NSAASSOFTREU
Batting practice
Softball coach Kalum Haack helps senior center fielder Shanna Cole with her hitting techniques during practice. The team practiced yesterday afternoon in Anschutz Sports Pavilion because the sched uled game against Missouri-Kansas City was canceled because of wet field conditions.
12
Wednesday, March 31. 100
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April 2 Latin American Culture Night and reception for Friday Central American students, with music and food. ECM, 1204 Oread, 7:00-9:30 p.m. (Call 749-7427 for info)
April 1
David Lippman Concert with Rice and Beans Dinner.
Thursday
ECM, 1204 Eadron, 6:00 p.m. ($5 for dinner and concert)
Latin American Month
April 8
Tuesday
Annual meeting, Alcore B, Kansas University; 6:30 p.m.
Come help plan next year's activities!
April 15
Thursday 1204 Oread, 7.30 p.m. (Call 749-742 for info)
April 8 Albert Fishlow, Professor of Economics at the Thursday University of California-Berkeley, "NAFTA in debate: Is the Relationship with Mexico a Good Thing?" Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium. 8:00 p.m.
April 19 Anna Luiza Ozorio de Almeida. Senior Economist at the Institute for Applied Economic Research in Brazil, "Environmental Change and Sustainable Colonization in the Brazilian Amazon. Deforestation and Tropical Agricultural Technology." Big 8 Room, Kansas Union, 8:00 p.m.
April 26 Monday Paul Doughy, Professor of Anthropology from the University of Florida," The Effects of the Drug Economy in the Andes on the Indigenous Populations," 100 Smith Hall (KU's Religion Building), 8:00 p.m.
April 29 Las Talpetales Leaders from Topeka's Salvadorah Companion Community, including a discussion of setting up a sister city relationship in Lawrence. First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway, 7:30 p.m.
Jamaica
jamaica
enterprise
america
Team makes college poll
Baseball KU
Jayhawks enter top 25 at No.18, Cowboys fall to 24th
By Brady Prauer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team, on the heels of its best start in the program's 115-year history, is ranked No. 18 in the nation in Baseball America magazine's latest top 25 weekly college poll.
Sponsored by Latin American Solidarity
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said the ranking, which came out Monday, was meaningful to Jayhawks past and present.
"The ranking is really important to all those kids who are here now and have worked so hard to gain recognition," Bingham said. "But it's even more important to recognize those kids who have worked so hard before the group we have now. This belongs to them as well."
Of the three Big Eight teams ranked, Kansas has the highest ranking. Oklahoma, 20-7 and 5-0, is No. 23.
According to available records, it is the first time Kansas, 18, overall and 4-1 in the Big Eight Conference that has ever been ranked in a baseball league.
Oklahoma State, which lost four
of five games to the Jayhawks last week, fell from No. 10 to No. 24. The Cowboys are 14-7 and 1-4.
It was the first time since 1972 that Kansas had won a series against Oklahoma State, and the first time that Oklahoma State won a series against the Cowboys.
The editorial staff of Baseball America compiles the rankings from weekly contacts with college baseball coaches and sports information directors across the nation, according to David Hardee, special projectors editor of the magazine.
Mississippi State, 16-1 and 3-0 in the Southeast Conference, is ranked first.
"I would hope so, because it has been ground longest." Hardee said
Kansas is not ranked in those polls
been around longest. Hattie said,
Collegiate Baseball, Baseball
Weekly, and USA Today also have
college baseball polls, as does the
National Association of Baseball
Coaches.
"We joke about this all the time," Wuycheck said about polls. "But it's nice to be recognized. We have to concentrate on baseball. We don't care if we fall, go up or go down in the poll, as long as we play our type of baseball."
Despite Kansas' first national ranking, senior first baseman John Wuychek said his and team did not place a lot of stock in palls.
In three appearances against Oklahoma State. Walker allowed no runs and no walks and struck out nine n batters in six and two-thirds innings. The right-hander earned a save and a victory in the series.
Yesterday Wuycheck and senior pitcher Jimmy Walker were named Big Eight player and pitcher of the week, respectively, for their performances against Oklahoma State. Wuycheck was 8-for-21 and hit a one-out, two-run single in the bottom of the ninth inning to lift the Jayhawks to a 9-8 victory against the Cowboys in game three of the series.
Kansas' doubleheader at Iowa State today was canceled because of heavy rains. Under Big Eight rules, conference games that cannot be played on the scheduled day are not made up.
The Jayhawks will play host to No. 16 Wichita State tomorrow at 7 p.m.
Baseball America Top 25
Kansas entered the poll this week at No. 18 after the Jayhawks took four of five games from Oklahoma State. The Cowboys dropped to No. 24. Oklahoma is No. 23. Wichita State is No. 16.
rank team record last week pr
1. Mississippi St. 16.1 6.0 2
2. Texas 32.5 6.0 3
3. Georgia Tech 19.4 4.2 1
4. Texas & MN 19.3 4.1 5
5. Cal St.-Fulton 17.4 3.1 4
6. N.C. State 19.7 4.0 6
7. Arizona State 16.10 5.0 15
8. Florida St. 24.6 3.3 7
9. UCLA 14.6 0.1 8
11. Arizona 20.15 3.8 13
12. Texas Tech 25.7 7.0 10
13. Southern Cal 17.5 1.3 11
14. Miami 19.10 3.0 17
15. Hawaii 24.11 6.0 NR
16. Wichita State 17.6 4.2 12
17. Arkansas 17.6 1.9 12
**18. Kansas** **18-8** **4-1** NR
19. Pepperdine 20.10 3.1 18
20. Sacramento St. 10.8 2.0 NR
21. Kentucky 16.6 4.1 22
22. Rice 25.7 2.3 16
23. Oklahoma 20.7 5.1 25
24. Oklahoma St. 14.7 1.4 10
25. Old Dominion 16.3 1.0 NR
Dropped out of the poll: Stanford (14), Cal St.
Northridge (19), Ronda (21), California (23), Fresn
State (24)
Source: Kansas sports information KANSAN
SPRING TRAINING
Houston Astros take 6-4 victory against Royals
Reds' Morris injures shoulder in fight with Indians
The Associated Press
KISSMEEE, Fla. — Eric Anthony drove in four runs, three of them with his fourth house run of the spring, leading the Houston Astros to a 6-4 victory yesterday against the Kansas City Royals.
Chris James' single scored Ba
Anthony's home run came off Rick Reed with one out in the first inning.
The Astros added their final runs in the fifth. Chris Donnels walked and scored on Jeff Bagwell's double.
The Associated Press
Two Houston errors helped Kansas City score in the ninth inning.
Kansas City's Felix Jose hit a two-run homer in the first inning off winner Brian Williams, who had relieved Darryl Kile. Kile sustained a bruise when he was struck on the back of the neck by Wally Joyner's line drive.
Kansas City added a run in the fifth. Jose singled, stole second, advanced to third on an infield and scored on Kevin McReynolds' saffron fly.
tackled Mesa.
After Barry Larkin and Chris Sabo hit consecutive homers off Mesa in the third inning, the right-hander threw an 0-2 fastball behind Morris' head. Morris charged the mound and
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — Cincinnati Reds first baseman Hal Morris injured his left shoulder after charging the mound to fight Cleveland pitcher Jose Mesa during a 6-5 victory yesterday against the Indians.
Both players were ejected. Morris went into the Reds' clubhouse to get his left shoulder iced and was holding the injured arm with his other as he left to get the shoulder X-rayed.
Tom Browning, a cause for concern early in spring training because of shaky outings, had his second consecutive strong start. The left-hander allowed just one run in seven innings.
Mesa was hit hard, giving up all six runs and eight hits in two innings plus.
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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You'll place an ad in the Jayakt Network section of the Kanan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
3. After your aid runs in the Kanan,
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to the messages people leave for
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4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone) enter the mail box number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
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To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
13
Two faculty members receive grants for studies
Two KU faculty members from the department of human development and family life will receive grants to study and teach in KU departments outside their field during the 1994 spring semester.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Wilma Hla, instructor, and Edward Morris, professor, are the recipients.
Exxon Corp. established the grants to the KU Endowment Association in the early 1980s. In recent years, the association has provided funds for the awards.
Holt will study gifted education for young children and enroll in educational psychology and research courses that specialize in gifted children. She will concentrate her studies on gifted education for minority children and children from low socioeconomic backgrounds. Holt has a master's degree in child development from Oklahoma State University and became a faculty member in 1971.
Morris will take courses in the history and philosophy departments. He plans to study methods of historical research and the history of philosophy of science. Morris earned his doctorate in developmental psychology from the University of Illinois and joined KU as an assistant professor of psychology in 1975.
A KU doctoral student was one of only 11 students nationally to receive a Pharmacology Research Associate Program fellowship from the National Institutes of Health.
Doctoral student awarded research fellowship
student, will spend two years at the Laboratory of Molecular Neurobiology in Bethesda, Md. He will study proteins in the brain that are targets for drugs such as cocaine.
Peter Johnson, Lawrence graduate
Since 1988 he has worked as a research assistant with Elias Michaelis, professor of pharmacology and toxicology.
Johnson graduated with a bachelor of science degree in biology from Linfield College, McMinnville, Ore., in 1988, and he received a master's degree in pharmacology and toxicology from KU in 1991. He will receive his doctorate in pharmacology and toxicology from KU in May.
Johnson said he thought his work at KU had helped him win the fellowship.
"I was a bit surprised," he said. "I'm lucky to come from such a good lab where there is a legacy of people working in the fellowship."
Women in education program to be shown
A satellite video conference on the problems of minority women in higher education will be shown from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
The program "Too Invisible, Too Silent, For Too Long" will be sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs and Black Issues in Higher Education.
The video conference will feature a panel of college administrators from across the nation who will discuss the experiences of minority women in the college community. Topics will include equality, women in leadership positions and their limited opportunities, student experiences
and the academic, social and professional environment for women.
The conference is being held in conjunction with Women's History Month and is open to the public.
Plan would give Regents control over financing
A House committee yesterday passed a plan to the full House that would revamp the way the Regents universities are financed.
rme plan, spearheaded by State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, who is head of the House Appropriations Committee, would create a base budget for the universities and guarantee them set percentage increases from the state general fund for three years, beginning Fall 1994.
That percentage was set at 2 percent yesterday.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, DLawrence, who is a member of the House Appropriations Committee, has said the plan was a good one in theory because it also would give universities control over tuition increases and would give them the revenues generated from those increases. The tuition increases now are controlled by the Board of Regents and can be set by the Legislature.
But Charlton said a 2 percent increase from the general fund each year may not necessarily benefit the universities.
"It's hard to say if we're better off or not," Charlton said. "It may be close to what we'd get anyway."
Briefs compiled by Kansan staff writers
Joshua Joltaven, Dan England and Ben
Grove.
KU SAILING CLUB Informational Meeting
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@ Walnut Room Of Kansas Union
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY!!!
for info call Bryan Welsch@864-6702
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YOU'VE GOT A WHAT ?!
On April Fool's Day don't let the joke be on you and your partner.
April is National STD Education and Awareness Month. This month and every month, remember that you can reduce the spread of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, including HIV/AIDS, by being responsible.
If you decide to have sex, the concurrent use of a condom and spermicide with nonoxynol-9 offers the best protection from STDs. Abstinence is the surest way of preventing STDs. Also, long-term, mutually monogamous relationships put you at lower risk for STDs.
Spermicides and condoms are available without prescription at Watkins Pharmacy. If you believe you may have an STD, call 864-9507 to make an appointment.
Health Education Seminars
Watkins Health Center, First Floor Conference Room
Breathe/Texticular Self Examination Information Table Mar. 31 at 1:30 p.m.
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Information Table Apr. 5 & 7 at 1:30 p.m.
How to Help Yourself Stop Smoking Apr. 6 at 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Health Educator are available to present programs on many health topics. $ \textcircled{c} $ 864-9570
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864-9500
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Wednesday, March 31. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU students win scholarships
Munro Richardson: Mellon Fellowship
By Terrilyn McCormick Kansan staff writer
Not many students can work 15 to 25 hours a week and still maintain a 3.91 grade point average.
Munro Richardson does. But he is not the average college student.
Richardson, a Chinese language and civilization major, is one of 85 Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship recipients in the United States this year. He is the 18th KU student to be selected since the fellowship was established in 1982.
The fellowship covers one year's
tition at any graduate school in the United States and $12,500.
The goal of the fellowship is to encourage students to become part of the nation's college and university faculty. Richardson, Kansas City, Mo., senior, he planned to teach while working for his doctorate at Harvard and later pursue a career in international affairs in China.
At a very young age he said he developed a strong interest in East Asian cultures. Richardson said his interest was fueled by field trips to the Nelson-Akton Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo., which houses an
extensive Asian art collection.
"I feel very fortunate because I love what I study and it comes relatively easy for me," he said. "I feel even a little bit guilty sometimes because it comes so easy for me."
Wallace Johnson, professor of East Asian languages, said that Richardson was one of the best students in the department in many years and that his concentration on his future goals set him apart from other students.
Richardson will attend Harvard next fall and begin his doctoral program in East Asian studies and law.
Margaret Hu: Harry S Truman Scholarship
By Kathleen Stolle
I am so happy to be able to share my love of reading. I enjoy taking part in various book clubs and reading new books every week. My favorite book is "The Art of War" by Leonardo da Vinci. This book is a masterpiece that showcases the brilliance of Leonardo's mind. I believe in the power of words and imagery to tell stories and convey emotions. Reading is a way to connect with others and find solace in the world. I hope you enjoy my work.
Special to the Kansan
During spring break, Hu, Manhattan senior, learned she had been awarded a scholarship from the Harry S Truman Scholarship Foundation.
After years of giving, Margaret Hu is a recipient.
Last fall Hu, who is majoring in women's studies, Chinese and political science, helped found a local chapter of the National Organization for Women. She heads the Kansas Governor's Student Advisory Council and recently was appointed to a council concerned with community service project development in Kansas.
The foundation, based in Washington, D.C., awards scholarships to outstanding undergraduates who are planning to pursue careers in public service.
Hu credits her parents, who came to the United States after fleeing China, as her inspiration.
Munro Richardson
Hu will graduate next year and plans to take a break before entering law school. She said she wants to either intern with a federal agency or study abroad.
"They felt privileged to be in a country where there is freedom,
equality and justice." Hu said, "and they challenged me to contribute to those ideals in my future career."
This year the Truman Foundation selected about 80 recipients from more than 900 applicants.
Hu will receive $3,000 for her last year of undergraduate studies and $27,000 for graduate studies.
I am a kind of man. I am not a man who has to look after my own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life. I am a man who has to live his own life.
Kathryn Price: Harry S Truman Scholarship
By Christoph Fuhrmans
By Christoph Fuhrma Special to the Kansas
"A leader has to lead, or otherwise he has no business in politics," Harry Truman once said.
Kathryn Price. Wichita junior, has shown her ability to lead as a director of Associated Students of Kansas, student senator and member of the board of directors for the KU Memorial Corporation.
Margaret Hu
Price was awarded a Truman Scholarship on March 22.
established in 1975 by Congress, is given to students who plan to attend graduate school and pursue careers in government or public service.
The Harry S Truman Scholarship
Price, whose major is political science, will receive $3,000 for her senior year and up to $27,000 to continue her education in graduate school. She plans to pursue a master's degree in public policy with an emphasis in domestic policy.
Price said the degree would help her with one of her interests; improving the U.S. educational system by concentrating on the development of children's learning abilities.
To date, 61 college students from four-year schools nationwide have been awarded scholarships for the 1993-94 scholastic year. As many as 85 scholarship may be awarded.
KU has had nine students selected as Truman Scholars since 1981, including Price and Margaret Hu. Manhattan senior, who also received the award this year. The last time KU had two scholars in the same year was 1988.
Susan M.
--an real estate fair in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and a similar law on discrimination, imitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, to imitate dis-
Kathryn Price
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications for
OFFICE & WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for 1993-1994 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
Return NEW Applications to SUA Office by
DEADLINE
SPRING INTERSESSION
For a free brochure and enrollment form, mail the coupon below to:
Registration Office, Division of Continuing Education, 131 College Court, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 6506-6015. Or call (913) 532-5658 or toll for 1-800-342-8222.
- Over 55 courses will be offered. Registration begins April 28, and can be accomplished by phone, mail, or in person on the K-State campus.
- Need college credits before Summer session begins? You can earn one to three credits between the spring semester and summer session in Intercession at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas.
Kansas State University May 17-June 4 1992
Spring Intersession 1993
Please send me a schedule of Spring Intersession classes and an enrollment form.
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The Kanas will not knowingly accept any appertentiation for housing or employment that discriminates against the Kanas, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kanas will not knowingly accept advertising that it is violation of University of Kansas regulation.
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ray or evening help wasp. Apply in person only
at Border Hideid. 1208 West 23rd.
The Principine Review seeks a highly motivated, businessman and extremely personable self-starter to serve as a part-time on campus marketing representative. You will be given the opportunity to put your marketing skills and creativity to work, and efforts will be made to recruit, train, mentors, assess, and many other valuable incentives. Call Sandy Katz at 1-800-453-7727 for more information.
The Princeton Review is looking for college grads to teach M.T. courses part time. The ideal candidate should have a master's degree in chemistry or biology and has excellent communication skill. Fax your resume to 202-667-7198 or mail your resume to Princeton, Inc., 50 West 47th Street, New York, NY 10017.
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Automotive parts counter sales person. Afternorms and weeks, experience preferred but will训. Phone for interview appt. Midway Auto Supply 841-1830. W 18th St. E. Ask for Bob
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys girls summer camps. Teach, swim, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, swimming, archery, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $10 or more camp, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also garden, seeder, 78 Maple, Nd., IJ 6003, 7046-4424-24
ECE 211 Tutor needed, call 843 6906, leave message if I'm not home.
Cruise line entry level on board/landside positions available. Summer or year round, great pay. Must be at least 25 years old.
Enthusiastic, sales oriented person wanted for waitress/waiter position at Alvamar Country Club. Apply in person between 2-5 p.m. 1809 Crossgate
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GRADUATE ASSISTANT for International Student 9.93年. Assist new and returning international students, coordinate programs, train and supervise orientation leader. Applications available in English.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make
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Kansas and Burge Unions part-time jobs available. Prairie Rue Host/Hostest, Custodian-Kansas Union Building, Cashier-Burge Union Building, Office Assistant KU Bookstore-Kansas Union, Office Assistant KU Bookstore-Kansas Union, KU Concessions Special Event Clerk, Job Board, Personnel Level 5, Kansas and Burge Unions. Must work hours listed for each location. Burge Unions Personnel Office EOE, Kansas and Burge Unions Personnel Office EOE.
Lake of The Oarskats Employment The Oarskats offer a variety of work opportunities for waitresses, waters, and cooks. Excellent salary and tips, great working conditions, and some food furnished. Apply while housing is available.
Music Industry Internship
Models needed pro $175/300-day & TV/Film
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Motivated District Manager for property management
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(718) 955-0413
National Concert Promotion / Marketing company based in LA seeks music/Marketing Intern based in Kansas. Sophomore or above, know your market well and be very into music. Go Rt ASAP
Namia positions available nationwide including
Namia, Hawaii, summer/yr. Great pa-
tion.
Now hire for wait and bar staff for a new bar in Lawrence. Apply in person, 3-pm. M-F at W15S 8158
ORIENTATION LEADERS for International Student Services. Temporary, part-time positions in August to January at the UIU. Applicants available in 2 srrong Hall. Deadline: April 9.
GREEKS & CLUBS
Each member of your frat
sorority team club, etc.
pitches in just one hour
and your group can raise
$1,000 in just a few days!
Plus a chance to earn
$1,000 for yourself!
No cost No obligation
S1,000 AN HOUR!
No cost No obligation
1-800-932-0528, ext. 65
STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER I
Date: 04/12/93 Salary: $59.85 / $60/month
Duties include participating in program coding,
reassessing programs, and preparing reports and/or other specific output;
share responsibility for insuring that programs perform as per specifications; assisting as necessary in the preparation encountered in executing programs; assists in preparation of required program documentation; performs program analysis and review on existing schedule. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Anita Roster, Personnel Office, Computer Center, University of Alabama, Lawrence, KS 66040; EO# 8047.
Student月底 in the office of Systems Development. This is a ½ hour appointment responsible for assisting in maintenance and preparing Macintosh hardware and software support in Student Affairs, Life and Educational Services. Must be a Bachelor's degree or equivalent. Description available at 37 Strong Hall. Salary: $63.35 / month (50% assignment and 20 hours per semester) with additional references to: Mr. David J. Ryan, Specialist II. 37 Strong Hall. All materials must be received by 5:00 p.m. Friday, April 2, 1983.
Students earn extra money Set your own schedule Earn $100 or more a day Call (815) 374-8348 Summer jobs $,000-$2,000 House painting for schools $,000-$1,000 Lennery Leroy Pad. Lenny, MO 60125 Lennery Leroy Pad. Lenny, MO 60125
FULL TIME JOBS IN KC!! The most
The most productive way for graduates to find new opportunities quickly at hundreds of top Kansas City Employers.
Call ACCESS at
1-800-362-0681 or
(inKC) 432-0700 or
cbeck Career
Career
Center.
CCESS
UNIQUE CARRIERS AND COMPANIES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
15
Spring Break is over and still no summer work? Why don't you check out what a 4,000 college students do each summer where the average student makes $170/week. Call 841-5327.
Help Wanted
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT!
GET $135 BY DONATING NINE
TIMES IN ONE MONTH.
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
816 W. 24TH 749-5750
Summer Jobs Outdoors, Over 7,000 Openings!
National Parks, Firefires, Creeks, Resorts
Send Sample Fee to Free Details
Collins, MA W. Kipperville, Kailua, MT 5900
$
Did all of your money melt away during Spring Break?
NABI Biomedical Center Introduces its
Spring Special Earn $15 each
time you donate plasma. $30 a week!
Give a gift of life
816 W 24th
749-5750
--factory work on weekends,starting Friday at midnight and ending Sunday at midnight. Flex time possible. A student work team will be formed to cover
O
Packer Plastics Incorporated
Part-time unskilled factory work on
interested please
Interested please call Packer Plastics at 842-3000, ext. 475 to
225 Professional Services
interview.
For free consultation call
*Driver Education > offered mid-Thursday Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, river's license obtainable, transportation provided: 841-7749
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
FREE MONEY for school vault include Financial
MONEY for your students.
EWS MSN5 F. O. Box 16947 KS 60964
EWS EMS5 F. O. Box 16947 KS 60964
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUTY's
Fake ID and & alcoholoffenses
divorce criminal & civil matters
The lawoffs of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
**Heading for EUROPE this summer?** Jet there anytime for only $169 for East Coast, $299 from the Midwest (when available) with *NIRHICHTM* (Reported in "The New York Times") and *NIRECRAFT* (registers registered trademark) 212-844-2000. Frame Photos and Headshots. B&W Diaform Fast Service. First Light Photography. #411-4234
Lawrence Glass Tinting
---
- BUGSHIELDS
• BEDLINERS
• RUNNING BOARDS
• BUMPERS
Home Business Automotive
235 Typing Services
841-7019
737 E.22ND
1-der Woman Word Processing, 682-306
Expert typing by experienced secretary. IBM Correcting Solelectric $1.50/double-spaced page. East Lawrence. Call Mrs. Matlis 841-1219
der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063
**Pro Type:** Serving Service, Fast and Reliable. Any kind of typing. Call M-P 8-5-01-842.6242.
Word Chapters shire theme & papers to byte-size text. We cut it **832-CHOP** (2647) or *193-BODY*.
Word Perfect Word Processing Near Orchard Corner.
No. 843 APTER PW. 834.6586
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribition, materials, research, job res-
hailable jobs, Masters Degrees. 4034
Resumes
- Professional Writing
* Cover Letters
* Laser Printing
Transcriptions 1012Mass. 842-4619
X
PA RW Professional Association of
Resume Writers
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
2 Final Four tickets for sale. Lowest section at 1700 or up. Best offer goes to New Orleans! $790 and up.
Computer-Macintosh Classic with software and Image Writer II pnr. 842-6979
Fax machine 8600 bps plus audio/vac fixe box and cleaning kit $175. MIDI interface plus cable and Maestro software for DMSO $50 call Archi at 865-3560 after 6 pm.
Fender Squire II Stratocaster guitar and amplifier. Like new, $20 or best offer. Call 823-04-16
any time
Eighteen buyers, lowest prices. Call at 812-334
Four-year loans, lowest prices. Call at 812-334
Final Four tickets, lowest prices. Call at #812-334-2272,
or 8137-7841-2641.
Final Four tickets available. Call 842-3396
Final Four Ticket pairs of scats center court see
12. Leave Exc. Mess. Call (Mare 618) 739-2500.
Leave Exc. Mess. Call (Mare 618) 739-2500.
NCAA Final Four Tickets. Seven pair (14) for sale
708-989-8557 10a.m. - 9 p.m.
Round Trip Student Air Pare to Four-Four Leave
Round Trip Student Air Pare to Four-Four Leave
Smith Corona Electronic Typewriter with SK memory. Includes Line-Write and Spell Check functions. Can erase mistakes. $100.00 Call 626-578-4928
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
2 & bdm1.bmps, aptr. 2 & bdm2.bmps, & bdm3.bmps
1 & bdm4.bmps, no allowable. Payload
Lichen Renchii at 682-987.
1900 NASMISH 8 & 4 BR. 2 Bath. Lg. rooms.
1900 NASMISH 8 & 4 BR. 2 Bath. Lg. rooms.
variable leaves, variables leaves,
variable leaves, variables leaves,
a baptist at 107 Tennessee avail. B/1 with W/D and off street parking. parked in monthly plus new apartment. 1 yr lease, 1 yr fee, flooring. 3 bpt apt 861/month, plus security and utilities. 1 yr lease, wood floors. AC, No pets. 48-88
3/4 BR HOUSE sub avail fall, Central air, wood floors, WD hokusupps, DW, private parking, sundeck, $ biks to campus or dwentw NO PETS $540.
841-7510.
691 Arkansas, good location. 2 bdmr apit upfairs,
furnished, modern conveniences, central heat and
air, protected space. Subsidies immediately withdrawn.
In winter, retain retains the difference
691 Arkansas/811 or 401-789
A bik from campus Lg. l bkr Wood fire/lifes
place/sun mw. 800q; i kkr Fav. avail 5/1
sum/year.
APARTMENTS: Small, Large. Walk to KU Medical Center. A/C, newly decorated, furnished or unfinished. Quiet, secure building, off-street parking, many extras. 816-361-3928.
Available Aug. 1, 8 bark apartment in renovated old house, walk to KU or downtown, wood floors, window AC, dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, off-street parking, no pets.码419-874176
Holiday Apartments
Tropical island
Leasing for Summer & Fall
210 Mount Hope Court#1
843-0011
Bung for Summer
- 1 Bedroom $340
• 2 Bedroom $400-415
• 3 Bedroom $625-650
• 4 Bedroom $800
- Recently constructed
- On bus route
- Dishwasher
- Nice quiet setting
- 110M Mount Hope Cou
in removed older house, walk to CU or
downstreet. (Call 615-780-1423, off street,
pickup number: 696, $304-1604)
ceiling sun, water paid, no pets; $595. 461-1074.
Available August: 3 BR apt in nice old house. 3 doors from Duds N Suds. Wood floors. CA, DW, carport, no pet;s. $595. 461-1074.
Available August 1, 2 Bedroom apartment
DUPLEX for RENT 3 bedroom, 2009 large garage 2009-11 University Call 407-772-5380
For lease 4 BR Townhouse, 2 baths. 3 car garage
$90 per month or will wash & dryer. Avail-
able immediately.
***attain Nb** Now furnished Rms / w shared kitchen
***kitchen** Now furnished Rms / w off-street
***parking, no petc* Calls 611-585-8342
Available August 1, 3 Bedroom Apt in charming older house, upstairs or downtown, large kitchen, claw foot floors, floors,
BEAT THE CROWd! Everyone wants these apss.
for August, but if you can take one June, I can
share them. I will be building buildings at West Hills Apts 100; Emery Bdr. Great
location near campus. NO PETS: 841-380 or -362
Naismith Place
Higher Place
> Jacuzzi in mast appt
> Jacuzzi to KU bou rout
> Toilet, to KU bou rout
> Pd cable TV/NETs
> Basketball court/park
> Office/appt
Outstanding 21st Cl. 64-1815
Office/hour
5 Org Appt for 10 - 12 p.m.
5 Org Appt for On-call
MACKENZIE APTS. new leasing for Aug 1. Newly constructed luxury laps, close to campus. Att 3 chairs, weather & dryer, energy efficient 2 decks or porch. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-166.
New leasing for Fall
Atwest Aspen West 2BR, 1yr lease,
no pets, water pass, on bus route 850-285 for appt.
Rent a living room, dining room & bedroom set for only $60 per mo. Thompson-Crawford Home & Office Furniture Leasing 601 Kaisoln 841-7311
Office Furniture Leasing III 601 Kaisoln 841-7311 till July 11st $125 4 countries. Call 843-9011.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
SUMMER SPECIALS
*1,2, & 3 bedroom units
*3 month leases
*avail end of May
843-4754 (call for appt.)
Room w/ all your friends! This old house. 6 bdrm.
Kitchen, laundry room, dishwasher, kitchen,
central air, of artfurniture.
$1100-1300 per month lease applies
up to $299.00 and August 1. (581) 244-8257. leave message.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Spacious 2 bedroom
>Laundry facility
>Swimming Pool
>Waterbed allowed
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
southpoint apartments
2168 W. 202d St. Apt 3
Now taking deposits for summer/fall leasing.
Mon-Fri call for app. 845-6446.
Sublease 3 bedroom/2 bath. Furnished apL_ close to campus, avail May-15 Aug 10
9th & Avalon 842-3040
RAINBOW
TOWERAPTS
Hey! KU Med Students,
Enter the Tower
Lifestyle...
Luxury...
Limited Entry...
Convenience...
*Across from KU Med*
*Studio, 1 & 2 bdmts Adm*
*Garage Parking*
*Heated Pool, Sauna &
*Across from KU Med*
Quail Creek
- Exercise Room & Clubroom
· Heat and Water Paid
summer & Fall Leasing. Pursued I & berm
parking, KUU KU W/ off-street parking,
pno. Call 841-754-2090
Now Pre-Leasing For Fo
3838 Rainbow Blvd.
831-9363
Bird
5 Min. from Downtown & Plaza
2-3 Bedrooms
On bus route
Ask about our
Spring specials
Office Hours:
1-5 pm M-Fri.
9-12 am Sat.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Offering Luxury 2 br. apartments at an Affordable Price!!
(Next to Benchwarmers)
2111 Kasold 843-4300
COLUMN SUB-LEASE W) OPTION FOR YR.
RENTAL, 1234 Vermont Appt #1, 2 bedrooms, outside deck, close to campus, air conditioning in rooms, $355/mo Call 841-5480
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
24th& EDDINGHAM
meadowbrook
Each apartment features
Washer and dryer
Microwave
Gas heat, central
living rooms
Mint blinds
On KJB bus route
Carparks available
1 bedroom $405,465
2 bedroom $440,765
3 bedroom $525,855
4 bedroom $840
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Summer sublease I dbrm. apt. mtl & Mississippi.
Hospital room, gas & wood, floor floors,
fam. in 841-31-309; fax. in 841-31-307.
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
BROOKLYN NURTURES
424-4200
The Perfect Apartment!
Whether you are looking for a furnished studio, a spacious one bedroom with a balcony or a shiny bright 2 bedroom with a study, it's here and waiting for you!
Mon. Wed. & Fr. 12:00 - 2:00p.m
Tues. & Thurs. 6:00 - 8:00p.m
is the time to rent for Fall, we are filling unquickly!
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
NOW
843-1971
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
15th & Crestline
Sorry nopets
Please call Kelly for appt
SUMMER SUPPLYLE 3 Dbrm. 2 bath, W/D,
across street from stadium, new. $600 Ngz. $85
EAST STREET
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Graystone Apts.
& Introducing New Eagle Apts.
S
Swan Management
- Graystone
*1-2-3 bedroom aparts.
2512 W.6th St.
749-1288
Summer subsea studiot.apt; Trialrail. Available May 1. On bus route; $300/mo includes water; 828-1492.
Summer subsea W. K. Bath. Purnished and Water; Call 842-5511.
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for
June or August
Try living cooperatively at Sunflower House.
Have openings for Spring Summer Fall. Offer friendly living, fantastic rates. Call 749-0871 or 841-0484. Stop by 140 Tennessee.
Spacious apts.-furnished
- 1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$305 to $365 per month
*2 bedroom apt. $384 per month
$375 to $450 per month
WATER PAID ON ALL APTS.
1:00-4:00 pm no appt. needed
Wanted: Summer subleasees for 3 berm2/2 bath
Southpate point Aq. Good location, balcony, on bus route, pool & sand volleyball $40/mo OBO
Water pail Q4: JIHWK
GREAT LOCATION Near campus
OPENHOUSE
Wed. Thurs.
This ad for original buildings only.
does not include Phase II -call for
- Garages (Vill.)
- Garages (VIII.) * Tennis Court Pools
Sunrise Apts.
POLYGONAL MESSAGES
-1,2,3,&4 Bedroom
info or appt.
*Luxurious Town Home
On KU Bus Route with
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
TRAILRIDGE APTS.
New sign leaving summer & fall
Call Sarah for your appointment at
843.7333
& Apartment Living
•On Bus Route
- On KU Bus Route with 4 stops on Property
* 2 Laundry Rooms
* Some Washer/Driver
- Close to Campus
- NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
We are now accepting deposits on apartments and townhomes for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence.
Hookups
Park25
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Sat.-Sun. 1-4
Summer sublime 3 bedrooms / 2 bath Great Location
大 deck, $400/mo. negotiable Call 812-765-9311
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Call or stop by today.
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
---
Summer sublease available May 15. 3 bedroom
townhouse, w/ call 865-2471.
Boardwalk
Apartment
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN
524 Frontier 842-4444 Open6 days a week for your convenience
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
Female roommates needed for summer or next year. New College Hill Condos. Close to campus. Washer/dryer in apt! Call Kathleen at 865-2300.
3BHR house on bus route. April-fall, two month
furnished, free k.d. k. deposit, utility calls 661-8905
- phone number: 804-345-1234
* allowed in any mail to be on your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* file stored.
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Stop by the Kampan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or charged, or used on Visa or VISA.
Female roommate wanted ASAP or from May to
campus with 4 BR 1hr term rent neg 843
760-768
Female, N/S, rooentom wanted for fall in 18R b2AP. on Bus route pool, AC, free water canele, trash,heat $222/mo & 1/2 electric. $83-8540.
Roommate wanted, $110 a month, WD, free utilities except telephone. Hair & 23rd. 749-2951. Summer Sublime One female roommate to share a 2 BR, 1 Bath to campus, on bus rt. Starts
Need a roommate starting June 1 for summer and
on. Own room, 10 minute walk to campus, 2 blocks
down from downtown, 165 US a month + half utilities.
Call Lou or Claudia. 865-4178
Classified Information and order form
Summer Submarine 2: Females to share large bdm apt $200 + w/U, W/D, patio 85-292
bdm apt $200 + w/U, W/D, patio 85-292
By Mail: 1191 Stairway Print, Lawnshr. KS, abc3456
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanan District. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or vCard account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
**Higher rates:** Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day inceptions and the size of the ad (the number of apage lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Failures on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash will not be available.
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8-12 lines
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
1 per line per day
Deadline
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication
Classifications
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X
1.95 1.50 1.00 1.00 0.70 0.45
1.85 1.10 0.75 0.60 0.55 0.50
1.78 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.50
1.67 1.00 0.70 0.60 0.55 0.50
Please print your ad one word per box
140 lost & found 305 for sale
269 high要求 404 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 jobsites
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Total due cost___
..
Phone: ___-
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Account number:
Total days in paper.
Address:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Master Card
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
My God! It could've been any one of us.
Drive-by erasings
16
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, March 31, 1993
What the heck does this:
Have in common with this?
Sprint.
FONDOARD
000 000 0000 0000
STEVE HULLER
Global Caring Number
0000000 000 0000 0000 0
They're both easy if you know what's up. And they're both brought to you by Sprint—official NCAA* corporate partner and purveyor of the fresh, fantastic FONCARD."
During Final Four* frenzy, you just don't have time to deal with confusing calling cards. That's
why the FONCARD is based on your home phone number. It makes long distance dialing a total slam dunk.And the FONCARD's not just easy to use, it's easy to get.
Just call Sprint. Then you can vibe your friends talk tournament strategy with your dad, and give
Grandma the play-by-play. Sprint is your ticket to maximum calling power. Call 1-800-PIN-DROP.
Sprint.