V
B A C K - T O - S C H O O L E D I T I O N
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.1
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Academic chief is a quiet leader
David Shulenburger welcomes the challenges of fatherhood and his new administrative position as vice chancellor for academic affairs.
NEWS:864-4810
By Lisa Cosmillo Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, wants to have an interesting and varied life, and he does.
From his dark tousled hair and rolled-up sleeves to his subdued necktie, he is a study in contrasts.
When he leaves his office he prefers to be in his garden or camping with his sons.
Shulenburger spends his days behind a desk as chief academic officer at KU.
his great love of chapening.
"It may all go back to being a farm kid," said Shulenburger, who was raised on a 100-acre farm in North Carolina.
Although Shulenburger has been a leader in many aspects of his life, he said that being a good leader is the most difficult part of his job.
"I hope the people I deal with think I'm fair. Shulenburger said."
As chief academic officer for the University he is responsible for seeing that the University maintains its level of academic excellence and for leading it in new directions.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he thought Shulenburger was a good choice for vice chancellor.
snutenburger, who considers himself a 47-year-old Boy Scout, said he subscribed to the philosophy of Jean Jacques Rousseau, who
"Some people, upon first meeting, would have called him aloof or some other adjective, arrogant or something like that," said Amber. "But he is, I think, in his own personal demeanor quiet and reserved. I think there might be a little shyness as well. He doesn't impose himself on other people."
originated the idea of the social contract.
He said he tried to live by this precept.
"My moral precept is really the notion of a social contract — that we are all in this together," Shulenburger said. "We can't tromp all over one another, and when we do that, we're violating the social contract, and we ultimately make it much more difficult for society to work. So I think my ethical and moral precepts come from the notion of a social contract."
"Anyone who is still a boy Scout has it to have something special going." Ambler said. Until recently the Amblers were neighbors of the Shulenburgers, who have invited them to attend Boy Scout ceremonies over the
See CHIEF, Page 11A.
1
David Shulenburger became vice chancellor for academic affairs June 7. Shu
lenburger was the associate vice chancellor for academic affairs last year.
INSIDE
Sporting scene
Apreview of fall sports, including a look at the changing perception of KU Football a review of last
SPORTS
Senior allied at football stadium
Neville allowed an injury to Jamie Hearn
Mason winning 'perception' battle
Senior half challenges counter-half
Birmingham City 4-0 Leeds United
Leeds United 2-4 Birmingham City
Birmingham City wins second straight match in league title race
year's successful teams
Section B
Get a KU life
Lawrence and the University have much to offer in entertainment -bands, theaters,a state-of-the-art performing arts
KULIFE
Life at the lake
Christian Lake offers wide variety of experiences
center and the newest in the bar scene and recreation.
Section C
Around campus
Learn how to avoid boredom this weekend and how to survive the rest of the semester.
CAMPUS
Surviving at KU Flying high
The first book in the series is a celebration of KU's academic excellence. This book will help students prepare for their future by providing them with valuable tips and strategies for success.
THE CAMPUS
Surviving at KU Flying high
The first book in the series is a celebration of KU's academic excellence. This book will help students prepare for their future by providing them with valuable tips and strategies for success.
Section D
The Times of London edition
ACTIVITIES
Club sports allow athletic outlet
New York Daily News
Baltimore Sun
Pittsburgh Post-Dispatch
The Washington Post
NYT
KU offers a wide variety of activities, such as club sports, minority organizations and religious groups.
Beyond academics
Section E
Also inside:
KU students visit pope
**KANSAS CITY:** The Plaza and Royals baseball are only a few of this nearby city's attractions.
A GUIDE TO THE PALATE: From barbecue to fine dining. Lawrence has many restaurants to satis fv almost every craving.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
BRAKE FOR
CATHOLICS!
ED BOZARTH
DAILY RENTALS
913-266-5151
TOPEKA, KANSAS
Jay Hyland (left), St. Louis graduate student, and Marshall Maude, Topeka sophomore, play with a hacky sack during a break from Youth Day activities. About 120 students from the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center stayed six days in Denver at the gathering that attracted about 350,000 people.
Youth Day draws Lawrence Catholics
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
About 120 KU students and chaperones from the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center braved extreme heat and huge crowds to sing for and worship with Pope John Paul II.
But two recent KU graduates had to overcome anxiety as well. One was asked to sing solo, and the other was asked to speak before the large crowd and the pope.
The pope's visit was the highlight of World Youth Day, held August 10-15 at Cherry Creek State Park outside of Denver. On World Youth Day, Catholic youths come together to worship and celebrate their religion.
The Center's choir, which has 88 members, was selected to be one of three Midwestern choirs that performed for the pope. The Center also sent a group of about 33 that took part in the ceremony but did not sing with the choir.
The event was attended by about 350,000 Catholics from as many as 80 different nations.
The two groups have been planning the trip since Christmas of 1902.
"We've had prayer meetings and have been basically getting to know one another," said Father Jerry Volz.
Despite the long preparations, Anne Weist was not quite ready for the role she played in the celebration. Weist, a 1983 graduate, represented the St. Lawrence Center and KU Catholic students when she spoke to the pope and the crowd.
"I was extremely nervous. I had to pretend like the pope was not there." Weist said. "I focused on what I had to do and what I wanted to say."
Youth Day directors asked the Center to send a speaker. Weist was selected from a group of frequent participants at the Center.
"It was an honor," she said. "But I don't think I was anything special. There were about 120 of us in the group. I just said what all of us felt."
Lynnette Valencia, a 1993 KU graduate, was selected to perform the duty of cantor during the Mass on Sunday. The cantors are responsible for leading the crowd in song. Valencia said the crowd did not bother her.
Alit
"I just pretended I was only singing for the pope," she said. "When I was little I was told that singing was twice praying, so I just
loue Hesse KANSAN
Pope John Paul II at Stapleton Airport in Denver for a stop at World Youth Day. thought of it as praying.
Valgueron was chosen to sing partly because of her knowledge of the Filipino language. She was asked to sing in Filipino, Vietnamese and Korean to help pilgrims from many countries feel welcome.
FLOOD OF '93
Damages from flood ever-rising
By Carlos Telada
Kansan staff writer
Douglas County damage estimates for the flood of 193 have hit $4.5 million and will keep rising, said Paula Phillips, director of emergency preparedness for the county.
The flood, which the KU Weather Service said dumped 18.3 inches of rain on Lawrence in July, huri resiriver rose to 24.5 feet at the Lecompton measuring station 10 miles upstream from town, more than seven feet above flood level. The rising river submerged Burcham Park and threatened the Lawrence River front Plaza, both of which are on the south bank of the river.
Service san- rain on Lawrence dents and businesses. Backed up sewer lines in North Lawrence filled North Second and North Third streets with water that was 13 inches deep at the North Second Street underpass. The flooding closed businesses and drove out residents.
KU HELPS:
Assistance available for students who are flood victims.
Page 12A
FLOODED FROGS: Rising waters confused wildlife in Lawrence.
The Kansas
Page 12A.
Although the waters have since receded, damage reports have not. Phillips said the emergency preparedness office still was calculating damage to the county's residential and agricultural areas.
"It's going to take years for the recovery to bring things back to their conditions before the flood," she said. She said one of the office's primary concerns had been helping residents left homeless by the flood. The rising river destroyed houses on the eastern ends of 11th and 15th streets and east of Eudora, leaving about 50 people homeless.
Fred DeVictor, director of parks and recreation for Lawrence, said the flood caused $210,000 worth of damage to the city's trees. He said the trees were both an aesthetic and economic loss.
"It's difficult to put a dollar value on those trees," he said. "There is a dollar value, but those big trees can't be replaced."
See FLOOD, Page 12A
Policy bans student-faculty romance
By Lisa Cosmillo
Kansan staff writer
A policy prohibiting consensual relationships between faculty members and their students will go into effect Aug 20.
The policy was written after a task force made recommendations on sexual harassment, said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor.
The new policy applies to all faculty, including nontenure-track professors and graduate teaching assistants.
In its final form, the policy exceeded the recommendations of the committee, said Robert Shelton, University Ombudsman.
"I can see that there will be some obvious areas of controversy as well as avenues that will have to be explored in actual
TONKOVICH: Law professor will appeal
TORKOVICH: Law professor will appeal a University's decision to
uphold his firing. Page 4A.
implementation of this policy," Shelton said. "I would assume the Ombudsman's office will be involved."
Meyen said that his office had circulated the original proposal to other University officials and that they had expressed a great desire for the KU administration to take a stronger stand on consensual relationships.
"There was a strong recommendation for the policie." Meyer said.
The policy states that faculty members involved in consensual relationships with students over whom they have authority
The definition of such a relationship includes faculty members who have authority over students' grades, employment, theses or dissertations.
Tom Berger, former acting director of
A gratience may be pursued confidentially through the University Ombudsman's office. Shelton said.
If students or faculty have grievances about consensual relationships or sexual harassment, they can pursue University grievance procedures through the academic or administrative department involved or through the Office of Affirmative Action. 313 Strong Hall.
must report the relationships to their departments heads. The faculty members will be expected to remove themselves from the position of authority.
affirmative action, was involved in the formation of the consensual relationships policy and said it was similar to policies at other state universities.
The new policy was announced the same day as the outcome of Emil Tonkovich's dismissal hearings. Chancellor Gene Budig had recommended in Fall 1992 that Tonkovich, professor of law, be dismissed after allegations that Tonkovich pressured a female student into having sex with him. The recommendation was upheld July 30 after a series of hearings.
Tonkovich said that a relationship between a student and faculty member generally was not a good idea, but he also said that it was demeaning to women to implement a rule stating that students could not date faculty members.
2A
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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July weather extremes break records in U.S.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — It was too wet and too dry.
and too cold.
It was too hot and too cold.
It was July 1993, month of extremes in the United States.
How bad it was — or rather how it was bad — depended on where you lived.
nived.
The month was dominated by cool air that moved in from the west, traveled north of the Rocky Mountains and then turned south toward the West North Central states. At the same time, a strong high-pressure area kept the Southeast dry and pushed wet air from the Gulf of Mexico north up the Mississippi Valley.
July rain for the area was 2.02 inches.
courtesy of these two forces converged in the upper Midwest and produced the massive Mississippi Valley flooding while the southern and eastern sections of the nation remained dry.
The result was the wettest July ever for the West North Central states, which averaged 4.85 inches of rain over the region during the month. Some spots got a lot more. Average
in the area was 26.2 inches. And it was the second wettest July in the 99 years of record-keeping for the East North Central states with an average of 5.86 inches of rain over the region. Only 1902 was wetter, averaging 5.95 inches. The normal is 3.61 inches.
On the other hand, it was the driest July on record in the Southwest, which averaged a mere 0.73 inches, well below the normal 1.83 inches.
And the average of 3.34 inches in the Southeast made it the second driest July for that area. Only July 1983 had less rain, 2.94 inches. Normal is 5.56 inches.
July also was a hot and cold month. As swintering farmers and city residents could attest, it was the hottest July on record in the Southeast, averaging 82.7 degrees over the region where the normal July average is 78.6 degrees. It took a lot of readings in the 100-degree plus range to pull that average up.
WEATHER
average up.
In the Northwest, though, it was the coolest July on record with an average of just 58.9 degrees.
Weather around the country:
Atlanta; 96/75'
Chicago; 86/68'
Houston; 99/75'
Miami; 91/76'
Nineapolis; 85/64'
Phoenix; 105/83'
Salt Lake City; 89/62'
Seattle; 74/55'
Wichita: 103'/75'
◎
Tulsa: 101/77
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
☀️☁️
Partly cloudy; slight chance of showers
Partly cloudy; slight Partly cloudy chance of showers; chance of showers
High: 92° Low: 70°
Low: 75°
Source: National Weather Service at Topeka
High: 95'
Low: 75'
Trees make shade... We don't recycle... You're getting warmer
VISIONS 806 Massachusetts
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806 Massachusetts
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Work ends on Union renovation
1912
Plastic fences are no more; the building has a new look
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staffwriter
After $11 million and 10 years of planning, students no longer have to walk around plastic orange fences to get to the Kansas Union.
Construction of the Union master plan renovation project is finished, much to the delight of both University officials and students.
"It's nice to able to go to class without hearing jackhammers all morning," said Erik Nyberg, Wichita junior.
Pat Beard, manager of building services for the Union, said they had not received many student complaints about the construction.
The renovation project began when a survey was mailed to 2,500 students, staff and faculty members in 1983 asking for suggestions on how to improve the Union. Their answers, along with plans from an architecture and design class, were used in the final plans.
the Architecture Barriers committee, a group that advises new architectural projects and is associated with the KU Student Assistance Center, also provided input for the final plans.
As a part of the new plans, all the bathrooms were made handicap-accessible, braille was added to signs, a pay phone for the hearing-impaired was added, and automatic door openers at the main entrances were installed in the front and back of the building.
Despite the long wait and the inconvenience from the construction, both students and faculty agree that the improved Union was well worth the wait.
Jim Long, director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, said, "We've had a tremendous reaction from the visitors to the building about the changes."
Tim Combs, Loveland, Colo., sophomore, said he liked the additions to the Union.
"It feels more like KU, more KU style." Combs said.
The final phase of the renovation of the Kansas Union is finished. One of the new features is the depiction of the history of the Jayhawk in the tile on the lobby floor.
There will be two dedication ceremonies for the Union. The first will be Oct. 1, and it will be a memorial to the 130 students, staff and faculty that died in World War 1 and for whom the building was dedicated to in 1926. Relatives of the 130 will be invited to a private ceremony.
The original memorial time capsule of 1926, a copper box that contains the names of the 130 who died, war newspaper headlines and dried rose petals, will be placed in the right pillar of the arch over the entrance to the foyer.
The second dedication ceremony will be for the students during homecoming weekend on Oct. 15. A new time capsule will be placed in the left pillar of the arch. Student Union Activities is making a list of the contents for the new time capsule. Some sug-
The final phase of the renovation of the Kansas Union the history of the Jayhawk in the tile on the lobby floor. gested items include a safe sex packet, a 12 compact disc and the recipe for Joe's doughnuts.
The landscaping of the Union, which involves planting shrubbery and flowers, is all that remains of the renovation project. Bid opening for it will begin Aug 27.
Construction at the Union will be minimal now that the renovation project has been completed. Beard said.
The next construction project at the Union will be the renovation of Woodruff Auditorium, he said. When money becomes available, carpet, tiles and seat covers will be replaced, and the stage will be enlarged.
Union construction phases
PHASE I began in Spring 1987. This $6.5 million phase included renovating the bookstore the student organizational activities office, and installing a new food court
PHASE II began in Spring 1992. The $4.5 million phase included moving, expanding and renovating the lobby, Student Union Activities offices, Union administrative and business offices, banking services, travel services, art gallery, information center and front plaza on level four. Some of highlights of the work on level four are the arch over the entrance to the foyer and the tile replicas of the six different Jayhawks on the floor.
Tonkovich firing OK'd after review
He maintains his innocence
By Lisa Cosmillo
Kansas staff writer
KANSAN
Kansan staff writer
Emul Tonkovik, former KU professor of law, said jealousy was at the root of what he called a "witch hunt."
On July 30, by a 3-2 vote, a faculty review committee upheld Chancellor Gene Budig's recommendation that Tonkovich be fired on grounds of sexual harassment and moral turpitude.
In a press conference on Aug. 2, Tonkovich once again insisted he was innocent. He announced his intention to appeal the decision to the Board of Regents and possibly to bring suit against the University.
"The committee's decision endorsed the chancellor's vindictiveness," Tonkovich said.
In August 1991, Tarnum McVey, a former student of Tonkovich, told University administrators that in Summer 1988 Tonkovich pressured her into performing oral sex after a discussion about grades.
After Budig recommended that Tonkovich be dismissed, Tonkovich requested a formal hearing with the tenure and related problems committee.
"This case is about one professor's exploitation of his position as a faculty member, his exploitation of students for his own private benefit," said Rose Marino, associate general counsel who represented the University.
The testimonies of 49 witnesses produced an 8,176 page transcript.
100
Tonkovich
The committee's 250-page report released July 30 said that the committee had reached a unanimous conclusion that a sexual encounter
jonkovich and Tammy McVey did occur.
Tonkovich denied that the sexual encounter occurred.
"I was fired for having the audacity to assert my innocence," Tonkovich said.
He said he thought that the other professors in the law school had relationships with students and that he was being singled out for persecution because of his political conservatism and superior knowledge of the law.
"Professors are in a lot of ways jealous of me," Tonkovich said. "When I taught a course more students, women and men, wanted to take my courses."
Tonkovich is the second tenured professor in the University's 128-year history to be fired. In 1990, Dorothy Willner, former professor of anthropology, was dismissed for willful failure to perform academic duties and behavior that violated professional ethics.
Tonkovich said his future plans were uncertain.
"Maybe I'll be digging ditches," he said. "I don't know."
Tonkovich timeline
July: alleged
incident
between
and
Tonkovich
Tonkovich
August:
Mcvey
files
complaint
Two years of investigation into the accusations against Emi Torkowik came to a close July 30, when the faculty review committee released their recommendation to hold the review.
April 17:
second
complaint
filed by Budig
May 12:
hearings
conclude
August 2: Toniokvich announces his intention to appeal to the Board of Regents
1988 1991 1992 1993
FALL 1993 KANSAN STAFF
KCTRAUER, Editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
September: Budig's fi
complaint; Tonkovich
placed on paid leave
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
AMY CASEY
AMY CASEY Business manager
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
July 30: committee voted 3-2 to uphold Budig's recommended dismissal of Tonikovich
August 27 evidentiary hearings begin
Assistant to the editor .. J.R. Clairbone
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Editorial .. Terilyn McComick
Campus .. Ben Grove
Sports .. Kriati Fogier
Photo .. Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features .. Era Wafle
Graphics .. John Paul Fogel
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
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Service adds $48 to room and board
Cable television installed in residence halls
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Students moving into KU residence hall this week are finding the same cinder block walls and hard floors, but they are discovering a new luxury.
"We've been wanting to do this for several years," Stoner said, "but it was a complicated transaction. It took so many different agencies — student housing, telecommunications, purchasing, facilities planning. It took a lot longer than I would have liked."
Cable television hook-ups were installed this summer in each room of every residence hall except Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, said Kenneth Stoner, director of the Department of Student Housing.
All residents have to do is provide the televisions.
Stoner said that the complicated room layout in Corbin caused delays and that he hoped that GSP-Corbin might have cable next晨
Last year, residents of other halls had access to cable TV only in some of the hall lobbies.
Stoner said that $48 of the residents' yearly room and board rates paid for the basic cable service in their rooms. GSP-Corbin residents pay $48 less than residents of other halls this year.
Stoner said that residents also could pay for premium channels, such as HBO and Cinemax, by ordering them from Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire St.
Some residents are happy to have cable TV in their rooms.
This is a step in the right direction
for housing," said Jamie Cutburth. Hillsboro, Ore., senior and president of the Association of University Residence Halls "Everyone pretty much wanted it, and we got a good deal."
Cuturbth said residents were beginning to expect more services in their residence halls.
"The demographics are changing" Cutburth said. "And it's new generation of students who come from smaller families and are used to some of the luxuries they have at home."
of the theater Anjella Kosanic, Leavenworth sophomore who lives in Oliver Hall, said she had bought a television this summer so she could have full use of the cable service.
"I was planning on buying a TV because of cable, but I wouldn't have otherwise," she said. "I knew I'd be paying for cable, so that's why I bought a TV."
"I figure the rates are going up anyway," she said. "At least I have something to show for it."
Kosanic said she wasn't upset that room and board went up to pay for the cable.
Not all students, however, are happy having cable in each room. Anna Marasco, Omaha senior and resident assistant at Corbin, said she thought that more television in the rooms would lead to less productivity from residents.
"A residence hall is supposed to be an academic community." Marasco said. "In my opinion, nothing is worse for community or academics than cable TV in each room.
"If they're watching the Discovery Channel or PBS, that might be OK, but I think a lot of them will be watching Beavis and Butthead."
Dining commons delicious change for Daisy Hill residents
By David Stewart
Monday's opening of the Lenoir Ekdahl Dining Commons at Lewis Hall offers a new approach in college dining for Daisy Hill residence hall tenants, said Peggy Smith, associate director for dining services for the department of student housing.
Carpeted floors. A selection of more than 20 entrees daily. A panoramic view of the campus. Even soft serve New York cheese-cake frozen yogurt.
Kansan staff writer
Manhattan sophomore Melanie Schreiber lived in Elsworth Hall last year and usually ate at Columll Hall's dining hall.
"I was going into a basement to eat. What can you expect out of a basement?" said Schreiber as she left from brunch Tuesday. "This seems a lot more professional."
A 1988 survey helped KU decide to consolidate the five dining halls in the basements of the Daisy Hill dorms into one central facility. Smith said. Students indicated they wanted more choice in the meals offered and extended serving hours.
food dining hall with seating for 725 diners. The glass-and-brick, semi-circular structure has three levels of tables and stairs, connected by ramps and stairs. The standard serving line that dushed out only two or three entrees daily has been replaced by a "food court" design, similar to those found in shopping malls, said Randy Timm, informational writer and spokesperson for the department of housing.
The result is the $2.5 million, 30,000-square
KU designed the food court with the intent to cut long student lines, with two serving lines and five distinct serving areas including a pizza and pasta bar, a place for instantly prepared stir-fry, and a grill for hamburgers. Tum said.
"Before this place opened, we served four main entree items a day." Tzmun said. "Now we have about 21 every day."
Aaron Summer, Alton Ill. junior, appreciated the increased variety of food.
"This arrangement allows for students to get what they want. If they want pizza every day, they can get it." Timm said. "We give students so many more choices. That's a change a lot of people had asked for."
"Before, if you didn't like the two or three things they were serving, then you were out ofuck," said Sumner, an Ellsworth resident. "But now they give you so many selections. It's hard to go wrong."
Two other important changes that coincided with the new dining commons are longer serving hours and the option of a 15-meal plan instead of the previously required 19-meal plan.
The 19-meal plan costs $808 and the 15-meal plan is $768 per semester. Smith said that one-third of the students who had a meal plan had signed up for the 15-meal plan.
The only complaint Smith had anticipated was from students living in Ellsworth and McColum residence halls because of the distance they would have to walk for their meals.
Sumner said the walk from Ellsworth wasn't so bad. But he said students don't worry about the walking in August.
"Maybe wintertime might change their tune about that," Sumner said.
CANTONA MALL
Daisy Hill residents ponder the culinary offerings of the new Lenoir Ekatha Dining Commons at Lewis Hall. The commons allows students to choose among about 21 main entrees each day.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
5A
Flooding delays apartment construction
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Paul Kotz/ KANSAN
For Doug Compton, building an ark would have been more practical than apartment complexes.
PARKING LOT
Rains delayed construction on the new Chamberlain Court Apartments complex, 18th and Ohio streets, but it should be open for students to move in Friday, contractors said.
Flooding and rain has delayed apartment construction for Compton and other Lawrence developers, and students are staying in hotels while construction crews finish.
Some developers have not leased their apartments at all.
Compton, owner of First Management, worried all summer that excessive rains would delay completion of the renovations at the Oread building, 12th and Oread streets, and construction on the new complex Chamberlain Court, 18th and Ohio streets.
Floods elsewhere delayed the arrival of supplies for the Oread building and Lawrence rains prevented work on Chamberlain Court until the roofs were completed, Compton said. Now crews are trying to make up for
Daniel Fitzhugh, Kansas City, Kan,
senior, knows how hard the construction
crew has worked. This summer
Fitzhugh worked on the crew that
renovated the Oread building and he
plans to move in as soon as his apartment
is finished.
"We've absolutely worked our tails off over there," Compton said. "I've spent more on overtime in the last month than I have all year."
Now crews are trying to make up for lost time.
Units in the Oread building will be
finished by the end of the week instead of by the first part of August, as was originally planned, Compton said. Chamberlain Court should be done Friday, he said.
Compton is paying for residents to say at Westminster Inn until their units are finished.
Chris Noel,
Hutchinson junior,
had planned to move
in on Aug. 9 when he
started a new job.
He had stayed with
friends until Monday,
when he moved to Westminster Inn.
"I was bummed because I had all my
stuff up here and I didn't have anywhere to put it." Noel said. "But I understand their situation and they've been doing what they can to make sure people had a place to stay." Compton isn't the only one who is struggling to finish apartments.
"I don't think there is anything in town that hasn't been slowed up," Shultz said.
Mike Stultz, owner of Fwan Management, wanted to finish his new development, Eagle Apartments, Sixth and Eldridge streets, by Sept. 1. Now he plans on having the units completed by Jan. 1. Stultz said only 25 percent of the 149 units were completed.
Excessive rains held up concrete work for two months, he said.
Lawrence isn't the only college town that has had development slowed by weather. Compton also is building complexes in Manhattan. And he hasn't been as successful in catching up on lost time there.
"I have 180 units that just had their roofs out on." Compton said.
David Severn, manager of Leanna-
Mar and LoriMar, said construction on complexes at Wimbledon and Inverness streets in Lawrence also were slowed by rain. But they completed eight units by Sunday, which was what he expected.
Severn said he didn't lease units until he knew they would be completed. He said he remembered reading about residents who didn't have a place to stay last year because apartments weren't completed.
"We wanted to avoid a situation like that." Severn said.
Former Jayhawk arrested in connection with thefts
Kansan staff report
Former Kansas guard Terry Brown was arrested Friday in connection with three 1992 Lawrenceburg planes.
Brown, 24, was arrested at 11:30 a.m. Friday and posted $3,000 bond at 4:40 p.m., according to Douglas County District Court documents. He was charged with one count of burglary, two counts of felony theft and three counts of misdemeanor theft, the records said.
The most severe charge against Brown is a Class D felony, which carries a sentence of up to 10 years if he is convicted.
The court documents connected Brown to one burglary in August 1992 and two in December 1992. Among the items reported stolen were VCRs, a television, leather coats and jewelry.
Brown's first appearance in district court has been set for Aug 25.
CAMPUS in brief
Street lamps installed
Kansan staff report
The University campus will be brighter this fall after the installation of 105 halogen street lights.
"We have high hopes that they'll be all ready by the end of the week." Porter said.
Facilities operations is replacing the original 14-foot light poles with 20-foot poles for the walkways and 30-foot poles for the street, said Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations. He expected the lighting installation, the second phase of the campus-wide lighting improvement project, to be completed before Monday.
The bulbs will be 10 times brighter than the older bulbs and will use one-fifth the voltage.
The image provided is too blurry and pixelated to accurately recognize any text or details. It appears to be a simple illustration of buildings, but no specific content can be determined from this visual representation.
Student Senate approved financing the project with a temporary $2 student fee, which is being charged from Fall 1992 until Spring 1997, said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs and head of the campus lighting advisory committee. Ambler said the committee had made recommendations for areas on campus that needed more lighting.
Porter said.
"With the help of John Mullens of the campus police, we identified high crime areas where lighting will help increase safety," Ambler said.
Ambler said the walkways from Robinson Gymnasium to Watkins Health Center and the student parking lot were some areas that had new lights.
"This should really help those students parking there late at night, especially commuting students," Ambler said.
STUDENT WORK Fall Semester Openings $9.30 Call 842-8035 for info!
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6A
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
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UNION FEST '93
AT THE KANSAS UNION
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7A
Bail denied in Jordan case
The Associated Press
LUMBERTON, N.C. — Two teens accused of murdering Michael Jordan's father had no idea who they had shot until they rummaged through his belongings and found, among other items, his son's NBA championship ring, said Hubert Stone, Robeson County sheriff.
"They couldn't believe it happened," Stone said.
Daniel Andre Green, 18, of Lumberton and Larry Martin Demeny, 18, of nearby Rowland, N.C., were ordered held without bail Monday.
"I didn't do it," Green said as sheriff's deputies led him in shackles through the courthouse.
Demery also denied involvement. He wept as the judge warned that the case potentially could include the death penalty.
Investigators traced the crime to the
suspects using records from James Jordan's car phone.
The defendants also showed off the championship ring, which Michael Jordan had given his father, after the slaying, investigators said.
"We'll have witnesses showing they were wearing the ring," Stone said.
The ring was on James Jordan's finger when he was shot, NBC reported. Stone said the ring was buried in a plastic bag, and Green helped detectives recover it. Investigators are still looking for Jordan's watch and the murder weapon.
Stone said Jordan was asleep in his car July 23 near Lumberton, about 80 miles south of Raleigh, when two men approached to rob him.
"He started to wake up and the gunman got scared," Stone said. "He was shot inside the car."
The sheriff would not say which
Neighbors said the two teen-agers went joy-riding through their mobile-home community in Jordan's Lexus 400 luxury car in the days following the slaving.
man allegedly pulled the trigger
Janice Graham, who lives across the street from Green and his mother and sister, said Green and a carload of friends drove the car so hard they burned rubber from the tires. At night, they allegedly hid the car in the woods. The car was found stripped Aug. 5.
Jordan was shot in the chest with a 38-caliber pistol and his body was dumped in a creek near McColl, S.C., where it was discovered Aug. 3. The body was identified using dental records Aug. 13.
Four men accused of vandalizing the car pleaded innocent Monday.
ABC links Sudanese to bombing
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — At a taped conversation between the alleged ringleader of a plot to bomb the United Nations and a federal informant implicates two Sudanese diplomats as accomplices, ABC reported.
The two men were intelligence officers for the Sudanese government and were assigned to the Islamic nation's U.N. mission in New York, ABC said Monday, citing U.S. intelligence sources.
It identified the two diplomats as Siraj Yousif, the counselor to the Sudanese Mission, and Ahmed Mohamed, the third secretary.
According to ABC, the diplomats were to help get the suspects into a U.N. garage under the building by supplying them with diplomatic plates. When the task was complete, the mission would help them escape.
ABC said there was no evidence that Sudan's U.N.
ambassador. Ahmed Suliman, knew of the plot.
a telephone interview from his New York home, Yousif told The Associated Press that "everything mentioned by him was true."
AIDS. We now acknowledge that "Ahmed Mohamed and I are not intelligence officers." Youfis said. He said he had never been questioned about the case by U.S. authorities.
In Washington, FBI spokesman John Collingwood had no comment on the report. The State Department also would not comment.
Five Sudanese men were among 11 suspects charged with conspiring to bomb the United Nations, two New York commuter tunnels and other sites. The alleged plot was uncovered in June with the help of an informant, Emad Salem.
U. N. security sources have said in the past that investigators were looking into the involvement of employees of the Sudanese mission.
Kevorkian given charge in suicide
'Dr. Death' vows to test Michigan law
The Associated Press
DETROIT — A reluctant prosecutor gave Dr. Jack Kevorkian what the retired pathologist has been looking for yesterday — a felony charge that will test Michigan's new law banning assisted suicide.
A warrant was issued charging Kevorkian with assisting in the
PETER JOHN BARRINGTON
death of Thomas Hyde, 30, of Novi. Hyde, suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, died Aug. 4 after inhaling carcinoma
Jack Kevorkian
ide in Kevorkian's van on Belle Isle in the Detroit River.
Kevorkian then challenged prosecutors to make him the first person charged under the six-month law, saying he intended to ignore it because he considered it immoral.
though he disagreed with it and it may be overturned.
Kevorkian was arraigned yesterday before a magistrate, who ordered him freed on $100,000 bond and scheduled a preliminary examination for Aug. 27.
Wayne County Prosecutor John O'Hair said he could not let Kevorkian disregard the law, even
At a news conference later, Kevorkian said he would continue to help "suffering patients."
"This is not a matter of law, governors, legislators, politicians, ethicists, religionists, theologians, philosophers. It's a medical matter," Kevinkian said. "We need no laws, no regulations, no initiatives in any state."
He urged the medical establishment to push for an end to "all ill-advised laws" and regulate the practice like other medical procedures, such as heart transplants.
Kevorkian, 65, faces up to four years in prison if convicted, but O'Hair said he would not ask for iail time.
At a news conference announcing the charges, O'Fair said assisted suicide should be legalized. But he said the way Hyde killed himself was improper.
"When you think of Thomas Hyde on Belle Isle with essentially a stranger, in Kevorkian's rusty, broken-down van, inhaling carbon monoxide as a means of ending his life, it seems to me that this is exactly the kind of thing we want to avoid." O'Hair said.
"The violation of the law is clear. There should be a conviction."
Pilot calls Tailhook frightening
The Associated Press
Navy Lt. Paula Coughlin said her ordeal was "very, very frightening."
QUANTICO, Va. — The officer who blew the whistle on the 1991 Tailhook sex scandal testified yesterday for the first time, saying a captain groped inside her bra while someone else tried to remove her undemands.
"I had the feeling things were going very badly for me," she said at a preliminary hearing for Capt. Gregory Bonam.
Bonam, a jet pilot assigned to the Marine Corps Combat Development Command at Quantico, is charged with assault and conduct unbecoming an officer. He could be court-martialled and imprisoned five years if convicted.
He testified that he did not assault Coughlin and would have tried to protect her had he witnessed such an attack.
"I would have at least done something to prevent the attack." he said
Coughlin, a helicopter pilot, was an aide to Rear Adm. Jack Snyder, commanding officer of the Patuxent River Naval Air Station in Maryland.
According to a Pentagon report, 83 women said they were sexually assaulted during the Tailhook convention at a Las Vegas hotel. Many said they were forced to run a gantlet of groping aviators. Coughlin said that Bonam participated in the gantlet.
He was relieved of his command after falling to take quick action on her complaints after the convention.
The WESTERN MART
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Optical Dispensary VISIONS 841-7421
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SCHWINN CYCLING AND FITNESS
LOOKING: for broke college types living on ramen noodles & beans. Tired of hoofing it. Want to cruise campus on your own wheels with all the essential gear. Contact Cycle Works 842-6363.
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CYCLE WORKS CYCLING AND FITNESS
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842-6363
HOURS:
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Thurs 'til 8:00
Sun Noon - 4.00
kifi's
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8A
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
Mon-Sat 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
PAWNBROKERS
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Come visit Lawrence's only Cafe/Bookstore.
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Fine coffees, pastries, soups, gourmet twice baked potatoes and fruit & pasta salads, deli style counter service in a free form atmosphere.
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Balkan peace talks continue
U.N. seeks to seize control in Sarajevo
The Associated Press
GENEVA — Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic held talks yesterday with his Bosnian Serb foe on the future of eastern Muslim enclaves designated as safe havens by the United Nations.
At the same time, a three-man committee of Muslim, Serb and Croat representatives began the long task of fleshing out details of a preliminary agreement to demilitarize Sarajevo and place it under U.N. supervision.
The three warring factions agreed in principle late Monday for the Bosnian capital to come under interim U.N. administration pending a final settlement on its future.
Izetbegovic and his Bosnian-Serbial Radovan Karadzic met Monday to discuss the future of Muslim-populated enclaves like Gorzela and Srebrenica, which are surrounded by Serbs in eastern Bosnia. Like Sarajevo, they have been designated as safe havens by the U.N. Security Council.
Bosnian-Croat leader Mate Boban arrived for broader talks on the borders of the three ethnic republics envisaged in a peace plan. The three sides have agreed to the creation of a confederation of three ethnic units with only weak powers for a central government.
The toughest parts of the peace package remain to be thrashed out. The preliminary agreement on Sarajevo would cover a large area around the capital, including hills and suburbs from which Serbs have shelled the city for months. If the agreement is carried through, it would lift the siege off Sarajevo. All weapons, apart from those held by U.N. forces, would be withdrawn.
International mediators Lord Owen and Thorvald Stoltenberg this month indicated Sarajevo would have to come under interm UN. protection so that deep differences over the capital would not delay the signing of an overall peace package. The mediators said the temporary arrangement would likely last at least one or two years.
War broke out in the former Yugoslavia in April 1992 after Muslims and Croats voted to secede from Serb-dominated Yugoslavia. Up to 200,000 people are considered dead or missing victims of this war.
Husseini calls for realistic outlook
The Associated Press
RAMALLAH, Occupied West Bank - Faisal Hussein, leader of the Palestinian team at the Middle East peace talks, argued with unusual censure that now is not the time to get back all the land of Palestine.
The heart of his message to a group of Palestinians was that they have to face facts about Israeli control of Israel proper and focus their energies on liberating the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
"We have to achieve a place for ourselves in this world," Hussein told a town-hall style meeting Monday night. "I cannot say that we can have our place on all the land we want, the entirety of Palestine."
It was a tough sell.
"We should understand the reality around us," he said. "We should agree that our battle now is to end the occupation."
port at a gathering of about 500 Palestinian intellectuals, community leaders and local residents.
Here was, however, a thunderous burst of applause for a man who asked how he could trust the Palestine Liberation Organization in view of its ouster by Israel from Lebanon and its record of failures elsewhere. He also asked how he could have faith in Palestinian negotiators who were fighting among themselves.
About the only agreement was on the state of disarray that exists among the 1.8 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, occupied by Israel since June 1967.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin expressed frustration at the confusion in the Palestinian camp during the recent visit of U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher. He said negotiations were not making progress because Palestinians were "unstable and splintered."
The lack of a common strategy in the peace negotiations is at the heart of the leadership crisis.
The call for compromise and practicality won little sup-
Haitian police halt rally for ousted leader
The Associated Press
PETIONVILLE, Haiti — Police broke up an attempt yesterday to display banners and photos of ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Fifteen rifle-bearing police chase demonstrators, seized leaflets and confiscated a Reuters reporters' notes.
A U.N.-mediated agreement this summer calls for army ruler Gen. Raoul Cedras to resign and for the exiled president to return by Oct. 30.
They handed out leaflets carrying Aristide's picture with the words: "He's coming back, whether you want him to or not!" The leaflets said public demonstrations were legal under the constitution.
About 20 activists displayed a banner across a road in this suburb of the capital Port-au-Prince, saying: "An End to Army-Special Agency-Rural Sheriff-Gangster Repression. This Has to Stop."
Pro-Aristide rallies have been stifled since 1991 when the military overthrew Aristide, Haiti's first democratically elected president. Haitians who carry his photographs have been detained or beaten.
International observers monitoring human rights here witnessed the incident. At least three people were detained and driven away, including the Roman Catholic Rev. Yvan Massac, a pro-aristide activist.
a pro-Aristide politician, Wesner Emanuel, said parliament's expected confirmation of businessman Robert Malav as Aristide's prime minister was not threatened by yesterday's events.
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JOHNNY'S EXPRESS
Last year in Lawrence there were 800 D.W.I.'s! Don't worry about it by taking the free J.T. Express Bus. Weds. through Sat. 9:00 pm to 2:00 am the bus will be making the rounds.
Specials
9:00 & 10:00 Phi Cap house
9:10 & 10:10 SAE lot
9:20 & 10:20 Kappa Sig lot
9:25 & 10:25 Delt lot
9:30 & 10:30 Sigma Chi house
9:35 & 10:35 Sig Ep house
9:45 & 10:45 J.T.
11:00 10th & Mass.
12:00 Downtown
10th & Mass.
9th & Mass.
8th & New Hampshire
Busses leave J.T.
12:30 1:30 2:00
JOHNNY'S
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SUN. 2.50 Cheese burger, fries and beverage.
MON. 3.00 pitchers
TUES. 3.00 pitchers
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THURS. 1.25 bottles 1.25 PITCHERS at the up & under FRI. shot special
SAT. shot special
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
9A
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Just bring in your clothing. Our buyers decide what will sell for us, and for how much. Out of our selling price, we give 40% in cash or 60% in trade
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Call 832-3330 by September 12th Ask for Patricia or Scott
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Crystle's bed & breakfast in historic old Concordia.
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Aperfect romantic get away, a place to relax; or for any special occasion.
508 W. 7th St 234-2192
Concordia Ks 66901
Concordia, Ks. 66901
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Call 843-8111
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and gifts for every occasion!
- Hand Crafts
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Kansas City Hotel
101 Massachusetts Stem
Louisiana, Kansas
841-7587
• Gift certificates
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10A
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HONOLULU
Hurricane causes anxiety but spares Hawaiian Islands
Hurricane Fernanda threw a scare into Hawaii residents before turning away from the island chain.
Forecasters canceled a hurricane watch for the islands Monday but warned that the storm still could change direction and threaten Hawaii. Civil Defense officials warned of the rough surf, which destroyed one boat and damaged another in Hilo Harbor and damaged a dozen homes on the Puna coast.
"We are all very relieved," said Harry Kim, Hawaii County civil defense administrator. "We were scared. Everyone was scared on what could have hammed."
At 5 p.m. Monday, Hawaiian time, the storm was 310 miles east-northeast of Hilo, on the southernmost island of Hawaii. It was moving northwest at 5 mph with sustained winds of 90 mph and gusts of up to 115 mph.
Forecaster Hans Hablutzel said the storm was expected to continue weakening and move away from the islands.
Before the hurricane watch was canceled, about 200 people on Hawaii Island fled their homes, and residents of all islands stocked up on emergency supplies.
On Oahu Island, which has most of the state's residents and visitors, some roads on the coast were overrun by high waves but remained open. One beach was closed because of high surf.
Monday, 40 hikers were evacuated from Wailua Valley on Molokai Island. The valley is accessible only by ocean or a difficult trail that would be impassable during a storm.
WASHINGTON
U.S. wants search of China ship
The Clinton administration is trying to compromise with China on inspecting a ship thought to be carrying chemical weapons supplies for Iran.
A senior U.S. official said Monday that the United States was talking to the Chinese about having a neutral third party board the ship, which moved out of Iranian waters Friday to an area off Oman in the Persian Gulf.
China has denied it is shipping chemical weapons material to Iran in violation of an international agreement and has accused the United States of obstructing its commerce with nations in the region.
Establishing what is aboard has been an issue for weeks, but the United States has been unable to arrange for the shin to dock for inspection.
"We are continuing to work with China to resolve the issue, and hopefully we'll do so shortly," said Michael McCurry, the State Department spokesperson.
A
THE NEWS in brief
NAIROBI, Kenya
Bombing drives out Sudanese
Government bombing of rebel-controlled areas in southern Sudan has created an exodus of 100,000 people, many fleeing to nearby Uganda and Zaire, a church group said.
The New Sudan Council of Churches said the government began bombing July 26 and escalated it in early August. It forced more than 30,000 people to flee to Uganda. An additional 70,000 sought refuge in Zaire or elsewhere in southern Sudan.
Zaire and Ugana border Sudan on the south.
The council, composed of churches in Sudan's rebel-controlled south, urged the United Nations to stop the bombing, to bring about a cease-fire and to set up safe havens and no-fly zones so that relief can be delivered.
The statement was written Aug. 9 and delivered to news agencies Monday,
The Sudan People's Liberation Army took up arms against Sudan's Muslim-dominated government in 1983 seeking greater autonomy and economic development for the predominantly Christian and animist south.
But the rebel group has fractured in the last two years and much of the recent fighting has been among the insurgents.
The 10-year war and famines caused by it have killed up to 1 million people.
List for federal flood aid grows
TOPEKA
Federal officials added Harvey, Pawnee, Rice and Shawnee counties Tuesday to the list of those in Kansas eligible for federal aid to repair public facilities damaged by recent flooding.
Residents in those four counties also are eligible for disaster relief as well, the Federal Emergency Management Agency announced. The addition of those counties to the list of disaster areas brings to 46 the number of counties so designated.
Previously, six townships in Shawnee County had been designated, but not the city of Topeka.
FEMA officials estimated they have received more than 6,200 applications for aid for individuals and their families. The agency has distributed more than $2.4 million in housing funds and general aid to individuals. It said the Small Business Administration has approved more than $3 million in loans to homeowners and businesses.
In 39 counties, aid is available for individuals and to repair public roads, bridges, buildings and utilities.
They are, Atchison, Brown, Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Doniphan, Douglas, Edwards, Ellis, Elsworth, Geary, Harvey, Jackson, Jewell, Lane, Leavenworth, Lincoln, Lyon, Marion, Marshall, McPherson, Nemaha, Ness, Osborne, Ottawa, Pawnee,
Pottawatomie, Republic, Rice, Riley, Rooks, Rush,
Russell, Saline, Shawnee, Stafford, Wabaunsee,
Washington and Wyandotte.
Seven more counties have residents eligible for aid, but they are not eligible for money to repair public facilities. They are Jefferson, Johnson, Morris, Osage, Reno, Sedgwick and Sumner.
TOPEKA
Charges in Schmidt murder refiled
Attorney General Bob Stephan announced that charges against Donald Ray Gideon in the death of Stephanie Schmidt were refiled late Monday in Cherokee County, because that was where the crimes occurred.
Gideon was previously charged in Crawford County with premeditated first-degree murder, felony murder, aggravated kidnapping, rape and aggravated criminal sodomy in the July 1 slaying of the Pittsburg State University student.
Gideon turned himself in to authorities in Florida and led them to Schmidt's body in Cherokee County.
He was being transferred to the Cherokee County iaI. Stenhan said.
If Gideon is found not guilty of first-degree murder, he could still be convicted of felony murder, which is causing death in the commission of a felony, and face a lifetime prison term under Kansas' new sentencing guidelines.
Gideon and Schmidt were co-workers at a Pittsburg restaurant. She disappeared after leaving a Pittsburg club with Gideon, who officials say offered her a ride home.
Report: State housing needs met
TOPEKA
The present market system is responding to housing needs in the state, an El Dorado banker told the Governor's Commission on Housing and Homelessness Tuesday.
Joseph Eaton of the Walnut Valley Bank in El Dorado said there were no "reports of measurable deficiencies in meeting the housing needs throughout the state."
The private sector, working with existing charitable and governmental programs, appeared to be satisfying the current housing needs in the state, he said.
Eaton said the Legislature needed to take steps to reduce paperwork for lenders whenever possible. Complicated regulations governing home loans made it difficult for smaller banks to provide them.
The commission is holding hearings on state housing laws and programs, focusing on programs to help low-income families buy their own homes.
From Associated Press wire reports.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
11A
PASCAL MICHAEL CUNNINGHAM
Paul Knotz / KANSAN
Grant Goodman, retired KU professor of history, recently showed a historical document to the Japanese press that confirmed that the Japanese government had sponsored prostitution houses for its soldiers in World War II.
Professor reveals evidence proving WWII prostitution
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
For nearly 50 years, retired KU history professor Grant Goodman knew the truth. But he didn't know that the truth would shock the world.
"I was surprised that there was any doubt that the Japanese government-sponsored houses of prostitution had existed, since I was involved in translating materials which absolutely 100 percent substantiated that they did exist." Goodman said.
Earlier this month, the Japanese government begrudgingly acknowledged its direct involvement in the military brothels and forced prostitution in occupied territories during World War II. A military intelligence report, which Goodman possessed, helped bring the truth into the world's consciousness.
Goodman acquired the damaging report while translating captured documents for the U.S. Army in the
Philippines in 1945. Nearly five decades later, in 1992, Goodman read about a Japanese professor struggling to prove the government's involvement in forced military prostitution. He then decided to share his information with the Japanese press. Goodman, who lived in Japan during the first year of U.S. occupation and has since visited the country about 30 times, said the Japanese briefly did acknowledge their wrongdoings following the war.
take a nooning Japanese economy and renewed national pride erased many memories, he said.
"This is a half a century later, two and a half generations later, and obviously people of younger age in Japan and elsewhere in the world seemingly didn't know about this," he said. Carl Lande, professor of political science and East Asian studies, said the pride of the government and the low status and shame of the Asian women
— about half of them Japanese — were other forces that kept the matter suppressed.
Lande also said that after the occupation of Japan, the Japanese Ministry of Education busily began rewriting history, erasing blenishes such as the government's foray in forced military prostitution.
Lande said the Japanese government would not have confessed without Goodman's document.
"They do have a respect, perhaps a grudging respect, for outside scholars," he said. "I think the fact that he was an American and that he had worked there gave it a kind of credence."
Goodman said his role was coincidental.
"It's interesting that it's attracted all of this attention in both Japan and the United States," he said. "I hope it contributes."
New factory outlet center to open in North Lawrence
By Liz Klinger
A group of about 50 people tried to keep their cool yesterday at a groundbreaking ceremony for Lawrence's newest factory outlet mall at the intersection of Interstate 70 and Highway 59.
Kansan staff writer
Wearing a suit despite the 90 degree weather, Steven Tanger, vice president of Tanger Factory Outlet Centers Inc., said he hoped that the future Tanger Factory Outlet Center would create an attractive gateway to Lawrence, offer customers upscale merchandise at a reduced price and provide the community with approximately 300 new jobs.
The 90,000 square-foot outlet mall will feature 23 designer and manufacturer stores. Tanger said the mall will open with a few stores by Thanksgiving and will probably be completely filled by mid-February.
Mayor John Nabandian said the mall would offer a larger variety of retail products in Lawrence and open North Second Street to some investment opportunities and redevelopment that will add to city property and sales tax funds.
"We hope that we will bring North Lawrence and Lawrence together as one megalopolis," said Tanger president Stanley Tanger.
SIR JAMES HUNTLEY
Both Steven and Stanley Tanger said they hoped that their mall, one of 17 in 17 different states, would bring in customers that would visit other shopping areas in Lawrence such as those downtown and at the Riverfront Plaza.
"We feel people will visit both our property and the ones downtown," said Steven Tanger. "The downtown merchants have become allies and friends of ours."
In addition to building in Lawrence, Tanger said his 12-year-old company wanted to be considered a part of the community. At the ceremony he presented Sherri Cannon, executive director of the Ballard Community Center, with a check for $250. Cannon said the social service agency will use the money to restock the food shelves deplenished by flood victims.
Wint Winter, left, former state legislator, gives KUT t-shirts to Steven, center, and Stanley Tanger. The Tanger family is building a factory outlet mail south of Interstate 70 in North Lawrence.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kelvin Heck of Stephens Realtors,2701 West Sixth Street, who helped them select the site, said the location chosen for the mail was because it was easy to spot for people coming off of I-70.
Catholic priest draws ire for advertisement
The Associated Press
MOBILE, Ala. — A Roman Catholic priest drew an ultimatum from church officials Tuesday for trying to run a newspaper ad that advocates killing doctors who do abortions: recant or resign.
Archbishop Oscar H. Lipscomb issued a statement saying he had given the Rev. David Trosch "the alternative of publicly abiding by my judgment on this erroneous teaching or relinquishing his public position in the church."
He added that Trosch indicated he would recant.
In an interview published Sunday in the Register, Trosch said he designed the ad, which shows a man pointing a gun at a doctor who is holding a knife over a pregnant woman.
Trosch, who tried unsuccessfully to place the ad in *The Mobile Register*, did not return phone messages seekwhere he performed abortions, Trosch said his anti-abortion feelings were intensified by the shooting. An abortion foe, Michael Griffin, has been charged with Gunn's slaying.
Two words accompany the picture:
"Justifiable homicide."
"If 100 doctors need to die to save over 1 million babies a year, I see it as a fair trade," he said.
Trosch, 57, is pastor of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church at Magnolia Springs and founder of Life Enterprises Unlimited, which is not connected to the church.
Magnolia Springs is about 30 miles from Pensacola, Fla., where Dr. David Gunn, an Alabama physician, was shot to death in March outside a clinic
The archbishop returning from the pope's International Youth Day, denounced Trosch's position.
"If his comments concerning abortionists, as repeated in print and television are correct, he is in serious error as a teacher of Catholic moral theology," the archbishop said.
"While recognizing the great evil of abortion and the destruction of innocent human life as a result of it, the Catholic Church cannot espouse the teaching that abortions are to be killed in defense of human life," Lipscomb said.
CHIEF: He's a quiet leader but decisive
years
Continued from Page 1A.
"He has maintained his commitment to that organization, not only for the value he saw for his own three sons, but I think he really believes it's an organization that's good for young people," Ambler said. "And he's been willing to make a commitment of his own time and energy for it."
Professionally, Ambler said he appreciated Shulenburger's commitment to quality education.
It was a difficult transition from faculty to administration, Shulenburger said.
"David's a true academician," Ambler said. "Somebody who really believes in academic life and subscribes to the values of an academic institution. I think that's extremely important for the person who is going to be your chief academic officer."
Shulenburger's loyalties are with the academic side of the University.
"If the gathering of funds weren't a constraint, we could certainly get by with a much smaller administration than there is," he said. "But the reality is that people don't just give you money and say 'go do good with it.'"
Lessig said he had known Shulen burger for almost 20 years. They have been professional colleagues and fell low Bov Scout leaders.
Shulenburger, who began teaching at KU in 1974, has a reputation among his students and colleagues for his high standards and academic abilities.
"Fairness is a strong hallmark of Dave," said Parker Lessig, Pinet distinguished teaching professor of business administration.
As a former faculty member, Shulenburger understands the needs of the faculty, said Del Brinkman, former vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"I've always been impressed with his judgment, integrity and leadership ability." Lessig said. "He was an outstanding choice for this position."
Brinkman put Shulenburger in charge of undergraduate programs when he first entered the Office of Academic Affairs as associate vice chancellor.
"I think you're an advocate for the faculty," Brinkman said. "If you lose sight of that, you become a bureaucrat."
the czar of program review," Brinkman said. "He took to that naturally. He has a value system which says that high quality undergraduate instruction is important."
Program review was a process in which the Board of Regents instructed the University to review its programs and suggest ways in which they could run more efficiently.
"We used to jokingly call him the
cair of undergraduate programs, then
"I think what the office always faces is the serious issue of being able to stretch the budget to cover all the things that need to be done and to make decisions along the way that will allow the budget to be used in such a way that maximum productivity is developed," Brinkman said.
Brinkman said that intellectually and in terms of experience, Shulenburger was the perfect person for the job because he can be decisive on difficult as well as easy tasks.
"I have a super aversion to righteousness in people." Shulenburger said. "I define righteousness as always having the right answer without the discomfort of thought and the discomfort of having to confront people with different views.
"At the same time, I really hate accomplishing nothing. Those are a bit of opposites. People who are righteous, they at least know where they're going. There's direction about them. They get things done. So you take those two: an aversion for righteousness and the desire to get things accomplished, then my method of operation is to really find out what people think about an idea, a course of action, to research it. But once I've done that, I do make up my mind, and we go at that point. We get 'things done."
Shulenburger's background in labor relations prepared him for working with the many facets of the University community. Brinkman said.
"What's important about a university like this one is balance," Shulenbur said.
burger begins his day with National Public Radio, "I've got lots of rituals," he said. "One is reading the New York Times; I read it daily. It's here every morning when I come in."
He said he thought that undergraduate studies, graduate studies and research were of equal importance.
Brinkman said that as vice chancellor, Shulenburger probably was working 60 to 80 hours each week.
"There's a lot that needs to be done," he said. "But, at the same time, there comes a point at which you don't have anything left to give, if you give it all, so it's important to stay recharged."
To keep abreast of the world, Shulenburger reads newspapers avidly.
But Shulenburger said he was not a workaholic.
"I read the Kansas City paper before I come up to the office, the Times, the Journal World and I subscribe to the Wall Street Journal, so I get the range," he said. "And I feel like given the things I'm involved in I need the kind of information that I'm getting and the entertainment."
Shulenburger said he tried not to be too busy for his three sons: Luke, 13, Neal, 17, and Adam, 19.
He enjoys reading a great deal of nonfiction, including what he called works on the "soft side of science" and books about exploring the West. His favorite fiction writer, at present, is "Lonesome Dove" author, Larry McMurty.
"I try not to take too much of the work home," Shulenburger said. "We discuss some things, because the guys are of an age where they ask, and they wish to know when they read things that are going on, my perspective, so I take a little bit of work home. But I would rather come back to the office. I just don't like to really mix the two that much."
As assistant scoutmaster for his sons' Boy Scout troop. Shulenburger spends time camping and hiking.
"It's fun to work with kids, and at my age, it's fun to be a kid and enjoy things." Shulenburger said.
"I like the outdoors," Shulenburger said. "I can't be outdoors all of the time. But I can be in my reading."
His interest in the West and involvement with the outdoors and the Boy Scouts may come from being raised on a farm, Shulenburger said.
"I have never had a life plan. And I still don't. And I don't intend to create one," he said. "It interferees with enjoy- ing the moment."
Vice chancellor for academic affairs is usually a midlife, short-term appointment, Brinkman said. Shudenburger could go on to a presidency or back into teaching, he said.
What next?
Shulenburger's view, true to the man, is pragmatic.
"I intend to enjoy the job as much as is possible. When I qut doing the job I intend to do something interesting," he said.
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12A
FLOOD OF'93
Wednesdav. August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FLOOD:
Costs rising
Gcontinued from Page 1A.
Despite being on high ground, the University of Kansas did not escape flood damage. A storm on July 3 dumped 2.4 inches of rain in one hour, backing up drains on campus and filling the ticket office in Murphy Hall with almost four inches of water. Lightning struck the northern edge of the roof of Strong Hall, causing $3,000 of cosmetic damage.
Water also leaked into the weight room at Parrott Athletic Center and the basement of Stauffer Flint Hall.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said the same storm damaged 17 trees valued at $12,000.
Richardson said the flooding could not have been avoided. KU's drainage system dumps excess water into a conduit underneath Maushin Drive, which joins the city's drainage system at 19th Street and eventually empties into the Wakaraura River. But because the rain fell so quickly, the conduit backed up and the water went into the buildings instead.
He said work under Naismith Drive was being done to alleviate the problem but that might not stop the drains from backing up again.
Jim McCanley, a geologist with the Kansas Geological Survey, said flood damage to KU might not be immediately noticeable. Heavy rainfall on Mount Oread could hasten erosion and weaken the sides of the hill.
McCauley said the process could take decades before it caused any significant damage.
"It's sometimes called 'hillside creep,' he said. "It sounds more like somebody's blind date than a geological process, but it's there."
Doug Horso / KANSAS
Heavy rains in July flooded parts of North Lawrence including this intersection at Second and Locust streets near Johnny's Tavern, Rains delayed construction on pipes under the street at the intersection, and traffic was detoured.
Blood waters entice crawly critters
By Liz Klinger
The Bismarck Inn. 1100 N. Third St.
bass musical, guests these days.
Unfortunately, they're not the paying kind.
Since the summer flood, mosquitoes, spiders, catfish, carp, gophers and toads have descended on the hotel — just one place in Lawrence that noticed a change in wildlife behavior this summer.
The creatures appeared at the Bismarck in droves after the flood caused a creek, which once flowed behind the hotel, to swell up to the hotel parking lot.
General manager Mike Martin's
menagerie appeared in mid-May when Canadian geese, spotting the excess water around the Bismarck, began using it as a landing pad. Fish, then within casting distance of the hotel, also soon became an attraction for visitors. A few of the guests went fishing.
'We were just like a little island,' Martin said.
He halfheartedly said his staff was considering naddle boat rentals.
Gophers also moved closer to the Bismarck because of the flood. Several times a week, Martin had to pat down the gophers' mounds before he mowed the hotel lawn. The gophers retaliated almost immediately, forcing the dirt back above ground.
But the gopher hole problems were small compared with the masses of mosquitoes, spiders and toads that surrounded the hotel.
A few of the arthropods and amphibians got inside the hotel. Martin said one guest at the Bismark had been startled when she found one wart-covered toad guarding the exit door.
Stanford Loeb, adjunct professor of systematics and ecology, said that the increased standing water provided a larger breeding area for the waterborne animals.
Unfortunately for Martin, Loeb said the critters were here to stay, at least for a while.
Student victims of flood find aid
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
For KU students whose homes or businesses have been damaged by the floods, academic and financial assistance is only a phone call away.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the student assistance center, said several students had already called and requested academic help, and she expects more calls throughout the week.
"Most often, we will handle cases like students who are unable to attend class or are going to be late to school," she said. "We then analyze their schedule and contact professors to let them know about the circumstances."
Some students will come to school and be so distracted by the situation at home that they will leave KU,something the office is trying to prevent, she said.
Students who need financial assistance can contact either the comproiler's office or the Office of Student Financial Aid.
Kathe Shinham, comptroller, said that she and her staff would work individually with students in need.
Shinham said one way to assist those students would be to defer their tuition payments to Nov. 1, the date by which university comprollers must collect fall tuition fees. Students who need this assistance should contact the office as soon as possible.
The office of student financial aid is
How you can help
To volunteer to help flood victims: Roger Hill Volunteer Center - 865-5030
To donate clothing:
The Salvation Army Thrift Store
749-4208
To donate money:
American Red Cross-843-3550
To donate food:
The Salvation Army Church - 843-
4188
Source: Douglas County emergency preparedness KANSAN
also prepared to assist flood victims in need of more tuition dollars, said Diane Del Buono, director of the office of financial aid.
"They should bring in documentation describing the extent of the damage — repair bills, damage reports, a letter from the insurer telling what they did or didn't cover," she said. "From that, we can assess how that will affect their need analysis form."
That form, she said, dictates what kind and how much financial aid a student can have.
Del Buono said the KU Endowment Loan was also available at the office to those who already received the maximum amount of federal financial aid. It is a quick source of money, she said. To qualify, a student must have attended KU for at least one semester, have a 2.0 grade point average and be enrolled in at least six hours.
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THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE The University of Kansas 1993-94: Our 70th Season
Assassins by John Weidman and Stephen Sondheim October 15-17 & 21-23
The Boys Next Door by Tom Griffin November 12-14 & 18-20
John Steinbeck's
adapted by Frank Galati March 4-6 & 10-12
The Grapes of Wrath
The Heidi Chronicles
by Wendy Wasserstein April 15-17 & 21-23
All performances are in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Unless noted, performances are at 8:00 p.m.
*2:30 p.m. matinee
Don't miss out on live theatre at its best.
Buy a season ticket today! Show your support of The University Theatre. Save time and money and be assured of having the best seat when the curtain goes up. For a really good time, call 864-3982.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
13A
Rain puts pause in road repairs
Weather delays July construction
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff write
This summer, Mother Nature once again ripped up Lawrence roads.
Rain and flooding not only caused street damage, the weather also delayed July road construction projects until August. Construction crews are now working around increased traffic as KU students return to Lawrence.
The hole at the intersection of North Second and Locust streets has drawn the most attention. A sewer and storm pipe caused the hole when it broke and washed away the soil under the street in front of Johnny's Tavern.
Northbound North Second Street traffic is now re-routed along Elm. Third and Locust streets. That means Doug Hassig, co-owner of Johnny's
Tavern, is losing business.
"It really hurt us," Hassig said. "I'm not very happy, but there's not much I can do about it."
Williams said other, smaller potholes are making extra work for crews.
"The amount of rain actually peeled up the asphalt from the pavement," Williams said. "We may not get all the work done this season."
Additional turn lanes also are being installed at the intersection of Iowa and 21st streets. Construction began Aug. 2 and will end about Nov. 1, said Terese Gorman, city engineer.
Routine repaving projects also were delayed by rain, Gorman said. Kentucky Street between 11th and 14th streets will be closed for repaving until possibly Saturday.
"We've tried very hard to get things around the University and downtown done before the students arrived," Gorman said.
Doug Riat, construction administrator for Design Construction Manage-
ment, said the Naismith storm sewer project originally was scheduled to begin in early July, but because of a rain delay, the project did not begin until two weeks ago.
The project connects existing storm sewers on campus to the Naismith storm sewer, Riat said.
"There was no problem," Riat said. "It was simply an improvement for the storm water system here on campus."
Construction on the project now blocks part of the northbound lane of Naismith drive in front of Allen Field House. Riat said the street should be open by Aug. 30.
David Corliss, assistant to the city manager, said he was working with the Athletic Department to publicize the importance of avoiding construction on Iowa and North Second streets. Corliss said his main concern was avoiding traffic jams during KU football games.
the department and the city were sending construction maps to out-oftown meet routes," Corliss said.
"We are trying to encourage people, if possible, to take other routes." Corliss said.
Give me a break
Construction areas to watch for on Lawrence streets
Iowa and 21st streets --- reduced lanes. Estimated completion date is Nov. 1.
- Naismith Drive — short detour into southbound lane. Estimated completion date is Aug. 30.
Kentucky Street between 11th and 14th streets — closed. Estimated completion date is Saturday.
North Second and Locust streets — detour through Elm, Third and Locust streets. No estimated completion date
KANSAN
town ticket holders, Corliss said.
City Commission OKs street music festival
Bv Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
After a long, dry debate on annexation and rezoning last night, City Commission quickly approved a party.
On Sept. 25, Eighth Street will be blocked off from Massachusetts to New Hampshire streets so that The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., and KLZR FM-100 can co-sponsor a street party.
Brett Mosiman, owner of The Bottleneck, said he received approval from all merchants on Eighth Street
for a music festival during daylight hours.
The festival will run from 1 to 8 p.m.
"There will be loud music," Mosi-
man told the commission. "I would
expand it into a full day, full
weekend."
The festival will feature a single stage and sponsor six to eight bands, Mosiman said. No alcohol will be allowed on the street.
"If people bring a six-pack to the festival, our security will take it away from them," he said.
The festival, which will cost between $3 and $5, is open to the public.
"Lawrence has a really great reputation for good local music," Mosiman said. "I would like the city to inherit this as a festival."
In other action, the commission authorized up to $298,000 for improvements on the North Lawrence storm drainage system.
The old system runs under North Second Street by Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St. That system failed during the summer's heavy rainfall and created a hole the width of a car in front of the tavern.
On Aug. 10, the commission voted unanimously to install a new stormdrainage system.
George Williams, public works director, told the commission that installing a new system would allow the intersection to open sooner.
Last night, the commission also authorized the drafting of an annexation ordinance for 86.5 acres north of Peterson Road, south of Interstate 70 and west of North Iowa Street. The annexed land was rezoned from agricultural land to residential property for single and multi-family residences, with the condition that development would be limited until traffic problems were solved.
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安昌县
14A
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Educators discuss adjunct colleagues
The Associated Press
Quality of education at Kansas' 19 community colleges may suffer if they continue to use more and more part-time faculty to teach their classes, spokesmen for Kansas-National Education Association said yesterday.
However, an official of one of the colleges said that using adjunct faculty members is both a benefit and economic necessity for the two-year schools. He said the issue is what constitutes a proper balance between full-time and part-time faculty, and only the schools themselves can decide that.
Both sides agreed in testimony before the Legislative Educational Planning Committee that using part-time teachers is a fact of life, but the state needs to monitor the situation to determine the extent of the problem.
The committee heard from Craig Grant, lobbyist for the education association; Keyin Belt, a full-time
instructor at Butler County Community College; Janice McIntyre, full-time teacher at Kansas City Kansas Community College; and Ken Gibson, dean of instruction at Johnson County Community College.
Belt was chairman and McIntyre a member of a higher education task force created by education association, which represents the full-time faculty at 16 of the 19 community colleges.
At a previous planning committee meeting, Grant said that the state's six four-year universities are concerned about the quality of courses taught at the community colleges, and there is a suspicion that programs are created that use adjunct faculty just to increase enrollments and gain greater reimbursement from the state.
John Gamble/KANSAN
TOMMY TRIANGLE
TOMMY TRIANGLE
Joseph Sands, Omaha, Neb., freshman, helps his grandfather, Gus Underhill and mother, Sherry Wupper, move a cart load of his possessions into Hassinger Hall. Students were allowed to move into University housing beginning yesterday.
Campus emergency phone service expanded
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas will add 20 emergency phones across campus this year to increase access for people needing quick assistance.
The expansion of emergency phone access began a year ago when the University received about $21,000 from the state for the project, said KU police Lt John Mullens.
Thirteen phones inside campus buildings and one exterior phone already have been installed. Mullens said the phones were located in areas without access to regular phones, campus-only phones or pay phones.
"We're not as concerned with staff in their offices as we are the student in Wescoe who has some medical emergency," he said.
gency, he said.
The new phones will not be tradinational headset units, Mullens said. The phones are activated by pushing a button that activates a speaker, which is dispatched directly into the KU police dispatch center.
The microphone stays open for 3 minutes to allow dispatchers to hear what is happening. Officers will be sent to the site of the phone in all instances.
After the 13 interior phones were installed last year, little money was eft for this year's project, Mullens said.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, which is handling the accounting for the phone project, said, "We still have a little over $10,000 left in that part of the account. That money will go toward purchasing more phones for this year."
Construction on one exteriorphone is nearly complete at the southwest
corner of Fraser Hall.
Mullens said facilities operations and the Telecommunications Department had agreed to provide free installation services for the rest of the phones as long as the work was completed at their convenience. Because services were donated, the only remaining expenses are the cost of materials.
In October 1989, a proposal was made to expand the emergency phone service to between 100 and 150 interior phones and 20 to 25 exterior phones. Mullens said. At that time the projected costs were $1,000 for each interior phone and $3,000 for each exterior phone—including labor and installation. Mullens said the cost was running one-third to one-half less because of the donated services.
When installation is completed, 19 interior and 30 exterior phones will be operating, primarily in the central campus area. The budget will cover only the cost of keeping the phones on line.
Mullens said the four departments involved in the project would seek more money from the University to install phones in other areas.
Mullens said the money for the project would be spent after this year.
James Modig, director of facilities planning, said his office had earmarked $20,000 from its repair and rehabilitation budget for the emergency phones. That money will be used to install new phones and replace existing units, he said.
Mullens said the goal of the KU police was to cover campus so that students would not have to travel more than a block to have access to an emergency phone.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
---
15A
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
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841-7421
VISIONS
806 Massachusetts
Optical
Dispensary
Classified Directory
200s Feminine
100s
Announcement
Acknowledgements
405 Personal
110 Business
Personal
106 Personal
303 Entertainment
400 Lost and Found
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Available at
300s
Marrhane
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan 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 1988 which makes certain real estate advertisements 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 Etc.
Shop
TM
Communities leaders are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in the newspaper are available.
Men and Women
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Macmillaneous
370 Want to Buy
PUBLIC RELATIONS FALL '10 INTERNET. Gain experience working with public relations team promoting Kansas City metroropolitan area. Job responsibilities include story ideas, filling information requests, etc. This position is non-salaried but can apply for course credit. It may be full or part-time. Position requires a Bachelor's degree. Time will pay for parking expenses. Please resume and write sample to Prime Time News Bureau, al. Main Street, Kansas City, MO 64105. Or contact Suela Dressman at (814) 213-2166.
205 Help Wanted
403
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES
Advertise in the Kansan!
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
200s Employment
Kansas and Burge 1 owns hire part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs with varying学程, training, and experience apply. See job board, Union Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas University Building for job specs.
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ACADEMIC AIDE POSITION AVAILABLE. German Reader Dates include: Reading text and other materials for students at the English exams and assisting with library research. $4.25/h. Application fee to the student Assistance Center, 100 W. 6th Street, 8044, August 20, 1980, 5:00 p.m application deadline.
928 Massachusetts
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In oururs Emergency Screener for the pre-admission screening for psychiatric hospitalization. Be available 5 a.m., psychology, social work or nursing with 2 year's experience with clinical psychiatric services required. Please submit resume for Bert Nash CMIC, 338 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence, Bert Nash CMIC, 338 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence,
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UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student (or individual who will be working in Spain) with strong consideration for Fall enrollment with strong consideration for Graduate Assistance position in January, 1984. Want individuals with research interests and community resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership capacity, interested in helping others. Come by KU info, #420 Union for an application. Must return by Friday, Aug. 27.
225 Professional Services
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Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civilities
The law offices of
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Merchandise
300s
305 For Sale
Look for the KU Football Preview Coming Soon!
405 For Rent
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M M
Welcome Home to TRAILRIDGE
Keep us in mind for Spring and Summer 1994
...
2 pools
Tennis Courts
On KU Bus Route
2500 W 6th
843-7333
The Etc. Shop
Ban
Roommates to share nine 3-bedroom apts **1879 +**
high. Graduate not smoker member. Call Dave
212-546-0647.
Bring your pets in to visit us at the Lawrence Veterinary Hospi We stress gentleness & caring when handling your pets.
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story idea? 864-4810
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841-6966 914 Massachusetts
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
**sby phone:** 844-635-3083
**dsn they are may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.**
**Sale**
*in person.* 19 Stair Print Print
tip by the Office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be repaid, cash or check, or charged
with late fees.
Classified Information and order form
By Mail: 119 Stauffer Floor, Lawrence, KS 4503
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吊坠到 your MasterCard or Vaccum account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
**not used.**
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gage lines the ad occupies). To calculate 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 per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
**Refunds:** When a classified classifier that was charged on MasterCard or Credit, the advertiser's account will be credited for three days. Refunds on cancelled accounts that were pre-paid by check or with cash are available.
Blind Box Numbers:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
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.
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SPORTS
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1993
Seating altered at football stadium
SECTION B
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Button
The Kansas athletic program boasted arguably the best year in history in 1992-93, and the football team pulled much of the load.
With a final season record of 8-4, including a 23-20 victory against Brigham Young in the Alhoa Bowl, interest in the Kansas football program is at a near all-time high.
With the hoped-for improvements on the field, the University's ticket operations are trying to keep in stride with improvements in the stands.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, said concessions had been made to make this season more thrilling than the last.
The changes begin with the addition of student seating in rows 1-42 of section 34, and rows 43-69 of section 46, all on the east side of the stadium.
The added student seats did not come free, however.
Lost from the previous years' student seating are rows 16-41
A HOT TICKET: Winning
WINNING ways for Kansas sports are bringing more people to the ticket office. Page 78.
of section 40, which sit next to the 50-yard line. Also, the band was moved up to the first 17 rows in sections 36 and 37.
Kish said moving the band closer to the field was the primary objective.
we wanted to get the band more involved," Kish said. "Almost every other school has its band close to the field. When we were on the road, the band sat much closer to the field."
Kish said the new seating would allow the band and the spirit squad, which leads cheers from the track, to interact together more easily.
said she thought the move was a step in the right direction.
Second-year Crimson Girl Michelle Muscarello
"Ithink it will create a more intense and energetic atmosphere for the team." Muscarello said. "It will help us because we will be able to hear the band better, and we're responsible for keeping the crowd involved, so everyone benefits."
Everyone, that is, except maybe the band.
"From a spirit standpoint, I think it will help," said Jon Lassman, sousaphone section leader. "But it would be nice to see the games from higher up in the stands."
From a student standpoint, attitudes were much more positive.
"I think anything that makes Memorial louder and crazier is a plus," said Chris McCann, Kansas City, Kan., senior. "It was pretty outrageous during the California and Oklahoma games last year. I'd like to see that at every home game."
Students get the bump
A portion of section 40 in Memorial Stadium will be changed from student seating to alumni seating. Parts of sections 34 and 46 will be added to the student seating area. The band seating has been relocated to part of sections 36 and 37.
34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
student seating band seating new alumni seating new student seating
84
Mason winning 'perception' battle
Unfavorable image of his football team is finally fading away
John Paul Fogel/KANSAN
Kansas wide receiver Rodney Harris poses for cameras during KU's annual Media Day activities. Harris was a back-up tight end last year but was moved to wide receiver in the Aloha Bowl. These days, more cameras are pointing in the Jayhawk's direction.
By Matt Doyle
"Perception."
Perception
It is a word that Kansas football coach Glen Mason uses often when he addresses the media, fans or alumni.
Before Mason arrived in Lawrence in December 1987, the perception of the Jayhawk football program had a negative connotation. That perception carried over into Mason.
KICKOFF CLASSIC
CLASSIC: For the Kansas football team, playing No. 1 Florida St. is a risk worth taking.
While in Wichita in January 1988, the new Kansas football coach read a newspaper story in which then-Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown said the athletic department did not receive any cooperation from the administration when it came to academic matters.
Page 8B.
Mason, who already was struggling in trying to persuade some of the state's top high school talent to sign with the Jayhawks, said he thought he was in a no-win situation in Lawrence before ever coaching a game at Kansas. He seriously gave thought to leaving Kansas and returning to Kent State, where a replacement for him still had not been found.
Mason said he called his wife, Sally, and explained his intentions. She told her husband to sleep on it that night, and if his intentions remained in the morning he should call the Kent State president and ask for his old job back.
Mason woke up the following morning and decided he was going to change how people viewed the football program. Five years later, the perception of Jayhawk football has changed for the better.
Change was slow at first. Kansas suffered through a 1-10 season in 1988, Mason's first year with the Jayhawks. The team improved to 4-7 in 1989 and went 3-7 in 1990. But throughout that three-year period, Mason and his staff were improving the talent base for the Jayhawks.
If the 1991 season took a little air out of bad image, the 1992 season may have
Dana Stubblefield. Tony Sands, Gilbert Brown, Chip Hillier and Dian Eichloh were just a few of the players that signed on with the Jayhawks. Those players served as the core group of the 6-5 team in 1991, Kansas' first winning team in 10 years.
deflated it altogether.
Kansas finished the season 8-4, including a 23-20 victory in the Aloha Bowl against Brigham Young. The eight victories were the most since 1981 and the bowl victory was the first by a Jayhawk team since 1961. It also gave Kansas consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 1975-1976.
"The perception of our program is now on the right side of the page, not the wrong side, as it has been for so many years," Mason said.
HOD Frederick, athletic director at KU,
made the decision to hire Mason instead of
Earle Bruce, who was well known in the
coaching profession after serving as head coach at Iowa State and Ohio State.
Five years later, Frederick's decision has paid off
"Great credit goes to Glen Mason, his staff and the young people who have sacrificed so much during the last four years to get us to this point," Frederick said.
Senior center Dan Schmidt has experienced Kansas' rise in college football. He signed on with Kansas after the 1-10 season in 1988, and as he prepares for his final season with the Jayhawks, the program is a
See PERCEPTION, Page 6B.
Summer ball challenges centerfielder
By Kent Hohlfeld
The Kansas centerfielder helped the Oilers win their second National Baseball Congress World Series title with a 9-1 victory against Beatrice, Neb., at Lawrence Dumont Stadium in Wichita.
Kansan sportswriter
Darryl Mouroe felt a little strange going from the heat of Omaha and the College World Series to the cool, bright skies of Alaska, where he spent the summer playing for the Kenai Peninsula Oilers.
Monroe said that he felt strange playing in Alaska, which spends most of its summer in total sunlight.
"Our stadium didn't have lights even though we played all our games at night, Monroe said.
The lack of darkness did not affect Monroe's performance. Monroe was named to the All-Alaska team and helped Kenai to a second-place finish in the Alaska Central League. In the NBC tournament, he was named to the all-tournament team. He hit .340 with one home run and four stolen bases.
35
Darrvl Monroe
Monroe's success did not surprise his high school coach, Lynn Harrod. The Lawrence High School coach said he thought Monroe's future was bright even without athletics.
he next good enough grades to go anywhere in the country," Harrod said. "KU was the only school really interested in his baseball ability."
He said Monroe's abilities in the classroom had helped him grow during his time at KU. Harrod said that Monroe played catcher in high school and that it has taken him time to learn his outfield position.
Harrod said that playing in Alaska should help his perfor mance because of the experience he had gained.
See MONROE, Page 2B
INSIDE
]
Volleyball preview
The team focuses on defense as it faces a schedule of top-ranked teams from across the nation.
Olympic effort
Page 4B.
The U.S. Olympic Sports Festival is a proving ground for athletes and KU's Lawrence Magee, who answered the call as head physician for the event this summer.
P. K. BALA
Pago 6B.
Aloha Bowl, 1993
College World Series.1993
ESPN
KANSAS 20 NCA PINA
NCAA Final Four,1993
35
Kansas takes a triple crown
Postseason showings give the Jayhawk teams an unprecedented title
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
A bowl game victory, a trip to the Final Four and a school-first College World Series appearance.
While these honors could be the highlights of many universities for a decade, Kansas accomplished them in one school year, becoming the first Division I school in the nation to do so.
No one could have been more proud of the school's success than Bob Frederick, athletic director.
"It was a real thrill for all of us to accomplish what we did," Frederick said. "Everything went our way last year."
tain doors have opened for the school.
With the unprecedented success, cer-
"It's a tremendous boost for Kansas," said Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham. "It helped our perception on a national basis, and we now have opportunities to recruit athletes that we couldn't have before."
Bingham said if the Jayhawks' appearance in the Series did not establish their program, it at least made people aware of them because of television coverage.
In the past, Bingham added, the baseball team had to justify itself to recruits as far as what they had to offer certain prospects.
Kansas received television coverage throughout the 1992-1993 school year.
The Aloha Bowl, aired on Christmas
"The combination of the three events really helped gain exposure," Frederick said. "It helps all recruiting, and it certainly helps at the university level as well."
"When your university has a significant amount of visibility, it doesn't hurt," Baid
Also, the Series is virtually the only college baseball shown on television. The NCAA Final Four created a lot of media publication for Kansas, too.
Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life, said success in athletics could promote KU to future students.
Day, was the only college football bowl game on television at the time. Only the Sugar, Rose, Cotton and Fiesta Bowls had more viewers.
lard said. "If kids are looking for a school where there is a lot going on, then they're looking at us."
Ballard said the success in football would help football recruiting and the same would be true for basketball and baseball. But the overall success and national visibility could only improve the perception of the school, she said.
Frederick said although he knew that opportunities like last year's were rare, that would not stop the Athletic Department from striving to be the only school to win a bowl game, make a trip to the Series and advance to the Final Four in two different years.
"It will be clearly difficult to duplicate," he said. "But it will be our goal."
2B
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Intramural Information
The Office of Recreation Services offers opportunities for KU students to participate in athletics regardless of physical ability. The office recently has released its Fall schedules for sign ups and tournaments, as well as costs.
LEAGUES
Softball
A managers meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. August 30 in 115 Robinson. Play begins September 7. The fee is $295
A managers meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. September 13 in 115 Robinson. Play begins September 20. The foo is 875
Flag Football
Volleyball
A managers meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. October 4 in 115 Robinson. Play begins October 11. The fee is $25.
Floor Hockey
A managers meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. October 4 in 115 Robinson Play begins October 11. The fee is $25
TOURNAMENTS
Sand Volleyball
Tennis Singles
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. September
8. The play dates are September
10-12. The fee is $20.
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. September 15. The play dates are September 17.19. The fee is $5
Golf
Flag Football
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. September 15. The play date is September 18.
The fee is $10
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. September
22. The play dates are September
17, 18 and 19.
Field Goal Contest
Table Tennis Singles
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. October 13. The play dates are October 15-16. The fee is $5.
Badminton Singles
Badminton Singles
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. October
20. The play date is October 23. The fee is $5.
Racquetball Singles
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. October 27. The play dates are October 29-31.
The fee is $5.
Pickleball Singles
The entry deadline is 5 p.m. November 10. The play date is November 13. The fee is $5
Pre-Holidav Basketball
The entry deadline is November 23.
The play date are December 1-9. The fee is $20.
RULES
Most intramural team sports have six divisions for both men and women, greek, club – must be registered with Activities and Organizations, open – for anyone regardless of unit affiliation, residence hall, Co-Rec – men and women on the same team, no unit affiliation, and Jayhawk – which plays more often.
After a regular season of three games, all teams who have not forfeited twice are eligible for the playoffs. All teams have to opportunity to play at least four times. The winner of each division will compete to be crowned "Hill" Champion. Co-Rec and Jayhawk will have their own tournaments.
All enrolled students and employed faculty and staff are eligible to participate. A player can play on only one team within the "Hill" division, one team within the Co-Ree division and one team within the Jayhawk division. All players must be listed on a team roster before they play with a team.
Complete information regarding intramural sports can be obtained from Recreation Services, located in 208 Robinson, or by calling the "Rec-
MONROE: Gaining experience
Monroe said playing in Alaska was an experience he would never forget, including the most unforgettable experience, a 12-hour bus ride for a game in Fairbanks.
Continued from Page 1B
"There were 20 people jammed into two vans; it was pretty tight," Monroe said.
Another trip that stuck in Monroe's mind took him from Kenai to Seattle, to British Columbia, Canada, back to Seattle and then to Wichita for the Series — all in a span of 48 hours.
His summer experience was one that Monroe would not trade for anything. He said he thought that playing against the caliber of players in Alaska would help him during the season.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said he thought the summer league experience definitely helped players during the season.
"Last season everyone asked how we could play so well in our first World Series," said Bingham. " told them it was because many
of our guys had played against this kind of quality in summer leagues."
Bingham said that he thought playing against the best talent gave his players a chance to compare themselves to other players around the country. It also gave players a feel for what the professional atmosphere is like with its long road trips.
The professional game is an option for Monroe, who was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds out of high school and by the Montreal Expos in last spring's college draft. Monroe has until the first day of class to sign with Montreal or he will return to school for the fall semester.
"I just hope his performance doesn't make it more likely that he will go pro," Bingham said. "That would really be a devastating loss for the team."
Harrod said that he did not think his former high school star would leave the Jayhawks for the pros.
"I don't think there is enough money to get him to leave," Harrod said. "Getting his diploma is very important to Daryl."
Brett closes in on career offensive marks
The Associated Press
George Brett is playing for something in August for the first time in four years, and this time it isn't for something personal.
The Royals were out of it last year as Brett spent the second half chasing his 3,000th hit. This year, Kansas City is in a pennant race, trailing Chicago by 3/12 games yesterday heading into a three-game series against Minnesota at the Metrodome.
whose 20-year career includes plenty of post-season play and one world championship.
And Brett, whose future after this season is uncertain, stands one stolen base away from joining some very select company indeed. He needs one more to join Henry Aaron and Willie Mays as the only players ever with 3,000 hits, 300 homers and 200 stolen buses.
That makes it fun again for Brett.
"I hope I can give it my best and contribute all I can," said Brett.
Tigers, Braves players receive weekly honors
The Associated Press
Detroit's Dan Gladden, who hit two grand slams, and Atlanta's Greg Maddux, who pitched the Braves to two victories, were named the American and National League Players of the Week for the Aug. 9-15 period.
Gladden batted .324 with 13 RBIs, and hit three home runs in three consecutive victories over the Baltimore
Orioles. His grand slams came in back-to-back games.
Maddux went 2-0 with two complete games, allowed two earned runs and struck out nine batters in 18 innings.
Other AL nominees were Alan Trammell of Detroit, Mike Bordick of Oakland and Kirby Puckett of Minnesota, while Los Angeles' Jose Offerman was the only other NL nominee.
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Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Reaching for the sky
Jayhawks drill on defense to meet goals of postseason play and a regional ranking
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Defense has been the focus for the Kansas volleyball team in its preparation for tough competition in the coming season, Coach Frankie Albitz said.
in the coming week more defense and trying to improve us in handling." Abitz said. "We will need it for our schedule. Every team we play, besides the Kansas, Invitation.
aI, is either nationally or regionally ranked.
VOLLEYBALL
The invitational will be Sept. 10-11, but the next tournament might be the true test for the team. The Nebraska tournament Sept. 17-18 in Lincoln will have nationally ranked teams such as Georgia, Albiz said.
hz said.
Cynlee Kanabel said she was excited about starting her senior season. The players met before practice started and came up with team goals.
fice started and came up with the "We want to end up in the top three of the Big Eight so we can go to the Big Eight tournament." Kanabel said. "Getting a regional rank is also one of 'he big goals. It is really hard to get a national rank with so many good teams."
The team missed the tournament last year, and that was a big disappointment. Kanabel said.
Assistant coach Karen Schonewise said the team's major goal was to make the NCAA tournament. The tournament showcases the best 32 teams in the nation.
Another postseason tournament, the National Invitational Volleyball Championships, will be held Dec. 2-5 in Kansas City, Mo.
"We're the host team for the NIC tournament this year, but we would rather go to the NCAA tournament." Schonewise said. "I think it's a realistic goal."
g
Last year, expectations for the team were too
high, Albitz said.
high, Afzib said.
"I don't know why people thought we would be good," she said. "Last year, we lost key players. I knew we would struggle."
It took the team several matches to adjust to losing those players, Albizt said. This year, losing players to graduation might not be the problem.
ers to graduation might be the one. Abtiz said she was disappointed in last year's Big Eight Conference record. She said she also wanted a schedule change.
"We need to play tougher teams at this point," she said. "This year we're going to do that."
Kanabel said this year's schedule was full of good teams.
teams. "We are going to the Nebraska and Pittsburgh tournaments, and there will be great teams there," she said. "I think the tougher the competition the better you play."
After you pay
Schonewise said she was excited about the coming season. She said the team was competitive at every position this year.
"We have a lot of talent," Schinewise said. "It will be hard to choose the starting lineup."
Kamileli
Define that, Albitz does not expect a high preseason ranking for her team this year.
"the preseason rank can put pressure on a team," she said. "We usually only get a Big Eight ranking. If anything, we are ranked low, and it gives us some incentive."
incentive.
The Jayhawks have a tough conference schedule this year, Alitz said. Nebraska and Colorado are both top 20 teams.
"Oklahoma may be strong, but you just never know in the Big Eight," she said. "Other teams are improving like us."
"The Big Eight will be a roller coaster," Kanabel said. "There are usually five teams in the race."
Kanabel said the top four teams advance to the conference tournament.
The two keys needed to compete through the tough schedule will be team passing and good serving throughout the game, Albitz said.
"You have to have passers and good serving, then everything else will fall in line," she said.
John Gamble/KANSAN
The team's first match will be 7 p.m. Sept. 1 in Allen Field House against Wichita State. Albizt said there were not any specific things the team was working on to prepare for the Shockers.
working on our preparation."
"Right now, we're trying to get the team ready," she said. "We are finding our strengths and weaknesses."
Kanabel said she was ready for the first match against Wichita. Last year, Kansas lost to the Shockers, dropping the series record to 24-10, in Kansas' favor.
"Before last year, I don't think we have ever lost to them since I've been at Kansas." Kaneba said. "They're our state rivals. Plus, it's a really big deal to win that first game."
Gregory K.
Tracie Watt, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore, and Jenny Wiedeke, Evergreen, Colo., freshman, attempt to return a ball during volleyball practice Tuesday at Robinson Center
1993 Jayhawk Volleyball Schedule
Sept. 1 WIHTHA STATE 7 p.m.
Sept. 34 N Northern Illinois Tournai All Day
Sept. 62 NIUWAI 10 p.m.
Sept. 10-11 KUVINATIONAL 10 a.m.
Sept. 17-18 Nebraska Tournament All Day
Sept. 24-25 Pittsburgh Tournament #4 Day
Oct. 10 Oklahoma 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 2 at Oklahoma 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 6 KANSAS STATE 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 9 at Iowa State 7 p.m.
Oct. 13 MISSOURI 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 16 Nebraska 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 22 COLORADO 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 23 SOUTHWEST MISSOURI ST 3 p.m.
Oct. 27 Missouri 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 30 IOWA STATE 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 6 at Colorado 8:30 p.m.
Nov. 10 NEBRASKA 8:30 p.
Nov. 14 OLHOMA 3 p.m.
Nov. 17 at KANE State 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 27 Big Eight Tournament
at Ormah, Neb. All Day
Dec. 25 National Invitational Volleyball
Championships (Kansas City, Mo.)
Home matches ALL CAPS-held in Allen Field House
DeHoff loss won't kill volleyball
KANSAN
By Gerry Fey
Kansan.sportswriter
Losing a good player is tough, but if she was also a Big Eight volleyball leader in kills last year, it can be devastating for a coach.
Frankie Albitz, Kansas volleyball coach, is faced with that dilemma this year after losing player Kim DeHoff, but she said it might not be a problem.
DeHoff was one of the ten best in the Big Eight for kills last season with a team-high 316. She also led the team with a .274 attack percentage. A percentage of .300 is considered excellent.
well-filled," Albitz said.
"Right now her position is pretty well-filled," Ab
A.
Cyndee Kan-
abel, a 5-foot-9
inch senior, and
Jenny Larson, a
5-9 sophomore,
will be stepping
in where
DeHoff left.
DeHoff
Kanabel said the team would miss is DeHoff's height. DeHoff
was one of the taller players on the team last year at 6 feet 1 inch tall.
"We returned two All-Big Eight selections from last year. We were really young. Now, those freshman have a year under their belt."
"I don't think we'll have a real problem," Kanabel said. "When you'll tail, you get more blocks, but you're not as quick. We're small but quicker."
Kanabel said Kansas led the Big Eight in digs last year, but that may have been because of the lack of good blocking up front.
"If you lose it in some areas, you have to pick up in others," she said. "We should have better blocking this year, and we really need to improve from last year."
DeHoff's talent may not be the only thing missed. The fact that DeHoff was a senior makes it a bit tougher, Albitz said.
"You always miss your seniors, but Cyndey is a good player and the others are doing well too," Albitz said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1
Kansas tight end Dwayne Chandler poses with coach Glen Mason during media day.
PERCEPTION: Mason and team turn KU's program, image into winners
Continued from Page 1.
realistically, I did not know if KU could turn around that fast." Schmidt said. "I knew we'd be a winner before left, but I couldn't imagine that we'd come this far."
winner.
Three national television appearances and a regional television appearance in 1992 enhanced the changing perception of Kansas football, as did increased attendance for home games at Memorial Stadium.
Kansas' average attendance improved by 11,985 fans last year, the second biggest increase in college football, behind San Diego State. The Sunflower State Showdown against rival Kansas State produced a sell-out crowd of 52,000 at Memorial Stadium, and an estimated 7,000 fans watched the contest from Campanile Hill.
When Mason arrived in Lawrence, the annual contest with K-State was referred to as the "Toilet Bowl," since both schools were annually among the worst in college football.
Now, the rivalry means more than just state barging rights. Each school — the Wildcats in 1991 and the Jayhawks in 1992 — has parlayed victories in the game into winning seasons and upper division finishes in the Big Eight Conference.
The Jayhawks built upon the success of the 1992 season for future benefits. Kansas signed a top 25 recruiting class last February headlined by All-American defensive back Tony Blevins of Kansas City, Mo.
"Every year the program has been getting better," said Blevins, who chose Kansas over Stanford, UCLA and defending national champion Alabama. "KU was the place where I felt most comfortable."
The 1993 season will be a big test for the Jayhawks. Kansas opens the season against No. 1 Florida State in the Kickoff Classic Aug. 28 in East Rutherford, N.J.
Trips to Michigan State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Colorado are also on the Jayhawks' itinerary.
Nebraska's visit to Lawrence on Nov. 6 highlights the home schedule, which also includes Western Carolina, Utah, Colorado State, Iowa State and Missouri.
Kansas did not have to accept the invitation to play Florida State in the Kickoff Classic, but Mason knew that facing the Seminoles would help improve the perception of his program.
"Some people think we shouldn't be playing in this game," he said. "But when you get the opportunity to play an additional game like the
Mason and his staff face the challenge of trying to improve on last season's 8-4 record and help the Jayhawks reach their ultimate goal — playing in the Orange Bowl on New Year's Day.
Kickoff Classic. you take it."
Mason said that there was pressure to keep Kansas improving since the perception of Jayhawk football was changing to a winning program.
"I firmly believe that either as a player, coach or program, you either get better or worse," Mason said. "You never stay the same."
"Pressure forces a team to reach a different level of expectations or you fail. The pressure will be helpful in our situation."
While Mason is still working on changing the perception of Kansas football on the field, he has succeeded in changing the perception in one area off the field.
When he went out on speaking engagements during his first year, Mason was introduced as "the guy who's trying to change the cry that's heard at the start of each football season." When does basketball season start?"
KU physician nurses wounds of Olympic athletes
Mason disliked that then, but now not many Jayhawk fans are thinking about the start of the basketball season.
Mason said fans now are thinking about Kansas football. It is a victory for "perception."
Broken bodies
By Anne Felstet
feelings of
Kansan sportswriter
concerns of Watkins
Just as athletes worked, toiled and practiced this summer, so did Lawrence Magee, staff physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center and one of the four team physicians for all Kansas athletic teams. He was head physician at the Olympic Sports Festival held between July 23 and Aug.1 in San Antonio, Texas.
The Olympic festival is held every summer excluding Olympic years. The festival, exclusively for U.S. athletes, has the same rules as the Olympic Games and is run similarly, complete with drug testing and opening and closing ceremonies.
with Magee on research projects.
Wayne Ossness, head of the health, physical education and recreation department, informed Magee of where to receive an application. Osness has been on the Olympic committee's board of directors for the past eight years and has worked
That experience lead him to recommend Magee, Osness said.
Magee's quest to be a part of the medical team at the festival has been a long process.
"Magee was a natural." Osness said. "I thought he would be a great asset to the Olympic movement."
After applying, Magee said he was placed on the waiting list for two and a half years. Physicians who are selected must volunteer their time at one of the two U.S. Olympic training centers in either Lake Placid, N.Y., or Colorado Springs, Colo.
Aphysician who is picked to work one of the U.S. Olympic festivals can work up to the international festivals, the Pan-Am Games and finally the Olympic Games.
Prior to this summer, Magee volunteered two weeks at the Colorado Springs Olympic training center. He also worked
the 1991 basketball and track and field Olympic festivals.
"We must be chosen to progress." Magee said of the promotion process. "Physicians, just like the athletes, must work their way up the ladder."
Like Magee, Doug Vance, assistant athletic director/media relations and marketing, also worked his way up the ladder — all the way up to the top. Vance worked at the 1992 Olympic Games held in Barcelona, Spain.
"It is an honor to work such events," Vance said of the experience. "I not only represented the U.S., but I represented Kansas."
Charles Yockey, Watkins' chief of staff, said it was great that Magee worked at the Olympic festival.
"KU students definitely benefit from his experiences because he can come back with new techniques," Yockey said.
As the head physician, Magee said he dealt with any problems that occurred, took care of the administrative end of the operation, held interviews and was the extra help in caring for the athletes. Magee said he was the trouble shooter.
"It was hot. I worked long hours, but it was a good experience." Meye said.
Vance said his experiences have helped him make contacts with national media figures.
After working this summer, Magee said he is ready to move up to the next level of competition.
The festivals' serving as a training ground for Magee mirrored their purpose for the athletes.
The festivals were started as a way to give U.S. athletes a chance to compete at this level and to get more involved in the Olympic program," Magee said.
A. M. S. Ramanathan
Direct Work VANCAM
Lawrence Magee, Watkins Memorial Health Center physician, talks about his recent experience as the head physician for the U.S. Olympic Sports Festival in San Antonio, Texas.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7B
Enter
Douet Hesse / KANSAN
A sign football season is near
Gary McManness, left, and Les Rolins, both of Lawrence, change light bulbs in the Memorial Stadium scoreboard sign. Facilities Operations was preparing the sign for the coming football season.
Sports tickets in demand
Kansas success spurs students to buv passes
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Thanks to successful basketball, football and baseball seasons, all sports tickets and nonstudent season tickets have become hot items.
Season ticket sales this week are approximately 22 percent above sales levels at this time last year. Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, said the winning sports seasons had a tremendous impact on ticket sales.
An all-sports ticket, $85, allows the holder to attend all home football and basketball games and the Kansas State. Students hoping to purchase tickets now must do so during enrollment or wait until next year. Students who have purchased their tickets must wait until after enrollment has been completed to receive them.
A season ticket for reserved seating costs $111. South bleacher tickets are $36 and north bowl seats sell for $54. Season tickets for families
SOLD OUT
for $84. Season tickets for families — two adults and four children — cost $180. Kish said a lot of younger families were buying the family package.
Kish said he expected student turnout at the games to reach full capacity. Media attention and students returning from summer break should keep season ticket sales on the rise.
A student committee is looking into a system for allocating all sports tickets if the demand surpasses the supply of seating. Kish said.
Mike Enenbach, Overland Park sophomore, bought an all-sports ticket again this year. He said he probably would buy one every year.
"Buying a ticket helps support the teams at KU," Enenbach said. "And everyone has one, so it's fun to go with a bunch of people."
However, not everyone purchases a ticket. Gretchen Koetterheinrich, Olatte junior, said she had bought a ticket in the past but didn't this year because she was too busy and she did not like going hours before basketball games to get a good seat.
Koetterheinrich said she probably would attend a few games, though.
Kish said the athletes appreciated the students' support.
"People like to be associated with winning teams," Kish said. "Therefore, more people are buying the tickets."
Kish said the winning seasons had made his job a lot easier.
"We still do marketing, but now people are calling us," Kish said. "It's fun to be a part of Kansas athletics.
"The students, with all their loud cheering, made a big difference in some big games last year."
Anyone interested in purchasing season tickets can contact the ticket sales office at 864-3141.
Cheers meet Ojeda's return to pitching
The Associated Press
Bob Ojeda has become a starting pitcher in the major leagues all over again.
Five months after he nearly died in the Florida boating accident that killed two teammates, Ojeda joined the Cleveland Indians' rotation Monday night in a guts 4-1 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays.
He pitched five innings and allowed three runs and seven hits, striking out one and walking none. The numbers mattered little to him.
"I want good results, but the fact that I was out there was weighing heavily on my mind," he said. "And the way the people responded has been great."
Ojeda, 35, received standing ovations from the crowd of 25.546 when he walked to the bulpen for pregame warmups and again when he took the mound for the first inning.
Ojeda was added to the Indians' roster 10 days ago and appeared in relief in Baltimore and Milwaukee before manager Mike Hargrove gave him the starting assignment at home Monday.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ward set to lead Seminoles
17
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Florida State quarterback Charlie Ward drops back for a pass. Kansas will face Ward and his team Aug. 28 in the Kickoff Classic.
Court experience helps Seminole QB on gridiron
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Florida State quarterback Charlie Ward was known for his exploits as point guard on Florida State's basketball team well before he became the starting quarterback for the Seminole football team last season.
The 6-foot-1 1/2 Ward has quarterbacked the Seminoles basketball team to three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances. Ward has been described as a player who could find the open man, create scoring opportunities for teammates and make great decisions on the fast break.
However, those three characteristics did not describe Ward as a football quarterback in his first two starts for the Seminoles in 1992. He completed 37 of 72 passes for 528 yards with six touchdowns and eight interceptions in the two Seminole victories.
But as Ward gained experience by playing through his mistakes, he gained recognition as one of college football's most talented and dangerous quarterbacks after an 11-1 season in 1992.
That's not good news for Kansas coach Glen Mason or the eleven other head coaches that must prepare for the Ward-led Seminole offense in 1993. Mason's Jayhawks will get the first opportunity to stop Ward and Florida State when the two schools meet in the Kickoff Classic Aug. 28 at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
The Seminole senior gave Coach Bobby Bowden a glimpse of those basketball characteristics during late fourth quarter drives against Miami and Georgia Tech. Ward, setting up in the shotgun offense against Miami, drove Florida State 59 yards to the Hurricane 22 yard line. But kicker Dan Mowery missed a possible gameening field goal as time expired.
Two weeks later, Ward used the shotgun offense again to rally Florida State back from a 10-point deficit with five minutes remaining for 29-24 victory at Georgia Tech.
"The coaches simplified things in the offense that made it easier for me to operate." Ward said.
Bowden said he had been trying to implement Ward into Florida State's
pro-set offense, but changed to a shotgun, no-huddle "East Break" offense in order to utilize Ward's abilities of making good decisions, scrambling and turning busted plays into big plays.
pause.
"We didn't give up on him at all after he got off to a slow start last year." Bowden said. "But remember, that was his first time starting. Now, he's got a year under his belt. I'm almost scared to say it, but he could be even better."
Mason said he was impressed with the versatility that Ward possessed.
"Charlie Ward, for someone who excels in both football and basketball, is a tremendous athlete," Mason said. "He has the capability of making the big play in the clutch situation."
When Florida State employed their "Fast Bash" offense for the last month of the 1992 season, the Seminoles were notorious.
missed field goals when we used the "Fast Break" offense in the last three games of the regular season," said Bowden.
*We either scored touchdowns or
Florida State scored 184 points and totaled 1,817 yards in offense in those three games, which were victories against Maryland, Tulane and Florida. Ward personally accounted for 1,172 yards in that three-game stretch with nine touchdown passes and two touchdown runs.
Ward capped off a successful season by earning Most Valuable Player honors in Florida State's 27-14 triumph against Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. He completed 15 of 30 passes for 187 yards and two touchdowns.
The improvement from the beginning to the end of the season did not surprise Ward all that much.
"Id rather not compare my games at the first of the season to those at the end of the season," he said. "The things I did late in the season were
When football season concluded, Ward joined the Seminole basketball team and helped them reach the finals of the Southeast Regional in the NCAA Tournament, where Kentucky defeated Florida State 106-81.
due to the experience I gained throughout the season."
Just like when he is on the gridiron, Ward is a winner on the hardwood as well. Florida State's basketball team is 42-15 when Ward has been in the starting lineup the last three seasons. He ranks ninth on Florida State's career assist list with 296 and is 22 steals shy of setting the career record in that category.
"I can't really say which sport I am better at," he said. "I play each with the same intensity and let others form opinions on which sport I'm better at."
Because of the success he attained in both sports, Ward was named the Atlantic Coast Conference's Male Athlete of the Year for the 1992-93 academic year.
"He's a better football player, in my opinion, because 6-foot-1 1/2 stands taller on the football field than it does on the basketball court," Bowden said. "He's the most dangerous quarterback in the country and he's an outstanding basketball player. I think he can play both sports on the professional level."
ward said he did not expect to join the ranks of Bo Jackson and Deion Sanders as two-sport performers.
"That's impossible." Ward said of playing both sports professionally. "I'll need to make a decision on which sport to pursue," Ward said. "It's good to have the option of which sport to play."
While playing basketball last season, Ward suffered a partial dislocation of his left, nonthrowing shoulder which required surgery in April. Ward said that the surgically repaired shoulder had fully recovered, and that he expected no problems.
"It's almost better than my right shoulder now," he said. "I've got my full range of motion back, and it's stronger than it ever was."
Ward has been mentioned as a leading candidate for the Heisman Trophy this season along with San Diego State running back Marshall Faulk. But Ward said he had more important goals in mind.
"The Heisman is not my first goal. My first priority is to help the team win every game, then the ACC championship and then the National Championship," he said. "If we do that, then the individual things will take care of themselves."
81
Knight-RidderTribune
Ronalda state receiver Kevin Knox attempts to catch a pass in last year's Kickoff Classic, which ended in a 45-24 Semi-victory against Florida.
Mason eager for Classic despite odds, naysayers
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswrite
Kansas was not the first choice of the Kickoff official officials to play Florida State in the 11th annual contest on Aug. 28 in East Rutherford, N.J.
In fact, the Jayhawks were probably not the second choice either. Officials of the game had hoped to have Texas AAM, a probable top five team this season, or Boston College, coached by former New York Giants assistant Tom Coughlin, face the Seminoles, but neither match up materialized.
None of that matters to Kansas coach Glen Mason, who said he was excited to have the opportunity to play in the game that traditionally opens the college football season.
"I'm sure that maybe someone else had the opportunity before us to go in this game, and because the opponent was Florida State, they passed." Mason said. "I glad they did because we wouldn't have this opportunity to play the best, to play on TV and in a stadium like Giants Stadium."
Mason's excitement was not tempered when former Kansas and Pro Football Hall of Famer Gale Sayers said that the Jayhawks' appearance in the Kickoff Classic could hurt the program this season.
Sayers, during an informal interview session at the Meadowlands
Racetack in New Jersey on Aug. 4, said it was not worthwhile for the Jayhawks to play in this game against a team like Florida State.
"I'm not saying it's going to kill your program, but I am saying Florida State has a tremendous football team, and if Kansas comes in here and gets beat 40-zip, it could discourage a lot of players," Sayers said.
Mason said that Sayers had the right to his opinion, but that the only opinions he was concerned with were the ones of his coaching staff and players.
Senior center Dan Schmidt said he had watched past Kickoff Classic games, but never thought he would participate in one during his college career.
"This game is a great opportunity for us," he said. "Florida State is a huge challenge, but playing them can only do good things for us."
The Kansas coach said that for his program to reach this elite level in college football, with the likes of Florida State and Nebraska, games such as the Kickoff Classic are just too good to pass up.
"If we were stillhere in Lawrence on Aug. 28, watching two other teams playing, knowing we had the opportunity, we would be embarrassed that we shied away from competition," Mason said. "I might not have the best players or coaches, but we're not afraid of losing."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
9B
(left) Joanne and Linda. (right) Amy.
John Gamble/KANSAN
Cross country runner Julia Saul, Lawrence junior, stretches with her teammate Daniela Daggy, Bloomington, Ind., senior, in preparation for a practice run Tuesday.
Runners take their marks
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
This year's cross country squad has two sets of expectations — one set for the women and another for the men.
The women's team has expectations of significantly improving on their fourth place Big Eight Conference showing in 1992. The team ran well last year against perennial powerhouse Arkansas but faltered late in the season due to a lack of depth, Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said.
"Depth has always been a problem,"Schwartz said. "When I started here we had to get people from campus but now we've built up the quality."
That quality was tested last season when Rachelle Gundy, the third runner on the team, suffered at midseason a severe case of shin splints, which required minor surgery. Kristi Kloster, the second runner on the squad, caught the flu, which sidelined her during the Big Eight Championships. Even with the injuries that plagued the team last year, the team did field its first All-American in team history. Julia Saul.
Both Gundy and Kloster will return for what their coaches hope will be a legitimate shot at a Big Eight title.
"We'll have all of our varsity runners back and I think we have a shot at the Big Eight," said Steve Guymon, assistant cross country coach. "It's been a while since we've been able to go into a season knowing that."
The players are excited about the season as their coaches are.
"I've never seen the runners so excited about the start of the season," said Ashley Ace, junior runner.
Ace said that even though a painful foot injury hampered her summer training, she expected great things from herself and the team. She said that the team's depth had been a problem last year with the injuries and illnesses that the team suffered late in the year.
The depth problem may be alleviated partially by the acquisition of five All-State high school standouts from across the nation in the freshman class.
"This year, if someone goes down we'll have someone to step right in and take over." Ace said.
While the women's squad looks for success this season, the men's team is looking toward the future.
"We're not sacrificing the season, but we're a little unsure of how the men's squad will do this season," Schwartz said.
Last year the team missed qualifying for the NCAA Championships, breaking a string of three straight years in which the team had qualified for the national meet.
"We got a little spoiled making it every year," Guymon said.
This year the team plans to redshirt their two top runners, Michael Cox and David Johnston, in order to save a year of their eligibility. This will leave the team dominated by freshmen.
"We want to develop our younger runners this year," Guymon said. "Then we feel we can come back next year with Cox and Johnston and have a stronger team."
The runners agree that this is a year of change for the team.
"This is definitely a rebuilding year for us," said Chris Ronan, sophomore runner.
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Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS
Renee Knoeber/KANSAN
Hancock Leaving:
Kansas forward Darin Hancock will not
return for the 1993-94 season because of
academic
MEN'S BASKETBALL
reasons. Hancock,
shown here, shoots
over California guard
Jason Kidd during the
1993 NCAAT tournament.
Hancock departs from KU program
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams announced July 14 that Jayhawk forward Darrin Hancock would not be returning to the program for the 1993-1994 season because of academic reasons.
Hancock, 6-foot-7, averaged 7.5 points and 4.5 rebounds a game last season while starting 33 games and shooting 54.2 percent from the field.
"Darrin had some personal problems this summer that caused him to miss over two weeks of summer," school," Williams said. "He is withdrawing from school and will not be eligible to play."
Hancock
The Griffin, Ga., native was selected to the Big Eight Conference All-
Newcomer Team and Basketball Weekly's AllJuce Transfer second team last season.
Hancock was a relentless defender, accumulating 40 steals for Kansas' score 192-1993 Final four squad. He also scored 16 points and grabbed 13 rebounds in the Jayhawks' 64-49 loss to Long Beach State in January.
"This is a huge loss for us because Darrin was going to be such a big factor for our team," Williams said. "It's also a blow to me personally because Darrin is such a nice man."
Williams said that Hancock would be transferring to another school but that he was undecided on which school.
When Hancock decides on a school, he will have to sit out a year of basketball because of National Collegiate Athletic Association transfer rules.
FOOTBALL
Stubblefield, KU teammates make transition to pro teams
Dana Stubblefield finished his playing career at Kansas as a second team All-America defensive lineman, Most Valuable Player in
the alba Bowl and a National Football League first-round draft pick.
Now he is adjusting to life as a starter in the NEL.
KU
Stubblefield is currently listed as the first-team nose tackle for the San Francisco 49ers. The 49ers needed help on the defensive line after Michael Carter
Stubblefield
---
SPORTS in brief
A Summary of Summer News
and Pierce Holt left the team via free agency in the off season, but it was not expected that Stubblefleld would start immediately.
San Francisco defensive end Dennis Brown and nose tackle Ted Washington reported to training camp in Rocklin, Calif., overweight. Forty-niners coach George Seifert held both players out of training camp until they lost an undetermined amount of weight and removed them from their startings jobs. Stubblefield and fellow rookie Arte Smith from Louisiana Tech were inserted into the starting lineup.
Both Brown and Washington have rejoined the team for workouts, but Seifert has not decided if they will return to the starting unit.
Stubblebell is one of five members of last season's Kansas team who currently are
Defensive tackle Gilbert Brown is with the Minnesota Vikings. Brown, Minnesota's third-round draft choice this year, has seen limited preseason action.
Kyle Moore, a defensive end at Kansas, signed as an undrafted free agent with the Detroit Lions and has played on the Lions' special teams unit.
Quarterback Chip Hilleary and wide receiver Matt Gay are in the Kansas City Chiefs training camp after signing as undrafted free agents.
Offensive Inman Keith Loneker, an undrafted free agent, is currently in the Los Angeles Rams training camp.
FOOTBALL Quarterback Schottenheimer leaves KU for Florida Gators
FOOTBALL
Kansas coach Glen Mason said that entering this football season he had more depth and talent at the quarterback position.
Mason lost a portion of that depth and talent when redshift freshman Brian Schottenheimer announced earlier this month that he was going to leave Kansas and transfer to Florida.
10
"Brian thinks he has a better opportunity to play in a better situation, "Mason said. "I hate to see him go, but I wish him the best of luck."
Schottenheimer, who will sit out this season for the Gators, told the Gainesville Sun he decided on Florida because of Coach Steve
Schottenheimer
Spurrier
"I'm going to learn a lot of football." Schoenheimer said. "After football, I want to involve in coaching or some kind of management in pro football. I'd love to run Florida's offense in the future, but even if that doesn't happen, I'll still be preparing myself for what I want to do after football."
Schottenheimer, son of Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer, also visited Arizona State. Louisville and Colorado State.
Freshman running back Shaun Sands, younger brother of Kansas' all-time leading rusher Tony Sands, left the team last week and returned home to Plantation, Fla., Mason saddens us not going to return to the team.
BASEBALL
Lawrence native returns to KU; transfers from Arizona team
Lawrence native Ron Oebschlager is returning to his hometown to play baseball for Kansas next season.
Oelschlager will come back from Arizona after playing baseball there.
"Iron had come in my office to see if there was a possibility he could come back to KU," Coach Dwayne Bingham said. "I told him the only way I would consider it is if he would walk-on with other players."
Bingham said he did not actively pursue Oelschlager.
he was the one who asked for an opportunity. 'Bingham said.'
Oelschlager suffered fairly serious injuries when he collided with another player during a game in Arizona, Bingham said. He was unable to play last summer while recovering but resumed playing this summer.
"His challenge is getting back functioning, not baseball," Bingham said. "He looks very strong right now. He looks like he is back healthy."
Bingham said Kansas had actively recruited Oelschlag before he left Lawrence.
The need for a new place may have been the reason Oelschlager and the Arizona coaching staff parted ways. Bingham said.
"We said we would put him on the roster, and that was it." Bingham said.
"It may have been a case where there were points of frustration on both sides," he said. "A change of scenery was best."
Walk-on tryouts at Kansas for interested players are Sept. 20.
More summaries on Page 11B
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Wednesday, August 18, 1993
118
YANSA
KANSAS 23
Adonis Jordan
Rex Walters
MEN'S BASKETBALL
New Jersey Nets draft Rex Walters; Adonis Jordan joins Super Sonics
Two former Jayhawk guards and a former center were drafted by professional basketball teams during the summer.
Former Kansas guard Rex Walters became the 16th player selected in the June 30 National Basketball Association draft.
The New Jersey Nets, which suffered the loss of third-team All-NBA forward Drazen Petrovic, selected Walters as its first-round draft choice.
Walters, KU's most valuable player last season, said he had a good trip to New Jersey during the dreptraft camp tour. Walters quickly came to a contract agreement with the Nets. He signed a six-year deal worth $6.8 million.
"I had good vibes going in," Walters said. "And I'm going to work my tail off to make sure their decision was a good one."
Walters, a left-handed player, will join starting left-handers Kenny Anderson, a guard from Georgia Tech, and center Derrick Coleman from Syracuse.
New Jersey coach Chuck Daly said he preferred a left-handed guard who shoots well to a right-handed guard.
Also selected in the NBA draft was Walters' counterpart in the backcourt last season. Adenon Jordan.
terpart in the backcourt last season. Adonis jordan
Jordan was a second-round selection by the Seattle
Super Sonics, making the former KU guard the
42nd pick in the draft.
Jordan said he began to get nervous after the 30th pick had been made and he still had not heard bus
At 5-foot-10, Jordan's size is a question mark. However, he said it would not be a problem.
"They play an up-tempo game," Jordan said of his new team, "(Gary) Payton is a great defender, and I hope to learn from him. Size shouldn't bother me at all."
Jordan was also a second-round Continental Basketball Association draft selection. He was picked by the Rochester Renegade from Rochester, Minn.
Kansas' third senior from last year's team, center Eric Pauley, was drafted by the CBAs Fort Wayne Fury. The Fort Wayne, Ind., team picked Pauley in the sixth round of the draft.
ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT Frederick signs Kansas contract after interviewing with Michigan
Athletic Director Bob Frederick remains a Jay hawk. He will not become a Wolverine.
Frederick earlier this month signed a multi-year roll-over contract with Kansas that will take him through Spring 1996. A roll-over contract ensures that the contract will be renewed for three years.
Frederick interviewed for the athletic director's job at Michigan prior to signing the new contract.
Frederick has held one year appointments since he was hired in Spring 1987.
He said he had discussed a multi-year contract with Chancellor Gene Budig this spring prior to his dealings with the University of Michigan.
PARKER
"The chancellor was the one to suggest a three-year contract." Frederick said.
Frederick's new contract is consistent with the continuing trend of college coaches signing multi-year deals. He said he was pleased with the job security of the contract.
Frederick
Frederick was instrumental in hiring football coach Glen Mason, men's basketball coach Roy Williams and baseball coach Dave Bingham.
The basketball team has reached the NCAA Final Four twice in Williams' five years at Kansas. The football team made its first postseason bowl game appearance in 11 years at last year's Aloha Bowl, and the baseball team played in the College World Series last spring for the first time in Kansas history.
FOOTBALL
Parrott Athletic Center expansion offers more to Jayhawk players
Even though the new Parrott Athletic Center expansion project is not fully completed, it has become home to its first occupants—the Kansas football team.
Players and coaches returned this month to find their portion of the new complex completed. The new addition houses a new football locker room, a 152-seat auditorium, coaches meeting rooms, an equipment room and a new press conference facility.
The locker room has 106 solid oak sealed lockers located on the first floor. The first floor is the only portion currently occupied. The second story of the new facility is still under construction. It will house an enlarged sports medicine area and offices for the Jayhawk football staff and academic support personnel.
During twice-daily practices, Kansas football coach Glen Mason is calling the new coaches' locker facility home. This breaks with his tradition of staying in one of the residence halls during the extensive two week practice program.
Kansan staff writers Mark Button, Matt Doyle, Anne Feltet, Gerry Fey and Kent Holthoff compiled this report.
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12B
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
K-State ticket offer drowns in criticism
Newspapers decry AD's flood promotion
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Kansas State University's new athletic director is drawing some fire for promoting a plan to help flood victims by buying them season football tickets.
Two newspapers have sharply criticized the plan advance in an Aug. 2 letter to 50,000 Wildcat alumni and friends from Max Urick, the former Iowa State athletic director who got the Kansas State job in late June.
"Most of us thought the victims of recent flooding in Kansas had suffered enough, but the director of athletes at Kansas State University has found a way to make them suffer even more." wrote Bruce Buchanan, publisher of The Olathe Daily News.
Buchanan, himself a Kansas State graduate, called Urick's letter both inane and laughable.
"Unless, of course, he thinks letting the flood victims watch the disaster on K-State's football field will take their minds off the disaster on the river," Buchanan said in an editorial published Aug. 11.
On Thursday, *The Manhattan Mercury* said that while Urick's heart was in the right place, the idea "just doesn't work."
"He knows a football game can be wonderful entertainment for someone who has been stressed out by the floods," the newspaper said. "He worries that as purple passion begins to bleed all over this community some will think a Wildcat win more important than helping flood victims rebuild. That he worries says much about the man. Thank goodness KSU has hired someone who understands what sports and life are really about."
But The Mercury said the letter was a mistake, suggesting the university might better just take 500 tickets and give them away to flood victims.
"Unfortunately, for a man just getting his feet wet at KSU, the letter can be looked upon as an opportunistic way to sell football tickets, an attempt to manipulate a bad situation into a profit." The Mercury wrote.
Urick's letter spoke of July being a trying month for many Kansens hit by the flooding, which forced a number of Manhattan area residents from their homes.
"Disasters of this nature always seem so distant, but the flood of 1983 really hit home and obviously took a great financial and emotional toll on many people of Kansas," the letter said.
"Perhaps the most intriguing part of the last month was the sight of communities pulling together for the common good to fight off rising waters, it said. "These courageous people deserve special attention, so Kansas State University is offering a unique way to say thank you and help relieve the stress of the past month."
The Mercury said the introductory comment made it sound as if Kansas State was going to donate a percentage of football proceeds to flood victims, offer them discount tickets, let children in free, get corporations to buy a block of tickets for flood victims at a bulk rate or have a special day for those who helped their neighbors during the flood.
Instead, the letter went on to say the University was "offering you the opportunity to purchase a season ticket or a family season ticket for victims of the flood."
"The Red Cross has agreed to help us in our efforts and will make sure the tickets are put in the appropriate hands of the flood victims," Urick's letter said. "I hope you will agree that this is a unique opportunity to lessen the burden for our fellow Kansans during these times."
The proposal offered season tickets at regular prices, $120 each, or $168 for a family plan covering two adults and two children.
"As the sayings go, the road to hell is paved with good intentions," The Mercury said in its editorial. "At least four people so far have told us they were disgusted by the letter, seeing it as nothing more than a manipulative attempt to sell tickets."
Jack Key, the associate athletic director, said earlier he was aware some might view the appeal as trying to cash in on a disaster.
"Sure, we'd like to sell more tickets, but that was a low priority in this letter," Key said. "We aren't preying on flood victims. We didn't send letters to flood victims. We wanted to do something for them."
"Flood victims this year are going to be replacing refrigerators and cars and won't have much discretionary money," he said. "We thought this would be a unique way to relieve some stress."
Foot injury keeps Powell on the sidelines for now
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
By Matt Doyle
Kansas junior linebacker/fullback Chris Powell is a throwback to an era of leather helmets
and two way play.
The 5-foot-9,20-pound Powell is considered one of the toughest and most durable
Chris Powell
players on the jayhawk team. Powell admits that, if asked, he would run through a brick wall to help Kansas win a game. His
Chris Powell
durability showedinspiritual practice when he made a smooth transition from fullback to linebacker.
Unfortunately, Powell will not be helping the Jayhawks win any games from either position for the first month of the season. On the first day of fall practice, Aug. 7, Powell suffered a fractured fifth metatarsal in his left foot and is expected to miss the first three or four games of the season.
The injury occurred 45 minutes into the first noncontact practice of the season.
"I planted my left foot two ways, and then I heard a crack in the foot," Powell said.
Powell's role on the team was undefined entering this season. After spending last season as Monte Cozzens' backup at fullback, Powell was moved to middle linebacker in the spring after a rash of injuries affected the death at the position.
Powell underwent surgery on the foot last week and is currently rehabilitating the foot.
Larry Thiel was out of spring drills while recovering from broken left ankle. Steve Harvey suffered an injury to his right Achilles' tendon early in spring drills, and Dick Holt was held out with an injury to his left shoulder.
Powell said he prepared for the season knowing he would start off at middle linebacker, but with the strong possibility of returning to fullback.
"The coaches told me that I was going to stay at linebacker while
they evaluated Larry and Dick," he said.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said that all along he had planned on moving Powell back to fullback Thiel and Holt were healthy.
"Right now it hurt our depth at fullback," Mason said. "However, we have the ability to run out of the one-back set."
Powell said he knew how Thel felt when his injury, suffered against Colorado last season, had been made worse. Bowl against Brigham Young.
"I was looking forward to playing against Florida State more than any game I ever played in," Powell said. "It was my dream ever since I was a little kid to play against the No. 1 team in the nation."
NFL preview: Standings and schedule
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
**East**
Miami 2 0 0 1.000 47 37
Indianapolis 1 1 0 .500 23 37
Buffalo 1 2 0 .333 43 41
New England 0 2 0 .000 16 37
N.Y. Jets 0 2 0 .000 26 41
**Central**
Pittsburgh 2 1 0 .667 54 51
Cincinnati 1 1 0 .500 40 34
Cleveland 1 1 0 .500 24 50
Houston 0 1 0 .000 28 37
**West**
San Diego 2 0 0 1.000 36 24
Denver 1 0 0 1.000 23 7
Kansas City 1 1 0 .500 36 51
LA Raiders 1 2 0 .333 26 43
Seattle 0 2 0 .000 23 39
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
**East**
Phoenix 2 0 0 1.000 35 23
Philadelphia 2 1 0 .667 53 50
Dallas 1 1 1 .500 33 33
N.Y. Giants 1 1 0 .500 44 39
Washington 1 1 0 .500 51 31
**Central**
Minnesota 3 0 0 1.000 56 23
Detroit 1 0 1 .750 27 20
Chicago 0 2 0 .000 19 24
Tampa Bay 0 2 0 .000 17 43
Green Bay 0 3 0 .000 41 74
**West**
New Orleans 3 0 0 1.000 91 61
San Francisco 2 0 0 1.000 48 14
Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 47 38
LA Rams 0 2 0 .000 30 47
Friday. Aug. 20
Green Bay at New England, 7 p.m.
Cincinnati at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Los Angeles Raiders at Indianapolis,
8 p.m.
Miami at Denver
Saturdav. Aug. 21
Dallas vs. Houston at San Antonio
12:30 p.m.
Los Angeles Rams at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
Buffalo vs. Tampa Bay at Orlando Fla. 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
New York Jets vs. New York Giants
9 p.m.
Phoenix at San Diego, 9 p.m.
San Francisco at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 22
Washington at Pittsburgh. S.p.m
Monday, Aug. 23
Chicago at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
13B
Kauffman's death may signal salary limits, cutbacks for club
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ewing Kauffman was not so much the owner of the Kansas City Royals as he was their rich, tender-hearted uncle.
Blow the tuition money in Vegas? Not to worry. Uncle Ewing will cover your loss.
Squander millions again last year on unproductive free agents? Not to worry. Despite constant frustration, Kauffman kept opening his checkbook every winter. He shelled out another $20 million or so in December for pitcher David Cone and shortstop Gret Game.
Thanks to their late owner's vast fortune and undying love for his team and town, the money-losing, small-market Royals have been flexing financial muscle with the stoutest heavyweights in the game. Everything they did, they did first class.
Kauffman left a careful plan for orderly succession when he died Aug. 1 and did as much as he could to ensure the Royals would stay in Kansas City. He also left the team with a $39.7 million payroll, fourth-highest among 28 major club chains.
Fans have reason to wonder whether they have seen the end of the Koch brothers' campaign.
Royala R
25th Anniversary Season
"We're going to have to start looking
at decreasing the payroll," General Manager Herk Robinson said. "How much, I don't know. You don't want to credit or discredit this to Mr.K's passing, but we have to come to grips with that situation.
"I don't think there will be any noticeable change." Robinson added. "There were some things on the horizon that may be carried out to one degree or another regardless of whether Mr. Kauffman had been here or not.
"Our payroll has gotten higher and higher over the years. Had Mr. K remained, I think we would have had to take a good, hard look at that situation and probably discontinued the escalation."
Mostly because of free agent flings, the Royals' payroll has been jumping $3 million or $4 million every year for several years, Robinson said.
Aboard of directors is now in charge of the team, headed by Kauffman's wife, Muriel, and Mike Herman, chief
financial adviser to the Kauffman Foundation and the man who represented the Royals at the owners meeting in Wisconsin last week.
But as for now, the payroll will be downsized.
Eventually, according to Kauffman's long-range plan, a local owner will be found after baseball comes up with a revenue-sharing plan and resolves the television issue.
"But we're not talking about reducing the way some clubs have done." Robinson said. "We're going to care to be a little more careful. But it unlikely we will be involved in unrestricted free-agent signings."
Robinson insists the downsizing would be necessary regardless of the ownership situation.
"We're going to have $8 million less income next year than this year because of the television contract. So, theoretically, whatever our losses were, we're going to have a loss of $8 million with the same payroll," he said.
"I'm not saying we're going to decrease the payroll by $8 million. If Mr. K were still alive, we would recognize the growth we have had over the years in salaries and the fact we will have a minimum of $8 million less income next year."
Chiefs receiver makes comeback
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Wide receiver Michael Young was about ready to give it up.
He questioned whether he could make a comeback from back surgery that limited him to three games with the Denver Broncos last year.
Frustrated with his progress, he called his wife during training camp with the Kansas City Chiefs and told her that if things didn't improve quickly, the Chiefs' opening pre-season game at Green Bay would be his last.
In that first game, he caught two passes for 45 yards. And last week against Buffalo, he caught three more passes for 33 yards, making him the Chiefs leading receiver. It gave him renewed hope.
"I could not do the things that I could do before," he said.
"I had lost my explosiveness and some of the things instinctively that I did in the past that made me successful.
In one point during training camp, I honestly thought it was probably in my best interest not to play anymore," said Young. 31, who played four seasons with the Los Angeles Rams and four with the Broncos before signing in the spring with the Chiefs as a free agent.
"I was very concerned, and I could just see the concern on the coaches' faces wondering if I was ever going to be able to get back physically where I was before the surgery."
Young said he had some hope after the Green Bay game but he knew he still had a long way to go.
The Chiefs have a youthful corps of wide receivers and looked to Young for his experience.
"Michael knows how to get open, particularly in zone coverage," said Coach Marty Schottenheimer. "He has the ability to anticipate exactly where people are going to be in the zone and find the soft spot in that defense. He's a possession-type receiver, but he's excellent."
young has been at his best in big games, such as the 1989 AFC championship in which he helped the Broncos to the Super Bowl with a 70-yard touchdown catch and a 53-yard reception that set up another touchdown.
"I think that's one of the reasons the Chiefs were interested in me and guys like Marcus Allen," he said. "They want people who have been in those types of games. There's no doubt this team is going to get to the playoffs, and they want guys you can count on the stretch."
The toughest part was coming into a situation trying to be perfect and not make a mistake
Sports Quotes of the Week
That's not how you play the game. I'm glad to get this out of the way." — Joe Montana after his debut for the Kansas City Chiefs in an exhibition loss to Buffalo, 30-7.
"To tell the truth, it wouldn't mean doodle, except I still remember Buffalo and everyone does, too. We got out of this what we wanted. The only unfortunate thing was blowing the lead at the end." — Houston coach Jack Pardee, after the Oilers, who led New Orleans 28-16 late in an exhibition game, lost 37-28.
to gain back the measure of trustfulness I expect from a top flight veteran." — New York Mets manager Dallas Green after pitcher Bret Saberhagen admitted to spraying bleach on two reporters.
"He's going to have to work hard
"Would it be better if Moses weren't as old as heis? I'd have to say yes, but I believe he still
"It it's the most exciting thing that's ever happened to me golfwise. Obviously, I have a little bit better time talking about it than Greg would." — Bob Tway, heading into the 1993 PGA Championship, on the 1986 tournament when he beat Greg Norman on a last-hole bunker shot.
has some good basketball left, that
needs somebody for us to consider."
he's somebody for us to consider." — Philadelphia general manager Jim Lynam on the signing of Moses Malone.
"I think I will remember a lot about James smiling a lot. He was a smiler and a hugger." — Chicago Bulls general manager Jerry Krause, on the death of James Jordan, the father of superstar Michael Jordan.
The Associated Press Compiled by Vincent Cinisomo
Huskers, Buffs picked to lead Big Eight pack
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Nebraska is a heavy favorite among reporters to repeat as Big Eight football champion this year.
The Huskers were the top pick of 72 of 89 reporters who voted in the league's summer poll, while second-place Colorado received 25 first-place votes. Nebraska compiled a total of 757 points to 698 for Colorado.
The Big Eight said the poll has been correct in picking the conference champion 29 times since it was started in 1946.
Other teams and their total points: 4.
Kansas, 473; 5. Oklahoma State, 348;
6. Missouri, 278; 7. Kansas State, 228;
8. Iowa State, 172.
The only other first-place ballot went to Oklahoma, which received a total of 574 points and was picked to finish third.
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14B
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TOP 10
COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW
A look ahead at the top teams on the gridiron for the 1993-94 season.
1. Florida St.
2. Alabama
3. Michigan 4. Miami
5. Notre Dame
6. Texas A&M
7. Nebraska
8. Washington
9. Syracuse 10. Florida
Rankings and team histories from NCAA Football Preview
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Seminoles look to take next step
Bobby Bowden has done nothing but win in 17 years at Florida State. But he has never finished No. 1.
It Makes Cents!
Now, for the third time in the last six seasons, most preseason forecasters are predicting a national title for Bowden's gifted team.
The Associated Press
The team's offensive leader, quarterback Charlie Ward, has recovered from surgery on his left shoulder, which he injured while playing basketball for the Seminoles. Ward was last year's Atlantic Coast Conference plaver of the year.
Highly touted freshman kicker Scott Benttley also could play a crucial role. Missed field goals may have cost the Seminoles national titles in 1987, 1991 and 1992, and Bowden is hopeful that Bentley can reverse the trend.
Ward will have plenty of talented targets, including sophomore Tamarick Vanover, the ACC's top newcomer last year.
Seniors Matt Frier, Kevin Knox and Lonnie Johnson and juniors O'Mar Ellison and Kez McCorvey also will be part of an eight-man receiving rotation, which should keep fresh passcatchers on the field at all times.
100
The Seminoles lost last year's leading rusher, Tiger McMillon, to a preseason knee injury and will rely on backsacks Sean Jackson and Marquette Smith and fullback William Floyd to handle running duties.
Lestyley's notes
1992 AP end-of-season rank-
ing: No. 2
The Seminoles
Junior guard Patrick McNeil will anchor an experienced offensive line, but the defensive unit will feature a
Last season. Bowden became the
Last year's record: 11-1
offense for a "fast-break" attack designed to take advantage of Ward's free-lance skills.
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1992 postseason play.
Season opener: Kansas at
1992 postseason
Orange Bowl victory over
Nebraska, 27-14
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Marvin Jones, who won the Butkus Award as the nation's top linebacker has gone to the NFL along with defensive standouts Dan Footman, Carl Simpson and Reggie Freeman.
Yearbooks, booklets, manuals, tickets, announcements, business cards, labels, forms and more!
Florida State's traditionally rugged schedule does not get any easier this year. In addition to a tough ACC slate, the Seminoles play Kansas, Miami, Notre Dame and Florida in non-conference tests.
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The Seminoles have almost everyone one back from an offensive team that averaged 61 points and more than 600 yards in its final three games last year. The offensive explosion occurred after Bowden junked his traditional
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Steadman Shealy, quarterback of the last team to repeat as national football champion, has a message for those players who are trying to do it this year.
Alabama pursues consecutive titles
The Associated Press
"It's fun having a championship ring on my left and right hands," said Shealy, who directed Alabama to a 12-0 season in 1979.
Actually, Shealy said he thought the second title was easier to win than the first.
A new batch of Alabama players will try to break the repeat jinx after making history by going 13-0 in 1992. The Tide first won the Southeastern Conference championship game, then shocked defending national champion Miami 34-13 in the Sugar Bowl.
That team was a unanimous choice for No. 1, giving the Tide back-to-back national titles. No team has done it since.
Heading into this season, Alabama has the nation's longest winning streak at 23 games.
But repeating has proved to be a daunting task since Alabama did it 14 years ago. Miami won four titles in a decade, but could not put two of them together.
At first glance, Alabama's chances of repeating appear to be favorable. The schedule — criticized last year as being weak — is exactly the same. The toughest game figures to come the third Saturday in October against Tennessee, a team the Tide has beaten seven years in a row. Should Alabama repeat in the SEC
The Crimson Tide
last year's record: 13-0
Last year's record: 13-0
1992 AP end-of-season ranking:
No. 1
1992 postseason play: Sugar Bowl victory over Miami, 34-13
Season opener: Tulane
Western Division, the league championship game is once again at Legion Field in Birmingham - the Tide's home away from home.
Twelve starters return, led by junior quarterback Jay Barker on offense.
Barker has been maligned for the Tide's sometime erratic offensive play, but it is hard to argue with his results — 17-0 as a starter. At his disposal are an offensive line that includes All-SEC center Tobie Sheils and a receiving corps by ultra-talented David Palmer.
Palmer was brilliant as a freshman, but his sophomore season was marred by two drunk-driving arrests. Alabama is counting on him to return to his 1991 form and bolster an offense that ran for 209 yards per game but threw for only 154.
Alabama will not have All-American ends John Copeland and Eric Curry. Both were picked in the first round of the NFL draft, as was cornerback George Teague.
Elverrett Brown and Jeremy Nunley have the unenviable task of succeeding Copeland and Curry, but they'll be backed up by outside linebacker Lemanis Hall (a team-high 70 tackles, including five sacks) and a secondary that — even with Teague's departure — has four starters who combined for 13 interceptions in 1992.
Michigan's Wheatley could win Heisman
The Associated Press
Michigan's Tyrone Wheatley won the Rose Bowl MVP award last season. This year, he could win an even bigger award — the Heisman Trophy.
"The one thing I'll tell Tyrone that whatever he earns will be on the basis of performance," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "The team comes first. The more he helps us win, the better his opportunities are to be judged on his abilities."
Wheatley led the Big Ten in rushing as a sophomore last year and captured his season with a sensational performance against Washington in the Rose Bowl. Wheatley ran for 235 yards and three touchdowns against the Huskies, including a Rose Bowl-record 88-yard dash.
"He's the best back we've faced this year," Washington defensive tackle
The Wolverines
When coach Dennis Erickson took a look at his roster last spring, he found plenty of running backs, a depleted receiving corps, huge offensive linemen and an inexperienced quarterback.
Last year's record:
9-0-3
1992 AP end-of-season ranking: No. 5
To make another run at No. 1, the Miami Hurricanes will use a two-back attack.
1992 postseason play: Rose Bowl victory over Washington, 38-31
The Associated Press
Season opener: at Washington State
D'Marco Farr said after the game.
Because of his Rose Bowl heroes, expectations will be very high for Wheatley.
"There's always the danger of that," Moeller said. "That's the world we live in today. Some kids use that to motivate themselves. Will, Tyrone Wheatley? I don't know. We'll have to wait and see."
Miami alters game plan, plays to team strengths.
So Erickson revamped the playbook that helped Miami win 29 consecutive games during the past three seasons.
The one-back offense Erickson brought to Coral Gables in 1989 will remain part of his arsenal. But he plans to have two running backs in the game about half the time.
The memory of a 34-13 loss to Alabama in last season's Sugar Bowl also influenced Erickson. Crimson Tide defenders ignored the run, harried Heisman Trophy winner Gino Torreta into three interceptions and handed the Hurricanes their worst loss in seven years.
It ruined Miami's bid for a fifth national championship since 1983.
Poised to pursue that goal is perhaps the best set of running backs to attend Quarterback U. Probably at least four will be part of the rotation.
Sophomore tailbacks Danyll Ferguson and James Stewart have breakway speed; junior fullbacks Donnell Bennett and Larry Jones can run, block and catch.
Erickson hopes to throw less and run better. More than 70 percent of the Hurricanes' yardage came through the air last season, when they finished 87th in the NCAA in rushing
ing: No. 3
Last year's record: 11-1
1992 AP end-of-season rank ingr: No. 3
The Hurricanes
1992 postseason play:
Sugar Bowl defeat to Alabama. 34-13
■Season opener: at Boston College
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
15B
Player losses leave Irish fighting
The Associated Press
It has been five years since Notre Dame entered a football season with so many holes to fill. It has been exactly that long since the Fighting Irish won a national championship.
If a major building project foreshadows a big year in South Bend, Ind, the circumstances are right in 1993.
In 1988, 10 players, including six sophomores, made their first college start as the
Irish beat Michigan in their season opener. Three freshmen were starters by the time Notre Dame capped its 12-0 season. This year, 12 starters are gone.
The Irish face a typically grueling schedule with a completely retooled offense and a defense that could be among the nation's best.
When preseason practice began, six players who never started a college game were the front-runners at
their positions. Five more have started two games or fewer.
Defense, Dame, will be the key if Notre Dame will be the key if the Irish are to survive a schedule that includes a second-week trip to Michigan and Florida State's visit to South Bend in the second-to-last week.
Seven starters return from a defensive unit that improved dramatically last season. It finished at the ninth-best run
defense in the country, giving up 111.1 yards per game.
But most of the attention prior to the Sept. 4 opener against Northwestern will be on the Irish quarterbacks.
Senior Kevin McDougal emerged from spring practice with a narrow edge over junior Paul Failla. They will be challenged by freshman Ron Poulus, widely considered the best prep player in America last year.
Fighting Irish
Last year's record:
10-1-1
1992 postseason
1992 AP end-of-season ranking; No. 4
1992 postseason play. Cotton Bowl victor over Texas A&M, 28-3
Season opener: Northwestern
One call: best yet 'Huskers
The Associated Press
In his 21st season as head coach at Nebraska. Tom Osborne says the Cornhusker football team on the field this fall will be the most athletically gifted of them all.
The Cornhuskers
Headlining the list will be I-back Calvin Jones, a junior who twice led the Big Eight Conference in scoring
"I'd be hard put to say we've had a more athletic team, but there are a few spots that are thin." Osborne said last week as he greeted his squad for its annual media day fall kickoff. "But I'd say our overall team speed, the top 25 or 30 players on both sides of the ball, are about as good as we've ever tred."
Last year's record: 9-3
1992 AP end-of-season ranking:
No. 14
1992 postseason play:
Orange Bowl defeat to Florida State. 27-14
Season opener: North Texas
and is the defending rushing champ for the league. Also on the list is sophomore quarterback Tommie Frazier, who became the first true freshman to win the starting job at his position and led Nebraska to the Big Eight title and Orange Bowlerber.
Speed has been a hot topic at Nebraska over the past several seasons. It seems to have led to several disappointing bowl losses against some of the nation's best and fastest teams — Miami and Florida State
The Huskers dropped a 27-14 decision to Florida State in last season's Orange Bowl.
Syracuse a contender despite loss of talent
The Associated Press
Syracuse's offense will be missing last year's top scorer, leading rusher and two of its most productive receiver.
So why is the offense considered so potent, and why is there talk of the Orangemen competing for a national championship this season?
One reason: Marvin Graves.
During three seasons as a starter, Graves has emerged as one of the nation's top quarterbacks. He was second in the nation in passing efficiency in 1992 while running Syracuse's complicated freeze option offense. He threw for 2,296 yards and 14 touchdowns.
With Graves returning, Syracuse thinks it can supplant Miami atop the Big East Conference and challenge for the national title in 1993.
The Orangemen
Last year's record: 10-2
1992 postseason play: Fies
1992 AP end-of-season rank ing: No. 6
1992 postseason play: Fiesa
baiw victory over Colorado,
26-22
Season opener: Ball State
can tight end Chris Gedney, leading rusher David Walker, leading receiver Qadyr Ismail and leading scorer, kicker John Biskup, the 1993 Orangen will be more than a one-man show.
Syracuse still has a dozen starters returning and enough talented under-classmen to fill most of the holes.
The Orangemen's toughest tests figure to come Sept. 18 at Texas and Oct. 23 at the Orange Bowl against Miami.
Charges could keep Washington from bowl
The Associated Press
The Washington Huskies, 31-5 in the past three years, hope to play in their fourth straight Rose Bowl on New Year's Day and are the preseason favorite. However, the Huskies' fate might be determined before they play their first game.
Coach Don James and university officials met with the Pac-10 Enforcement Committee in San Francisco this week. The committee will review the case and determine punishment, if any, later this month.
The school's football program faces a series of charges by the conference, including alleged improprieties involving Husky boosters and athletes.
So when the Huskies open their season against highly regarded Stanford on Sept. 4 in Seattle, their Rose Bowl hopes may already be dashed.
"We'll be glad when all this is past," said James, about to begin his 19th season as Washington's coach and the career leader among Pac-10 coaches with 97 league victories.
The Huskies
Even with the losses of All-Ameri-
Last year's record: 9-3
1992 AP end-of-season rank ing: No. 11
1992 postseason play: Rose
1992 postseason play; Rose Bowl defeat to Michigan,
38-31
"We've been living with this for a number of months."
"I would think that there are probably about a half-dozen teams in our league that can win the title," James said. "I think our league race is probably as wide open as it's ever been."
Season opener: Stanford
Even if the verdict is favorable. Washington has no automatic ticket back to Pasadena.
Bill Walsh, Stanford coach,
returned a year ago and led the Cardinals to a 10-3 record, including a 24-3 victory over Penn State in the Blockbuster Bowl.
Aggies look to past for future victories
The Texas A&M Aggies aren't trying to forget their season-ending loss to Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl.
The Associated Press
"You always think about your last game," Inebacker Jason Atkinson said. "If we'd won, we might have been more complacent. Now we have every reason to get back to the Cotton Bowl and prove that we can win one."
They want to remember every gruesome detail.
The Aggies have flirted with the national championship the past two seasons, but have come up short both times in the Cotton Bowl. Two years ago, they lost to Florida State 10-2 in Dallas. Last season, the Aggies fell to Notre Dame 28-3.
That has given the Aggies even more incentive to win a third straight Southwest Conference title and another shot at the Cotton Bowl.
The Aggies are heavily favored to win the SWC title with 16 returning starters from last season's 12-1 team that was filled with freshmen and sophomores.
The Aggies may have to start the season without leading rusher Greg Hill, one of four A&M players suspended before the Cotton Bowl over a summer job controversy. Hill and six other players could miss one or more games this season because of the infractions.
But there is plenty of defensive talent returning, including Atkinson, cornerback Aaron Glenn, and lineman Sam Adams. Glenn upd
The Aggies must replace star defensive players Marcus Buckley and Patrick Bates and find a pointer to fill in for All-SWC leader David Davis.
The Aggies
Last year's record: 121
1992 AP end-of-season ranking: No. 7
1992 postseason play: Cotton Bowl defeat to Notre Dame, 28-3
Season opener:
Louisiana State
SWC-record 20 passes last season, and Atkinson was the team's leading tackler.
"We're going to be better than we were last year," Atkinson said. "We lost some players on defense, but we've got some others back and we've got some good replacements coming in. We're really excited about trying to get back to the Cotton Bowl."
Quarterback Corey Pullig, who started the final five games as a freshman last season, is back to lead the Aggies' offense.
But their offensive strength should be a powerful running game that features Hill, Rodney Thomas and newcomer Leelain McEliro. Hill has run for 2,555 yards in only two seasons, and topped the 100-mark 14 times.
The Aggies tried to diversify their offense with passes to Tony Harrison and Ryan Mathews last year, and the goal is the same this season. But they won't forget how to run.
"it's kind of hard to forget about the running game, but we've concentrated a whole lot on the passing game and we're doing real well." Pallig said.
Shortcomings do not stop Florida Gators
The Associated Press
Steve Spurrier peruses the numbers and wonders how his team ever won nine games.
Florida led the Southeastern Conference in passing for the third consecutive season and was the only team in the nation to feature both a 3,000-yard passer and a running back who gained more than 900 yards.
One of the SEC's strongest defenses the past decade, Florida slipped to ninth in total defense, ninth in scoring defense and last — 12th — in pass defense.
opponents gamed were the most since 1982. Go back to 1766 to find a Florida team that gave up 274 points.
Spurrier's team battled back from a 1-2 start to win seven consecutive games and claim the SEC East. After losing to Florida State in the regular-season finale and Alabama in the inaugural SEC championship game, Florida finished 9-4 by beating North Carolina State in the Gator Bowl.
The team's 28-8 record under Spurrier, including 10-4 in the SEC and a sparkling 18-0 at home, is the best three-year stretch in school history. And the young but
The 343 yards per game that
experienced Gators should be even better this season.
Ten starters return on offense, and the Gators' defense figures to get stingier If Spurrier gets the kind of pass rush and improved play in the secondary that he is looking for.
Terry Dean is the lone new starter on offense, replacing two-time SEC player of the year Shane Matthews at quarterback.
Dean, a 6-foot-2-inch, 204-pound junior, saw limited action in 1992, completing 13 of 35 passes for 174 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. The last time Spurrier started the season
with an mpexpened quarterback, Matthews threw for 2,952 yards and 23 touchdowns.
Six of the Gators' top seven receivers are back including Harrison Houston and Willie Jackson.
The running game was less productive a year ago, but Errict Rhett is healthy again after gaining 1,109 yards in 1991 and 903 yards in 1992.
Spurrier looks for continued improvement from an offensive line anchored by sophomores Reggie Green and Jason Odom, who started as freshmen.
The Gators
Junior Michael Gilmore and redshirt freshmen Anthone
1992 end-of-season ranking: No. 10
Last year's record:
9-4
1992 postseason
play: Gator Bowl victory
over North Carolina
State. 27-10
Season opener:
Arkansas State
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Lott and Lawrence Wright will step into openings in the secondary.
- Bring in this ad for a free haircut
(good only with Rebekah)
or
- Bring in this ad for 20% off a shampoo, cut, and blow-dry (good only with Rebekah)
(across from Trailridge Apartments) 841-7667 Expires 10-31-93
FAST FREE DELIVERY!
2711 W.6th St.
- **Get a 12" pizza for $1.89 when you buy any Gumby's Pizza at our already incredibly low coupon price. Please mention ad when ordering. (Limit one order)**
- **Additional toppings: 9.4cea**
or Whole Wheat.
GETA12" PIZZA FOR $1.89!!!
CUMBYS PIZZA
GUMBYS
PIZZA
841-5000
1445 W. 23rd
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Prices do not include sales tax. Coupons never collected.
Couch Potato
Coupons never collected
Couch Potato
20" Pizza
$8.97
Additional toppings
$1.18 each
Lawrence
GUMBYS
PIZZA
841-5000
1445 W. 23rd
Sun-Thur
4pm-2am
Fri & Sat
4p-3am
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Pokey's Revenge
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Come into Lawrence ONE HOUR PHOTO! We specialize in quality service in a quick and timely manner. No more waiting for those great pictures you took this summer. Bring them in, or drop them off. We have the only drive-thru in town for your convenience.
Welcome Back KU Students & Faculty!
ONE HOUR PHOTO
TIME HOUR PHOTO
& Attention Please
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K
2340 South Iowa 842-8564
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& Personal Stories
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Expires 18-93
NOT JUST FOR BOWLING ANYMORE!
Kansas Union Jaybowl • Level 1 • Kansas Union
• 864-3545 •
ARCADE
The Jaybowl Recreation Center has something for everyone! Whether you want to sign up for a league, play video games, shoot a game of pool or go camping
for the weekend, youll find it at the Kansas Union Jaybowl! Visit Wilderness Discovery now open in the Jaybowl!
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
Billiards Bowling Video Games Wilderness Discovery
16B
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Westlake Hardware
SAWS
School Sale!!
1/2 PRICE
LAMP SALE
Prices starting at $11.99
Back-To-School Sale!!
WWW
☎☎☎
Furniture from Sauder
Choose, three-shelf bookcase, utility cart, entertainment center, telephone stand or night stand. All have oak finish and come ready to assemble.
No. 84614
MICROWAVE STORAGE CABINET
SAUDER woodworking
1999
ELEPHANT
NIGHT STORAGE TABLE
Corner Desk Center
89 99
Computer Desk with Pull out Trays & File Drawers
Light oak finish, Hutch & Desk included in set, 59 1/4" Wide x 57" Tall.
No. 8626
Complete with desk, hutch center piece and printer's stand.
Computer Desk Sauder
Sauder Desk
No. 802376
EXOD Bar Stool
Swivel Desk Chair
159 $ ^{9 5} $
Comfortable chair
with height adjust
ment and casters.
801.1397
King Crate
No. 467
Plymouth Oak finish, roll out drawers, on casters.
5997
30 inch high assembled
hardwood bar stock 13-
18 inch diameter foot
sleeve for floor stool
is covered with re-
inforced cloaked Legs are
18 inch and side
sleeves are 1/8 inch in
diameter.
universal
C
1499
29 $ ^{95} $
299
THE FAIRY GODS OF THE WORLD
BY J. H. M. MAYER
1870
National Picture Frame
Tropical Plants
Red
white
and black
No.69239
White Stack Chairs
SYSTEMS
TECHNOLOGY
INSTITUTE
Assorted frame prints, 11" x 14"
frame hang art.
(MA 602297)
Frame A plastic included
10'' pots.
Many varieties
to choose.
2/ $ 5^{00} $
Great for inside or out.
899
S
Slimline Telephone
Pushbutton phone with last numbered wire. Ivory only.
No. 301315
997
24"-40" tall.
688
50% Off
No. 81743
Clip-On Lamp
Gooseneck Desk Lamp
1234567890
Regular price on all Lamps Sale prices from
11 $ ^{99} $ to $ 69^{99} $
ACE
Clips securely almost anywhere. Great for dorm rooms and bunkbeds. White, black or beige.
No. 30474
Available in beige
white, blue or
black.
No. 32560
Includes Floor Lamps & Magic Touch Lamps
4-Pk. Inside Frost Bulbs Choose 40, 60, 75, 100 for or 3-way 50, 150 No. 91120
588
688
ACE
Standard Light Bulb.
40.
4 Bulbs
100
AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS
20” 3-Speed Box Fan
Windmere 9" Oscillating Fan
Cool Yourself Down! Emerson Window Air Conditioners
Lakewood, white color.
No. 63858
2-speed.
No. 69203
5,000 BTU— **239**97
10,000 BTU— **399**97
18,000 BTU— **499**97
Kwik-Set ACE
water
---
1499
1197
Entry Lockset
Polished brass entry lockset
No. 58194
“Smokey Joe” Grill
888
2299
6-Outlet Power Strip
Power strip with on/off breaker and
heavy-duty cord.
No. 301379
Toastmaster.
Heat-resistant handle, base and cover for safe use on counter or desk. UL listed.
No. 68742
12-Cup Coffee Maker
Single Burner Hot Plate
Compact counter top burner with adjustable temperature control.
No. 66844
WEST BEND 5-Cup Hot Pot
Integral Keep Hot Plate and automatic Pause Servce control No. 64804
Power Strip
P
399
Bath Set
COFFEE MACHINE
includes, shower rods,
curtain and rings, white,
vanilla, blue or rose.
No. 403039
988
12 $ ^{9 6} $
988
Particle Board Shelving Unfinished
1159
8222
10000000000
Particle Board Shelving
899
Westlake Hardware
12 wide x 4' long— $ 2^{9 9} $
711 West 23rd Street
Malls Shopping Center • Lawrence, KS
843-8484
12" wide x 8' long- $ 4^{9 9} $
Lightweight Concrete Blocks
Light
Prices Good Thru 9/15/93
129 Each
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KULIFE
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1993
Life at the lake
POLICE PRESS
___
Clinton Lake offers wide variety of recreation
SECTION C
PHOTOS BY TOM LEININGER STORY BY TODD PUNTNEY
Jeff Kolars leans over the edge of his sailboat as a gust of wind runs through the sail.
Counteracting the wind with his body, the boat tilts slightly out of the water and Kolars, as he hikes out, keeps it on that narrow line between remaining upright and tipping over.
"You have to judge the wind," he said. "If you gauge it wrong and over-compensate with your body, you're in the drink."
Above: Dana Ramsey lands his jet ski in the waters of Clinton Lake.
Right: Trails of waves are left by a water skier.
Kolars, Belleville senior, has been sailing for 4 years. He said the wind, the water and the peace kept him coming back.
"Sailing is calming, kind of like going out for a long drive," Kolars said. "It's just you and your ability to harness the wind, and it's cheap entertainment."
Cheap is the buzz word for most students looking for an inexpensive break from homework and school. And what better place to relieve stress and tension than in nature, outside with the trees and birds and sun? Clinton Lake is the inexpensive antidote for the college doldrums.
With 7,000 acres of glassy water ahead of him, Kolars knows what cheap, purifying entertainment is all about.
As an Army Corps of Engineers project, Clinton Lake's primary mission is flood control. But, like all lakes, Clinton pulls in people who seek affordable, natural entertainment. About 1 million people visited the park last year.
"Attendance has held properly steady over the years," said Dave Rhoades, park manager for the corps. "And it's quite a few people."
them." he said.
The lake is divided into two areas one run by the corps and the other by the state of Kansas. Rhoades said both were ideal for fishing, camping and hiking.
"You don't have to use our Corps of Engineer parks unless you camp in
On the south side of the lake is the Rock Haven campground, which has a number of horseback riding trails. Camping costs $4 per night.
"It's really a nice place to take the family and enjoy the outdoors," Rhoades said.
The main campground, with 450 spots, boat raamps, a swimming beach and lots of shade, is about 20 minutes from Lawrence, near Bloomington, on the west side of the lake.
Another campground is in the outlet area below the dam. There is no charge for use of this area. Many people like to fish in the lake's outlet stream, Rhodes said.
"It's usually pretty good fishing when the gates are open." he said.
A number of day-use areas are also available, free, with picnic tables, shelters and grills.
Canton State Park, which is run by the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, has about 1,425 acres of land that can be used for camping, hiking, fishing, or mountain-biking, all for $8 a day.
Two campgrounds with 360 spaces, most of which have electricity and water hookups, are located west of the park office.
A
VOICES ON THE HILL
Story continues, Page 6.
Q:
WHAT ARE THE MOST FUN THINGS TO DO ON THE WEEKEND IN LAWRENCE?
"I usually go to Louise's West
because all the people go there, or I go to Benchwarmers for the bands."
A
Leigh Schick
Wichita senior
"I like to go to the Bottleneck
because I like seeing the good bands like Billygoat."
Chris Cunningham
Oconomoc, Wis., junior
"I like seeing different bands, catching cheap movies at the $1.25 movie theater or hanging out."
1
Lawrencesophomore
PENGUAN
"I like bike riding at Clinton Lake or just hanging out with friends."
Danny Iskak
Indonesia sophomore
Compiled by Susan White and Tom Leininger
INSIDE
Sounds of music
The Lawrence music scene is an important part of many students' social lives. Several local bands have recording contracts and strong local followings.
VAN HALFORD
See story, Page 7.
Center of activity
Robinson Center offers a variety of recreational activities. Students can use the building free with a valid KUID.
See story. Page 4.
Video cameras help Lawrence bar owners
Patrons videotaped showing identification in order to avoid fines
By Russell Lawrence Special to the Kansan
Local bar owners are retaliating against underage drinkers because the Alcohol Beverage Control of Kansas has issued citations worth thousands of dollars a year, three bar owners said.
"Fines usually range between $200 and $500 a person," he said. "Over the course of a year, you're talking about a lot of money paid out in fines that could have been used for something else."
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cape, 1340 Ohio St., said that since the installation of a video camera more than three years ago, he had saved a significant amount of money.
Video cameras have been installed at the entrances of some' local bars in order to provide footage of customers showing identification upon entering.
Wallace said he purchased the camera at a wholesale club on the spur of the moment, thinking a camera might be the solution to a costly problem.
The camera has been worth the money, he said.
"I was just sick of the police officers and ABC agents accusing me of not asking customers for identification," he said. "Even though I still pay fines, there are definitely not as many, and they're not as large."
Jim Conant, chief administrative officer of the ABC, said that he was not aware of any camera installation, but that he would applaud any effort to lower the number of underage drinkers illegally entering bars.
"I think it's a very good idea, but I don't want owners to start thinking that they're not going to be held liable just because they asked for identification at the door on film," he said. "Bar owners will still be liable if a person under the age of 21 is drinking."
Conant said the use of stamps or bracelets to identify underage drinkers often had failed when the owner did not patrol the bar efficiently.
"If that person sits at a table and starts drinking, that bar is table." Conant said. "I don't want anyone to think that installing the cameras is a silly idea. Owners just have to realize their responsibilities haven't diminished."
Bill Colgan, general manager of Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St. installed a video camera in January.
He said there were three pending cases involving underage drinking at his establishment that probably would rely on videotape to obtain a dismissal or reduced fines.
"The problem we were having was that kids were telling the police or ABC agents that we never asked for identification."
General manager, Benchwarmers
Bill Colgan General manager Benchwarmers
Usually after the kids have been pulled aside and we tell them that they were filmed upon entering the bar showing their identification, they will admit having showed us a false LD., he said. "The only problem is with the new types of laser printing and color backgrounds on the LD.'s, our job is becoming more and more."
"The problem we were having was that the kids were telling the police or the ABC agents that they were never asked for identification at the door," Colgan said. "Before we installed the camera, police would automatically assume we didn't card them, and the burden would fall on us to pay fine after fine."
difficult spotting fake ones."
Colgan said that since his camera was installed, police and ABC agents had not been in the bar as frequently.
"I don't know if they haven't been coming in as regularly because of the camera, but we definitely feel more comfortable having some sort of defense against the accusations made against us," he said.
"Colgan said that if the citations against Benchwarmers were not dropped, he would request a hearing and would use the videotape as a defense.
Steve Jenson, manager of Louise's West,
1307 W. Seventh St., said cues would cure
the outfits for an entire business day at his bar, which has a capacity of 73.
"Not only are we being fined between $200 and $500 for each offense, but sometimes we're required to shut down the bar for a few business days, which can really set you back in profits," he said.
After hearing about the success of the other two bars in dealing with underage drinking citations, Jonson had a camera installed during spring break.
Rick Renfo, co-owner of Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., said he was in the process of pricing camera systems for his bar.
"The other owners and I have talked and I think we're going to purchase a system," he said. "I think it definitely wouldn't hurt to install one."
2C
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
KU LIFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Photos of has-beens annoying but amusing
By David Mitchell Summer Kansan Editor
This summer I had several projects I wanted completed to make life easier for future staff members.
I gave. the newsroom the most thorough cleaning — possibly the only cleaning — it had had in years. I had our police scanner fixed so we could listen in on Lawrence's emergencies. I had our phones
Glen Campbell Verv'70s
PETER HARRIS
fixed so we could communicate with the outside world and each other. I got the remote control to work so we could watch "SportsCenter" in the editor's office.
Even more importantly, I weeded out the faded stars in our mug shot files.
Several times a year The Associated Press sends us mug shots of the world's movers and shakers. Bill Clinton, Boris Yeltsin and of course, Neil Sedaka.
HUMOR
Yes, the AP feels compelled to throw in mugs of semi-celebrities, has-beens, never-will-bes and curiosities. Unfortunately, past Kansan
photo editors have never taken the time to dispose of such unnotable unquotables as Alfred M. Butts, the inventor of Scrabble or Roch Voisin, Canadian pop singer.
PETER HARRISON
By the way, the word value of Butt's name is
Ken Berry King of Bad TV?
of Butts' name is 20 points
As a result of the multitude of mugs, when it was announced that Martin Sheen would be filming a movie here in Lawrence, I could not find his mug shot in the S's. However, I did find singer Donna Summer, circa 1979, actor David Soul, circa 1980, actor Felly Savalas, circa 1978, and five Brooke Shields mugs from the early 1980s — one for every bad movie or
Bob Hope special she appeared in during that time.
The AP issues new pictures of people who are in the news a lot — and
aren't. For example, actor Judd Hirsch had five pictures in our files. Now he has only one, which is probably one more than we will ever use.
MARY HOLLINS
It was interesting to see how celebrities have changed. For ex ample.
actress Suzanne Somers had her teeth fixed. Actress Angela Lansbury has had extensive plastic surgery. Actor Jimmy Stewart looks bad with a beard. I also noticed that everyone looked like singer Glen Campbell in 1979.
Jolie Gabor Mother of all Gabors
Then there are the truly bizarre people that the AP deems newsworthy.
Steve Gobie, male prostitute. Nice job — if you can get the work.
Marianne Williamson, spiritual
advisor; Of course. Marianne knew
beautiful since
Erland Vanlidh, Olympic
wrestler, opera
singer.
It's always good to
have a hobby to
fall back on.
AUGUSTINE E.
Patti Hearst,
former terrorist,
socialite. A tough transition
for even the prettiest patriotic.
Amy Carter Good news for Chelsea?
I also weeded out leaders of organizations or political entities that have ceased to exist.
Commissioner of the United States Football League? Punted
West German political leaders of the 1970s? History.
Then there were the thespians who haven't acted (successfully) in years.
Linda Blair had to be exorcised.
■ Conrad Bain, though one of the few members of the "Different Strokes" cast not to be incarcerated, has not been prime time material in a long time.
Adrienne Barbeau. Cleavage? Yes. Talen? No.
Ricardo Montalban and Herve Villecaize haven't been seen since 'da last plane left "Fantasy Island."
P. R. BURNS
Phyllis Diller Simply scary
Finally. I concluded that
Once again is the King of Bad Sitches,
Ken Berry is the King of Bad Situces,
having starred in "Mayberry R.F.D.," "F-Troon" and "Mama's Family."
Jolie Gabor, mother of the Gabor sisters. Now I know who to blame for such great drama as "Green Acres," but I can't imagine ever needing her picture.
Even worse than the pictures of these has-beens were the relatives of famous people.
And let's not forget Erlene and Louse Mandrell, sisters of country entertainer Barbara Mandrell. Where have they been since Barbara's variety show was canceled? Looking for the Visa tag perhaps.
Looking at Amy Carter's mug shot makes me think that Chelsea Clinton shouldn't have to take all the crap that's been directed at her. Looking at Phyllis Diller makes me sure of it.
C. Everett Coop
Looks the same
upside down
Of course, the next time the Kansan files are cleaned out
In the meantime, I'm having fun showing people that former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Coop looks the same upside down as he does right side up.
I walked out — in say, 10 or 20 years, someone will come across one of the many mugs I have used in my life. And then the 'Kansen and wander who I was.
KU students save on postage with electronic mail
By Matt Hydeman
Special to the Kansan
Imagine calling a friend in Australia without paying long-distance charges or sending a letter with no postage to somebody in Japan.
Sound too good to be true? For many KU students, this is very much a reality through the use of an electronic mail system called Oread.
"Many people don't know it exists," said Gary Hanna, Lawrence junior, a student assistant at the Computer Center.
read uses a microVAX computer, a
scaled-down version of the VAX 9000
computer system, which is used campus-wide.
MicroVAX allows computer users to send
and receive electronic mail to or from any where around the world. In addition, the system can act as a telephone to talk to other computer users. Students may use this system with no long-distance charges
Oread requires a computer terminal with access to the VAX system. Terminals designated for public use can be found at the Computer Center and Strong and Fraser halls. Anyone with a private modem can use their own computers to plug into the system.
Various discussion and news groups are also accessible with Oread, Groups range from the latest news events around the world to a discussion group about food from McDonald's.
groups was time-consuming, sometimes taking as long as two hours to connect with an account.
There are 915 people with Oread accounts, Hama said. But that number will decrease after system administrators check to see which of those people are not enrolled for the upcoming semester. Those not enrolled will lose their accounts.
"If you have an account, all you have to do is stay enrolled," he said. "There's no need to come in and renew your account."
Hanna said that accessing the news
Sheila May, Overland Park senior, said she used Oread several times a week.
"I can keep in contact with friends I couldn't normally contact," she said. "Some of my friends live in town and use it
because of our different schedules."
May said that while she primarily used Oread for mail, she occasionally looked into the news groups to gain unusual information.
"It's almost like having specialized magazines at your fingertips," she said. "I can find information about any kind of subject I'm interested in."
May said that because information in the news groups came from all over the world, other users could comment on how reliable the information was.
"Sometimes it's a complete lie and other times it turns out to be the truth," said May. "But that's half the fun."
Computer connection
Oread is free to KU students.
- From a terminal at the Computer Center, typing the words "Telnet Oread" will bring a screen up on the monitor, welcoming the user to Oread, and asking for a user name. The user name is how a person is identified by other users while in the service.
- The computer prompt then will ask for the person's password, known only to the user and a select group of administrators at the Computer Center.
- After entering the password, another computer prompt, usually a dollar sign, will appear on the screen.
- The user can then access the electronic mail function by typing "mail."
The mail prompt will appear on the screen, and the user can now send a message to another computer user anywhere in the world, as long as the user knows the other user's computer address.
Ours to Share. Recycle Your Daily Kansan.The World is Kansan.
Fine Line Tattoo "We get under your skin" Quality work, reasonably priced, hospital sterilization
233-8288
29th&Mass.Topeka
Everyday 12-8
d Lyon Taver
ERN
Now a new place to have all your good times
9 Domestic and Imported Beers on Tap Pool, Darts and Great Times
832-8228
944 Massachusetts
Bryan Bowers
*California*
John McCutcheon
*New Traction*
Tom Paxon
*Ranch Romance*
Tim and Mollie O'Inen
*Scastaglen*
*Robin & Linda Williams &*
*Erik Price*
- Sugarbatе
• Steve Kaufman
• Lose Ties
• Pat Donohue
• No Strings Attached
• Beece Gambetta
Walnut Valley Festival 22nd National Flat Picking Championships September 16,17,18,19,1993 Winfield, Kansas
Featuring:
* Alison Kraus & Union Station
(Thurs Only)
TicketsPrices Advance Gate
Weekend (4-day) $43 $50
2-day Fri./Sat. 30 35
Sat./Sun 25 30
Fri or Sat. 18 25
Sun (Gate only)
- Children age 6 - 11 3/4 months, payable at gate
- Children under 5 years of age, payable to children under 6 education tree with adult
No mail orders after September. 9th. Orders
Received after September. 11th. Will be held at gate
WV
WALNUT
VALLEY
FESTIVAL
Andy May
* Spontaneous Combustion *
* Ivan Stiles*
* Paul & Winn Grace &
Family*
* Julie Davis*
* Laughing Matters*
* Linda Titton*
* Mary Castlin Smith*
* Radim Zenk*
* Revival*
- St James's Gate
* Andrea Parra Para
* Andy Owenya Project
* Roz Brown
* Karen Mueller with Tom
Festival gate and campgrounds will open Thurs. Sept. 9, 2014M. 0% weekly ticket holders allowed on grounds prior to midnight Thurs. Sept. 9, 2014
Advanced tickets guarantee admission.
$31,408 IN CONTEST PRIZES
This will be the best festival in the U.S. this year!!!
Workshops
Arts & Crafts & 4 stages in operation
Well Policed Gated No Animals. No Drugs and no motorcycles (Due to noise)
For more information write or call
For more information write or call
walnut valley association, inc.
P.O. Box 24519 15 Main Phone (310) 261-3250
Winfield, KS 67156
Trees make shade... We don't recycle... You're getting warmer.
Grand Opening
July 23rd-August 4th
Catch the excitement at the Burge Union.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Free Giveaways
Free Giveaways
Grand Opening
July 23rd - August 4th
Product Demonstrations
Free Giveaways
Free Giveaways
union technology center
KU
Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/846-5690
VISA
DISCOVER
MasterCard
MasterCard
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
3C
ALWAYS COMPETITIVE PRICE OPTIONS & TERMS
34 YEARS
OF SOUND EXPERIENCE
AUDIO/VIDEO
HI-FI
GRAND PRIX
AWARDS
AWARD
WINNING
DEALER
A SHORT 30-MINUTE DRIVE FROM K.C
KIEF'S SYSTEM OF
ACCURATE PRICE INFORMATION
WIN-WIN PRICING!
YOU WIN BY CHOOSING THE PRICE & TERMS:
At Kief's you can select from several price options in one store, from low factory wholesale prices to full service extended warranty prices, each with clear, straight terms.
WE WIN BY EARNING YOUR BUSINESS:
How? With straight talk, accurate information and virtually every "Award Winning" brand [106] in the audio industry.
PRICE OPTIONS & TERMS
EXTENDED WARRANTY-[5-YEARS INSURED] "A"STOCK
1. 5-Year total full service warranty, [Kief's full service terms].
2. Exchange satisfaction guarantee for 30 days.- Kief's loaner policy.
3. Insured service anywhere in the United States
KIEF'S FULLSERVICE-[SERVICE SECURITY] "A"STOCK
1. Instant replacement of any Manufacturer's defect-First 30 days.
2. Exchange satisfaction guarantee for 30 days. -Kief's loaner policy
2. Exchange satisfaction guarantee for Kief's warranty service.No charge for Freight;Phone;Parts;Labor;etc.
FACTORYSERVICE-[LOWDISCOUNTPRICE] "A"STOCK
1. Instant replacement of any Manufacturer's defect-First 10 days
2. Customer must transport unit to Manufacturer's Service Ctr. for warranty.
3. No in-store service on these units. -No exceptions.
SPECIAL ORDER "A" - [ AFEW % ABOVE COST] "A" STOCK
1. Payment in full with order. -20% service chg. for any change.
2. Expect 2 to 6 weeks delivery time. ~Our Guarantee of "A" stock unit
3. Freight, Handling & Ins. chg. [ADD] $12./box~over 30lbs add $18./box
4. Customer must transport unit to Manufacturer's Service Ctr. for warranty
STATEMENT: Kief's buys direct and all volume rebates are passed on to our customers. Any price found [meaningfully] lower than our SPECIAL ORDER "A" is only possible by selling [see below] "B" STOCK units!
CHEAPEST WAY TO BUY AUDIO-[BELOW COST] “B” STOCK
[Kief's will never recommend or stock "B" units] Some technical people want "B"stock, we will special order under these terms:
1. Full payment -No refunds -No specifications guarantee -No nothing
3. Kief's requires you sign that you are an informed customer about "B" stock a complete responsibility and service release!
2. Freight, Handling & Ins. [ADD] $12./box~over 30lbs & 18/ box
To be absolutely clear "if it fails in half you are the proud owner of both halves"
KIEF"S SYSTEM OF "WIN-WIN PRICING
Is the result of students and local customers shopping from coast to coast at every known profile of store. People today are shopping everywhere, full service shops, discount houses, by mail, etc.
With Kief's "WIN-WIN" pricing system anywhere a customer chooses to shop [coast to coast] as long as the product and the terms are the same we know we are the leading edge of competitive prices!
"B" STOCK. "QUESTIONS & ANSWERS"
Q. What are the Cheapest prices available for Audio and Video?
A. "B" stock & Grey market units cost dealers less and are usually sold for less.
Q. What exactly is "B" stock and Grev market units.
Q. How can I identify a "B" stock or Grey market unit?
A. It is very difficult! Most "B" stock units are reboxed in new containers, packing, manuals, etc. The boxes are marked by the Mfg., however [unscrupulous dealers may and do remove all the markings].
A. "B" stock units were damaged, blemished, defective or rejected audio components. Grey market units were built and designed for other countries.
Q. Is it legal to sell "B" stock?
A. Yes. Misrepresentation is not legal. "B" stock units are usually dumped at Auctions, Mail Order, Discount stores and many Insurance Replacement Companies.
Q. Do "B" stock & Grey goods perform like "A" stock units? A. No. No specification guarantee or American warranty.
KIEF'S TAPES CDs RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO
24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 842-1811
4C
KULIFE
Wednesday, August 18, 1993 U N I V E R S I T Y D A L I Y K A N S A N
fighting
Robinson offers many opportunities
By Gerry Fev
Kansan staff writer
A climber hangs from jagged edges each with only a safety rope and harness for protection. As one man moves his hand slowly to the next hand hold, his other hand slips, and he descends to the ground.
Not to worry though, he is at Robinson Center, and he is only 4 feet above the ground.
With Robinson's climbing wall, climbers do not have to risk their lives to learn rock-climbing techniques. The 30-foot indoor wall is an example of alternate activities available at the gym.
Rock climbing is one of about 34 sport clubs at Robinson. The clubs range from juggling to building model airplanes.
"Basically it starts with a group of interested students," said Venita Mitchell, assistant director of sport clubs and recreation services. "The diversity of sports is reflective of the diversity of students."
About 500 students participate in these clubs, fewer than those who play intramural sports.
"Intramural sports are bigger number-wise than sport clubs because there is not as big a commitment," said Gordon Krazt, associate director of intramural sports.
The clubs and recreation sports come from the students' requests and ideas.
"Maybe four or five guys who live in the dorm find out they all like wrestling, Kratz said. "So they come to us and go through the procedures to get a club started. It's not hard to do."
Sport clubs are not the only activities available to students. Robinson also has classes for credit and recreation, said Allen Heinz, director of physical education and recreation facilities.
Aerobics, an individual activity, had grown in the last four or five years, Heinze said.
Unusual activities, such as martial arts classes, also have been increasing. Mitchell said.
KANSAN file photos
Georg Birns, Stamford, Conn., freshman, took a Tae Kwon Do class for credit last semester. He said he did not think the increase was a fad.
"The classes are not filled with the same group of people," he said. "The people that go are very different."
THE RULES ARE THE SAME. THERE ARE NO RESTRICTIONS. THIS IS A FUN TRAVELER'S TENNIS CROSS COURSE. IT IS A MULTIPLE-PLAYER CROSS COURSE. IT IS A FUN TRAVELER'S TENNIS CROSS COURSE. IT IS A MULTIPLE-PLAYER CROSS COURSE. IT IS A FUN TRAVELER'S TENNIS CROSS COURSE. IT IS A MULTIPLE-PLAYER CROSS COURSE. IT IS A FUN TRAVELER'S TENNIS CROSS COURSE.
Birsa said he also went to the gym for weightlifting and an occasional basketball game. Weightlifting's popularity sometimes makes it difficult to workout.
For information about hours or services, students can call the Robinson information line at 864-3456.
**Top:** Members of a basic fencing class square off during class in Robinson Center. About 20 people were enrolled in the class.
**Above:** KU students play racquetball on one of the many courts available.
Center. About 20 people were enrolled in the class.
**Above:** KU students play racquetball on one of the many courts available in Robinson Center. Racquetball classes are available, and those who wish to just play for fun have numerous opportunities to use the building's facilities.
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KULIFE
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5C
Mountain bikers take to area trails
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Riders should be prepared for all terrain conditions
David Burgett, Lawrence senior, takes a break from bike riding. The Lawrence area offers two bike trails that are open to the public.
By Robert R. O'Blennis Special to the Kansan
Riding a bike along a trail may seem a relaxing way to spend an afternoon, but for some it's not just recreation. it's an adventure.
"It's because it's easy to get to, and it's the easier of the trails." he said.
Private trails offer another opportunity to ride, but are harder to find and usually require the owner's permission.
Greg travis, Lawrence junior, and a sales representative at Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts St., said the levee trails are a little more popular.
Riding in Lawrence is not limited to just these two trails. Other riding opportunities include gravel roads and private trails — not to mention cruising around town.
"I feel like one of those speeder bikes from 'Return of the Jedi,'" said Clayton Hess, Lawrence university. "You're on the edge, and you could hit a tree or fall off your bike at any time."
Hess is just one of many KU students who find Lawrence a great area to ride mountain bikes.
Davis helps take care of a private trail called Hastie Hill. He said the owners of the land like the idea of people riding on their land, but require permission before any riding is done.
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Glen Roussel, a bike mechanic at Rick's Bike Shop, 916 Massachusetts St., said Lawrence had two main trails.
"There are ticks and poison ivy in the summer, so I try to stay away." Roussel said.
Experts, like Roussel and Davis, agree that any trail riding should be done in a responsible manner. With the increasing popularity of riding in Lawrence, they want to make sure trails receive proper treatment.
Gravel roads are especially popular in the summer and when the regular trails are too wet.
"The two formal trails in town are the levee and Clinton State Park." he said.
Roussel said that the levee trail, located on the north side of the Kansas River, was the easier and shorter of the two, and that the Clinton trail had more rocks, was more technically advanced and was about 15 miles long.
Maps to Clinton trails can be found at local bike shops and at Clinton State Park.
"There were more students than I've ever seen in the spring." Davis said. "I think it's great, but we want to make sure people are aware."
Roussel said an important guideline was to avoid wet trails.
"Riding on a wet trail will cause erosion and degrade your bike," he said.
Carl Ringler, coordinator for the Kansas Trail Commission for the Clinton Lake trails, agreed.
I recommend, number one, stay off wet trails.
Ringer said, "Be self-sufficient with a patch kit, pump,
water bottles and a helmet. A helmet is very important.
Be cautious to other trail users and be careful around
blind corners."
The bike shops where Davis and Roussel work also help to make trail riding safe in Lawrence. Rick's offers occasional nighttime rides and Sunflower has a
trail report which lists the conditions on local trails. But the support doesn't there.
Both shods also trv to cultivate an open atmosphere so that customers are not afraid to ask questions.
Davis recommends following the rules established by the International Mountain Biking Association. Rules are available at local bike shops and at the trailhead at Clinton
"We feel that cyclists are a big family, and we want to help them out," Roussel said.
Popularity of country dancing growing
Country bars offer dancing lessons
By Christy Shirk
It's 8:30 on a Thursday night. Tami McGeeney is dressed in white boot-cut jeans that tightly hug every curve in her lower body. She has on her black cowboy boots, which perfectly match her black cowboy hat, and every eye in the Cadillac Ranch is following her.
"OK y'all' Step-ball-change, step-ball-challenge, turn!" she yells to the almost 40 people who have come to learn one of the many line dances, the tush-push.
But line dances are not the only lessons on the agenda. Tonight the group will learn to two-step, three step, 10-step and swing dance.
Special to the Kansar
ing music in the new 'young country', " said Lawrence senior Patrick Himmelburg, a bartender at the Ranch.
Young country music includes such performers as Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood, Wynonna Judd and Clint Black. Their music is often played on FM radio stations such as 104.3
"She'll teach you anything you want to learn," said Jon Davis, the Ranch owner. "And she walks through it step-by-step. It's pretty easy."
The disc jockey has just put on Toby Keith's "1 Should Have Been a Cowboy," and the fast twangy beat has got everyone tapping their toes.
Eric Hess, Leawood senior, said he never liked country music until he began frequenting the Cadillac Ranch.
"The crowd ranges from college greeks, to blue-collar folks, to white-collar yuppies, and, of course, to true-blooded cowboys," said bartender Trina Santos, Wichita senior.
The Cadillac Ranch is just one of the thousands of country-western bars that have opened across the country.
As on every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 8:30 p.m., the Cadillac Ranch is giving free dance lessons to anyone 21-years-old or older.
The lights are dim, the music is loud and those who aren't on the dance floor are gathered around one of the two bars to watch.
Ine lack of quality in recent Top 40 music has swayed both radio stations and music listeners to the pop-sound.
"I started hanging out there because all of my friends were going and the music really grew on me," Hess said.
Davis estimates that 30 percent of his clientele at the Cadillac Ranch are KU students.
Hess also said that country dancing is a great way to meet people.
It's become the most popular place in town."
"the dancing gives you a way to break the ice with a girl." Hess said.
Sarah Frazier, Starley senior, said that country dancing was a great thing to do on a date because the steps were easy and fun to learn.
"When you're out on a date, country dancing is perfect because you have a partner and any one can do it." Frazier said.
Sidewinder's Bar is Lawrence's newest country-western addition.
Like the Cadillac Ranch, Sidewinder's plays young country and gives free dance lessons, said Phil Hergules, manager of Sidewinder's.
"The DJ will play mostly young country music with an occasional rock song." Hercules said.
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KULIFE
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wildlife abundant at Clinton Lake
Continued from Page 1.
With eight miles of hiking and biking trails, another 3.5-mile cross-country ski trail, four boat ramps and numerous fishing holes, people from around the region visit the lake.
"It's heavily used by people in the Kansas City metropolitan areas," said Mary Butterbrodt, office assistant at the state park. "We even have people come down from Nebraska and Iowa to fish."
Since most college students lack a boat to fish in the deeper portions of the lake, the Clinton Marina in the state park rents boats by the hour or by the day. Fishing boats rent for $10 per hour or $50 per day; pontoon boats rent for $25 per hour or $125 per day; and canoes rent for $6 per hour or $30 per day.
Additionally. The Pub, a restaurant in the marina, offers dinner from the menu on Friday and Saturday nights
Wildlife is abundant in the wooded land surrounding the lake, providing an ideal spot for hunters. Between 9,000-10,000 acres have been designated as hunting grounds, and a portion of that is only open to bow hunting because of the proximity to hiking trails.
One area that is off-limits to hunters, who face a stiff federal fine or imprisonment for a single violation, is just south of the town of Clinton, where a pair of bald eagles build their nest every October.
"They are scattered about the park during the summer, but during nesting season they're near the nest. Rhoades sad."
The corps has built a parking area, a gravel path leading to the nest, and a perimeter of grass.
Some of the entertainment options,
however, are not all natural. Below
the dam is the Jayhawk International
Airport, a grass runway lift-suited for
a Boeing 747 or even a two-seater
Cessna.
The corps has leased land to the Jayhawk Modelmaster Club, a group of about 50 people who fly tiny, remote-control planes that whiz overhead at speeds up to 120 mph.
"I suppose there's a little feeling like a kid in it," sad Bardall Ballard.
member of the club. "But it's a great hobby that gets you outside in the fresh air and sunshine."
Although anyone can use the field, everyone must have model airplane insurance. Ballard said joining the club would help with individual insurance costs and help people learn to fly their planes.
"You need to go out to the field, meet some of the people and get advice on technique and equipment," he said.
Finding something to do at Clinton Lake doesn't have to involve a fishing pole or a pair of hiking boots.
Some people like to just sit at the edge of the pier on the dam, overlooking the lake and hearing the water lap below.
Susan Armbruster, Lawrence senior, said she came out to the lake to find peace.
"I take my dogs out here and I don't have to worry about work or the stupid phone ringing," she said. "I go clear out my head and get some sun. I like the scenery from up here, sitting over the water. I like it up here."
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Above: A mast sail boat sits in a cove, behind the main dock area, on Clinton Lake.
Left: Masts of boats create a pattern at the main docking area at Clinton Lake.
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KULIFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7C
Bars offer local showcase College audiences flock to hear live music
By Angelique Lower
Special to the Kansan
Lawrence may not have the distinct sound of Seattle grunge music, but in a town that is diverse as Lawrence, the music scene is hot.
win the last few years local bands such as Paw, Stick, Salty Iguanas and Baghdad Jones have gained growing popularity and recording contracts. A main contributor in the bands success has been the bars around town that gave them a chance to show their stuff.
Mark Smiir, lead singer for Stick and former rhythm guitarist for Kill Whitey said, "The Bottleneck and The Crossing helped us gain recognition in Lawrence. I think Lawrence is lucky because practically everyone 18 to 25 is in some kind of band and can play anywhere. There's one kind of everything in this town except polka."
Some of the bars in town that feature local bands are The Jazzhaus, hide-away, Hockenbury's Tavern, The Bottleneck and The Crossing. Most of the bars have to work in order to keep their college audience. Even though there is usually a cover charge to see the bands, specials on drinks are the incentive to bring students in.
Angelique Lower / KANSAN
Students have a variety of reasons of what factor brings them to a particular bar and what keeps them coming back.
Brett Hattaway, Lawrence law student said, "I come to the Jazzhaus all the time. I come for the music and it's a nice change of pace from the school routine."
John Bowell, a junior from Overland Park studying Liberal Arts had different incentives that brought him out to local bars. "It's cheap beer on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday," he said. "And good music the rest of the week."
Rick McNeely, owner of The Jdzhazzan said. "There is always a drink special here, never a plastic cup or an aluminum can. We know Lawrence is a college town without a lot of money so we try to keep the prices down."
ADY
Most of the local bars try to keep the cover charge less than $6 to see a band. The hide-away, a bar that opened last month, has no set group or type of music they try to book and charge $2 or $3 for local bands and $4 or $5 for national acts.
"We like to have smaller bands that are up and coming and also national acts that are touring the state," said Sydney Batte, co-owner of the hide-away.
The bar owners of Lawrence have high aspirations for the local bands and if a band does make it big, the proprietors hope that the band will come back and pay homage to the places where the band launched its career.
Right Drummer Tim Mohn and bass guitarist. Darrel Brannock of Stick perform at the hide-away. 106 North Park St.
SUNDAY, JULY 28TH
1974
Below: Saty
liganas leads
singer Barry
Osborne plays at
Hockenbury's
Tavern, 1016
Massachusetts
St.
Chris Batte, co-owner of the hide-away said. "Lawrence has a great music scene with good local bands. Lawrence's name will always be thrown in as having a good reputation on the band network."
Angelique Lower / KANSAN
**Above:** Mark Smiri, lead singer of Stick, performs at the hide-away. The local band has a contract with Anista Records.
The Beatles
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
Right: Rick McNeely, seated second from right and owner of The Jazzhaus 926 % Massachussetts St., performs with The Jazzhaus Big Band.
J
Angelique Lower / KANSAN
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Revitalization tries to bring back Hollywood glory days
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES—As surely as the swallows return to Capistrano, millions of camera-toting tourists swarm Hollywood Boulevard in summer to touch the magic of movieland.
They come from around the world where it is said that two American words are universally spoken: "OK" and "Hollywood."
"When people come to Los Angeles and you ask them what they want to see, they always say 'Hollywood,' a tour operator said.
out fans who fill the front of Mann's — formerly Grauman's — Chinese Theater day and night, carefully fitting their feet into footprints of the greats, usually leave the movie capital disappointed.
Alas, the glory days of the Hollywood district are gone. Kleg lights rarely illuminate the sky for movie premiers, and the great nightclubs of decades past have yielded to discos and strip joints.
The stars themselves now frequent Beverly Hills and Malibu. Now there are only homeless people, prostitutes and drug dealers on the streets of Hollywood.
Moving to Malibu
"Statistics show that 20 million people come to Hollywood Boulevard every year, but they don't stay," said Phyllis Caskey. "They look at the footprints and the stars on the sidewalk, and then they go spend their money in other parts of town."
But Caskey, guding light of the $45 million Hollywood Entertainment Museum project, and others who put the tourist traffic figure as high as 45 million, said that was changing. After decades of moribund leadership and faltering projects, the rebirth of Hollywood could be at hand.
With fingers crossed and money in the bank, Hollywood is ready to welcome such projects as the Hollywood Entertainment Museum, the American Cinematheque, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions and the Center for Photographic Studies.
"It's obvious that Hollywood Boulevard needs help," said Cinemaatheme Director Barbara Smith, whose project would occupy the landmark Egyptian Theater and provide activities including movie marathons and screenings of historical films
"This is help that would be meaningful," she said. "Hollywood Boulevard would become a really fun place to go."
A "Live on Hollywood" program.
launched in June, has added open air markets, street performers and historic walking tours to Hollywood. Planners envision sidewalk cafes and fine restaurants replacing electronics stores and fast food stands. Strolling security guards are in place as the first step toward a safe new boulevard.
"This industry is the image we send around the world of this country. Our Hollywood culture is celebrated all over the world. It has to be celebrated here," Caskey said. "It's an important economic resource for the city as the airport and the harbor."
In the midst of California's worst economic slump in decades, Caskey sees Hollywood redevelopment as a key to recovery.
"If apace is gone, you have to look at entertainment and tourism," she said. "If you want to create jobs, the No. 1 employer of entry level jobs in California is tourism Hollywood is the key."
Why has it taken so long? Ask the entertainment industry. Historically, there has been little investment in Hollywood from the business that stands to gain the most from sprucing it up.
The exceptions are Paramount Pictures, which renovated its own studio in central Hollywood and helped finance the museum project, and Disney Studios, which spent millions refurbishing the historic El Capitan theater on Hollywood Boulevard.
A long time coming
Hollywood, which is actually a part of the city of Los Angeles, has been slated for economic redevelopment since 1986. At that time the Community Redevelopment Agency adopted a plan and developers rushed in with designs to demolish buildings and put up show theater and restaurant complexes.
The largest project, the $250 million Hollywood Promenade, was planned by developer Melvin Simon to cover four acres near the Chinese theater. It would have housed the American Cinemahetique, the Entertainment Museum, shops, restaurants and movie theaters. No sooner was a ground-breaking party conducted than a roadblock was thrown up by a small citizens group which filed suit against CRA protesting the entire Hollywood plan.
The case took five years to wind through courts and, in the interim, economic bad times set in. The Simon company felt the pinch and asked for city assistance. Just as new plans
were being drawn, CRA spokesman Don Sprik recalls. Los Angeles was struck by the 1992 riots and a devastating budget crisis. The Promenade was abandoned.
"If the lawsuit hasn't been filed, the project would have happened," said Michael Dubin, a member of Korwasser and Friedman, the only development firm to successfully complete a new project, the Galaxy complex of movies and shops on Hollywood Boulevard.
"So many things happened." Duban said. "The roots happened, which really hurt Hollywood. The Boulevard still hasn't recovered. Then we had a mayoral election in which one candidate put Hollywood in a negative light saying what hadn't been done rather than what has been done."
No 'Planet'in Hollywood
that candidate, Richard Riordan,
won election over Hollywood's two-
term councilman, Mike Woo, whose
failure to complete the Promenade
overshadowed accomplishments
including the Galaxy, a highly suc-
cessful outdoor Hollywood Farmers
Market and a new, cleaner Cinema
District with recently planted leafy
trees.
Riordan focused on Hollywood's high crime rate, a tactic Dubin condemns as unforgivable.
"How do you entree to come to Hollywood when all they've beard is negative press from Rohrand?" he said. "I'd like to tell him that he decimated Hollywood's hopes of getting any new tenants."
Dubin said he was close to signing the upscale Planet Hollywood restaurant for the Galaxy when Riordan's campaign rhetoric hit. The restaurant chain, owned by a conglomerate of movie stars, pulled out.
Instead, the Galaxy now houses the Hollywood Yacht Club, a large, noisy night club eating to the MTV crowd.
"It's ironic," he said. "There's a Planet Hollywood in New York; there's one in Florida, but there's no Planet Hollywood in Hollywood."
Still, progress is being made, said Christine Essel, a Paranam Pictures executive who represents Hollywood on the CRA board. She said CRA has committed $4.4 million to immediate improvements.
A possible glitch could be the Metrorail subway project, which will bring underground transportation to Hollywood but will entail years of construction likely to obstruct traffic and eliminate parking.
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Wednesday, August 18, 1993
9C
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'An Affair to Remember' lives on
Hit 'Sleepless in Seattle' based on classic film
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — So you've seen "Sleepless in Seattle" and you're thinking about checking out "An Affair to Remember," that old Cary Grant-Deborah Kerr movie Meg Ryan and the other women in "Sleepless" keep sobbing over.
A couple of warnings
First of all, better get in line. Block-buster Video, a national chain, says people all over the country are renting it. Also, some scenes have enough saccharin to kill off a pack of laboratory animals. Even world-class weepers may sympathize with the men in "Sleepless" who would just as soon watch "The Dirty Dozen."
"This isn't like 'It Happened One Night,' when you go back to it and you're flabbergasted that every single moment is great, just as you remember it," said "Sleepless" director Nora Ephron. "This is . . . a movie you have memories about."
"Ican usually hang in for a lot longer with romantic movies than a lot of guys. However, I thought it was an incredibly sappy movie," said Jeff Arch, who came up with the story for "Sleepless" and was one of three screenplay writers.
But what was it about this film that made Ryan's character watch it again and again, that drove her into living
out the central plot twist by arranging to meet Tom Hanks on the top of the Empire State Building?
"An Affair to Remember." released in 1957, is actually of interest.
Cary Grant
a vintage classic romantic comedy, "Love Affair." The 1930 film starred Charles Boyer and Irene Dunne as a European playboy and a New York woman who have a shipboard romance and then promise to meet at the top of the Empire State Building.
Boyer arrives on time, but doesn't know Dunnie was hit by a car on her way to see him. Paralyzed from the waist down, she's so afraid of how he'll feel about her she doesn't call, leading him to believe he's been jilted.
The film was a great success and received Academy Award nominations for best picture, best actress and best writing. Sentimentality was relieved by scenes such as the starry night Dunne tells Boyer her father's philosophy: "Just keep on wishing, and cares will go. Dreamers tells us dreams come true." She then paused, and added, "Of course, my father was a drunk."
But director Leo McCarey was a far more serious man when he decided to resurrect "Love Affair" nearly 20 years later. The basic plot is unchanged, but pay close attention: McCarey, who had gone on to make "Gong My Way" and "The Bells of St.
Mary," has a message that gives, new meaning to living happily ever after.
At times, it's subtle, like the way Kerr keeps referring to the Empire State Building as "the nearest thing to
PABU LALI
Tom Hanks
heaven" or compare a country villa to the Garden of Eden. At times, you may feel someone spliced in "The 700 Club." Just listen to that children's choir sing "He Knows You Inside Out." Just watch those sweet, young faces warning sinners, "Look out, you may sizzle down below."
"That's the part I sort of fast forward through," Ephron said. "I can't stand any of that stuff."
There is a chapel on the grounds that Kerr enters. She kneels and solemnly bows her head. Grant entrists, knells and bows his head, too. Both are still for a few moments. Kerr then gets up, crosses herself and leaves. Grant gets up, starts to cross himself, but ends up straightening his tie.
Comedy and religion come together most oddly when Kerr joins Grant on a visit to his grandmother. An oddity as well. Grant was 53 in real life; in the film, his grandmother was supposed to be 82.
"An Affair to Remember" was a hit, but critics had mixed reactions. Time magazine called it a "saccharin trifle," while the Los Angeles Times said it was "pleasurable" and "bound to
evoke many tears . . . " McCarey him
self later said he preferred "Love
Affair."
"Everyone believes it's a much better movie," Ephron said of the Boyer-Dume film, "but it doesn't have Cary Grant in it."
In 1909, Arch came up with the story for "Sleepless in Seattle." He imagined a final scene in which Ryan and Hanks meet at the top of the Empire State Building, then realized he had gotten the idea from "An Affair to Remember."
Ephron, who remembered "bubbering and wheezing and whooping" when she first saw "An Affair to Remember," wanted to make another point. She believed the film was a classic women's picture, a shameless romance women fall for even when they know they shouldn't.
"I can watch it over and over and over," Ephron said. "When we were shooting 'Sleepless,' we'd watch the last 10 minutes of the film and within eight minutes everybody would be crying — if they were girls."
And if they were men?
"My husband (writer Nick Pleggi) left the room. Tom Hanks, who could leave the room, made it clear by a number of unbelievably derisive noises what he felt about this," Ephron said.
"It's like a lot of those 1930s movies, not a 1960s movie," Ephron said. "It's a women's weeper that is full of the kind of insane abnegation that makes no sense whatsoever to a modern audience. Why does this woman not call him?" Because it's a masochistic fantasy, that why?
TV now goes wherever the viewer goes
Virtual Vision puts television screen on tip of the nose
The Associated Press
Those days are gone forever. Now the television screen is ON my nose.
What's more, where my nose goes, the television comes with it.
NEW YORK — My mother used to say, "Don't sit there with your nose against the TV screen."
This step forward, if that's what it is, is thanks to the "Sport" system, introduced this summer by Virtual Vision Inc., a new company based in Redmond, Wash.
Here's how the gadget works: A wraparound vork worn like sunglasses houses a thumbnail-size, liquid-crystal display nucked into the frame. This eye wear plugs into a belt-pack worn at the waist, which accommodates a rechargeable battery as well as an antenna. Along with picking up broadcast programs, the Virtual Vision "Sport" can be attached to cable or a videocassette recorder.
what the company calls "personal projection TV."
Ear plugs in, you're experiencing
It's available for about $900 through the Sharper Image and Hammacher Schlemmer catalogs, as well as from specialty retailers in major cities.
Note, this is not "virtual reality," which transports you through sight and sound to another realm. Virtual Vision's rig does the opposite: It drapes nonstop television across the same old realm you've always occupied
As simply as shifting your attention between near and far while wearing bifocals, you see television as you roam the world — and you see the world, too.
1 did.
Standing knee-deep in a river that until Virtual Vision used to be away from it all, I watched children dive off a bank into the current — and at the same time watched a documentary on starving children in Cambodia.
Back in Manhattan, N.Y. I picked up a slice at the corner pizzeria, and picked up "Cheers" while I ate on the run.
In bed, I watched David Letterman, while my wife slept undisturbed. Clearly Virtual Vision could save a
marriage, and break one up, too.
I even tried jogging with the thing, though I don't recommend it, especially during a heat wave.
When the signal was strong, the picture was remarkably clear. I could read on-screen how the Home Shopping Channel's Kanchanaburi sapphire ring could be had for just $299.9 However, I was walking in the countryside at that moment, and I had no cellular phone with which to place my order.
For anyone old enough to remember when a "portable" TV was one a steroid junkie could maybe tote without a hand truck, Virtual Vision's tiny device is truly remarkable for finally setting the couch potato free. Behold the spuds on the run!
But portability isn't really the news. What is most striking about Virtual Vision's breakthrough is the removal of one last distinction between living life and tuning it in. This may be the ultimate integration of video and flesh-and-blood — at least, until science implants televisions in our noggins.
In this state of virtual oneness, you can finally look someone in the eye without missing a moment of Oprah.
"Socialize with people instead of having your eyes glued to a conventional screen," the user's guide said.
But sitting in Central Park, I watched John Chancellor's final "NBC Nightly News" commentary as he spoke of how people are more alienated from one another than they used to be. I realized that, yes, I felt alienated at that moment — and pleasantly so. Except that other people kept looking at me. The Robocop-like visor draws its share of attention.
Alienation and funny looks from strangers are only the beginning. The user's guide includes a long list of precautions. Don't drive a car or operate a skateboard. Don't play contact sports. Take care not to poke others with your antenna.
Though it does not come up in the user's guide, another danger could be that by watching real life and television at the same time, you end up doing neither very well. You see all, but you might see nothing.
"Call me old-fashioned," my friend Roger said, "but I don't want to wear a TV on my head."
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Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Flying disc golf is climbing fast
10
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
The relaxing game draws participants to Lawrence park
By Kelly Caffrey Special to the Kansan
"Tee off and fly freely!" reads the flying disc golf information board at Centennial Park, Ninth Street and Rockledge Road.
Centennial Park offers the only course in Lawrence for disc golf, a sport played like the traditional game of golf with a new spin to it. Like golf it has 18 holes, but instead of putting a ball into a tiny hole, a flying disc is tossed into a "disc-pole-hole."
The "disc-pole-hole" consists of a metal pole about 3 feet tall, with a chain-link, steel basket encompassing the top of the pole.
The object of disc golf is to toss the disc into the basket using the least amount of throws possible.
Centennial Park has a par-3 course, and the distance between the tee-off point and the holes is between 250 and 350 yards.
Jimmy Powers, Leawood senior, said he enjoyed playing disc golf because it was different.
"Compared to most sports, disc golf is a pretty relaxed game," Powers said. "You can walk through the course or run through it, depending on how much exercise you want to get."
Disc golf does require some skill, however. Players must at least know how to throw a flying disc
Jim Shinkle, Winnetka, III., senior, said skill levels were not important.
"It takes practice to be really good, but to play disc golf you don't have to be an expert," Shinkle said.
The course is maintained by the Lawrence Flying Disc Club. To add variety, the club tries to change the location of holes once a month.
Kay Cullman, Overland Park junior, said she liked the frequent course modifications.
"Changing the course frequently keeps the game challenging because there are always different obstacles to overcome," Cullinan said.
Missy Hankemeyer, St. Louis senior, sad trees were the biggest obstacle for her.
Although she has played only once. Hankemey
er said she had had a good time.
"It was a lot of fun, only my Frisbee kept flying into the trees and sitting stuck," she said.
into the trees and getting stuck, she said.
Discs designed specifically for the sport are available for the more advanced disc golf. Much like traditional golf, there are drivers and putters, depending on size and weight of the disc. The discs can be purchased in most sporting good stores and cost about $7.
Mike Hatcher
Above: Clark Onwick, Overland Park resident, plays disc golf at Centennial Park. Orwick is a traveling performer with Renaissance festivals who plays in disc golf tournaments in his spare time.
For more information on disc golf, consult the rules and information board at Centennial Park. The course is free and open to the public.
Flying lessons good for students
By Stacy Kunstel
Special to the Kansan
Learning to fly a plane may not seem like an easy, low-risk hobby, but flight instructor Rod Mohl, flight instructor for Lawrence Air Services, Inc., said it was a skill just about anyone can learn.
"Anytime you're not at home in your easy chair there's a risk involved," said Mohl. "We're in motion in a plane, but there's hardly any danger in it at all."
"Flying is more difficult than driving a car, but not much. Flying is comprehending three dimensions — up, down, and bank, not just fast and slow."
Mohl received his pilot certification when he was 20 and considers college students the ideal age for flight instruction.
"At that age the students are in their learning prime, and the eye-hand coordination is easier to develop than if you are much older," said Mohl.
Over 100 takeoffs and landings are practiced throughout the course. Mohl said landing the plane usually takes the most practice for beginners, and it is one of the most emphasized skills.
"To complete the course within six months you have to take lessons two to three times a week," said Mohl. "Taking the course once a week for a year gives you more time to become accustomed to fiving."
A private pilot's license is recognized by the Federal Aviation Association and valid in all states. Pilots must pass a physical exam, a written exam, complete 20 hours of flying with an instructor and 20 hours of solo flying. Mohl said that hands-on instruction began with the first lesson.
Lessons are given by appointment at the Lawrence Airport in a Cessna 152, a two-seat plane used for pilot training. The course can be completed in four to six months for about $2300, but Mohl suggests a slower pace.
Mohl said there had been one accident during a landing but the only damage to the plane was bent wings.
"Landing isn't all that difficult. It's like riding a bike," said Mohl. "You develop skills, judgments and reactions, and those skills develop more with experience."
Pilot certification does not allow complete freedom to fly, however. Those who complete the course can fly only in good weather and cannot be paid for flying services. To do these things, a pilot must earn a commercial license.
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KULIFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday. August 18, 1993
11C
At Liberty Hall, what's different makes it unique
By Angelique L. Lower Special to the Kansan
Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts, is one of the most unique entertainment buildings in Lawrence
It combines a video rental and two theaters, one that features alternative movies and another that can be rented for private functions.
Tim Griffith, general theater manager, said the hilled prided itself on bring the other alternative movie theater in the city.
"If it weren't for us, these types of films would never be seen in Lawrence." Griffith said.
Jeff Johnston, movie manager at Liberty, said people could expect a distinct atmosphere at the theater.
"Liberty Hall combines a variety of venues that some may not associate together," Johnston said. "If they're interested in one particular genre they may not connect it to Liberty Hall. If someone comes here for a concert, they have no idea we also rent movies."
In 1856, the hall became Lawrence's center for theatrical and musical entertainment, but in 1911 a backstage fire gutted the structure.
A new owner rebuild the hall in 1912 with a fireproof structure, and the building still stands today.
Griffith said "The Crying Game" had been a breakthrough for Liberty because the national media hype interested people in town to go see it.
"People realized it's not as different as other hints and opened people up for a new experience," he said. "It opened people's eyes to what else is here. A lot of those people have come back because they've realized there is an alternative to the mall movies."
Liberty is also known for its live events.
"Liberty was the first rock'n' roll house, and now everybody has their version of live music," Griffith said.
Cashiers at a local movie theater take money for movie tickets, Lawrence has several movie theaters which show first-run movies and video rental stores.
Many nationally known acts have passed through Liberty's doors, including Ice T., Skinny Puppy. The Sundays and Smashing Pumpkins. There is no north of Liberty towards the river, but
At one time there was nothing north of Liberty towards the river, but in the past three years the block has expanded into something unique
After a film at Liberty, a short walk down the street allows one the option to drink espresso at La Prima Tazza, have dinner at Free State Brewery or enjoy a night out at Quinton's Bar & Deli.
At Liberty, video rental is from noon to 11:30 p.m. Sunday through
Thursday and 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday through Saturday.
Movies are shown everyday but Christmas with varying times. The matinee costs $3 and other showings usually cost $4.25 for students and $4.75 for general admission.
Live events vary, so check your calendar.
Movie magic at budget prices
There are many methods to see favorite films
FUNERAL BANKING
Jim Wilcox / KANSAN
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Seeing movies can provide a great way to spend an evening or a good study break, but students with limited income may consider the price for first-run movie tickets a luxury.
Fortunately for those students on tight budgets, both KU and Lawrence provide inexpensive outlets to watching movies conveniently and cheaply.
The Lawrence Public Library offers the best price in town for getting movie videos: free. The library, 707 Vermont St., allows patrons to check up out to three feature videos for up to three days.
Viewers have a selection of over 2000 videos, said Wayne Mayo, director of the library.
"We order new videos all year long," May said. "We usually wait three or four months until the price of the current videos have dropped before buying new releases."
All that is required to check out videos is a current Lawrence Public Library card, Mayo said. To apply for a library card, KU students must bring in valid identification to the library.
Hastings also offers a good deal on rentals. Price range from 49 cents for older releases all week long to $1.49 for Monday through Thursday rentals of new releases, said Lewis Windham, Hastings store manager.
Unlike other video outlets, Windham said that Hastings does not require a credit card or deposit to become a member, just a current driver's license. The 99-cant membership fee gives customers the choice of 8,000 different titles in stock, he
Two other outlets for the cost-conscious video consumer are Liberty Hall Video, 644 Massachusetts St., and Hastings Books Music & Video in the Southwest Plaza at the corner of Iowa and 23rd streets.
said.
"We get most major new releases on Wednesday and Thursday," Windham said. "It's hard to say how soon we'll receive a movie after it stops playing in the theater, but for hit movies, it can be about six months."
For those video watchers wanting to save money and to rent more off-beat movies, Liberty Hall Video might be the ticket.
Manager Jill Johns said that Liberty Hall Video rented many of the current popular releases along with independent, foreign and art-house films.
New releases rent for $2 Monday through Thursday with older releases costing $150, said John. All Friday and Saturday rentals cost $3. The
store does require a $2 membership fee.
The true movie buff must not be satisfied with watching a big-screen production cut down to video form. All four of the first-run movie houses in Lawrence have matinee discounts available. The Cinema Twin at 31st and Iowa streets, offers a discount price of $1.25 for all movies, which have previously run at other theaters.
For those students who want to go to movies on campus and save money, they should consider taking in the films presented by the Student Union Activities. With a $35-a-year movie card, student cards have complete access to any of the almost 50 movies shown each semester at Woodruff
Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Shannon Scotton, who co-head the Spectrum Film Committee, said there were several special events planned for the fall semester.
"We're having an Asian Film Festival and a Women in Film week this October," Skelton said. "We will also debut six films to Lawrence next semester."
Among the films debuting at Woodruff are "Al Marichi," "Gas Food Lodging" and "Rain Without Thunder."
Those students not interested in purchasing a movie card may see individual films for $2.50 Tuesday through Thursday and $3 on Friday, Saturday, and the midnight movie.
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Wednesday, August 18, 1993
KU LIFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lied Center tunes for artists
Versatile venue readies for first season this fall
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
KU's Lied Center will bring a new sound to old friends.
The state of the-art acoustics built into Lied will lend themselves to the Kronos Quartet and performance artist Laurie Anderson, two artists who have played at KU before, sad Mary Kaiser-Caplan, director of public relations for Lied Center Series.
"They're old pals," she said. "We decided we wanted them to come back if possible."
The two acts are among several that the Lied Center Series will present in honor of its first year, Kaiser-Caplan said. Among the other nationally known entertainers brought in to begin Lied's career are Bobby McFerrin with the Kansas City Symphony.
the King's Singers, and the New York City Opera National Company in "Madame Butterfly."
Jeannie Mellinger, director of education at the Lied Center Series, said the year would begin with a production of "The Secret Garden," the musical that won three Tony Awards in 1991. She said the musical, which is the Broadway touring production, would be professional.
"They would not tour this out if they weren't sure it's a great production," she said.
She said that the Lied Center Series was also trying to arrange meetings between members of the show's production and theater students from both KU and area public schools. She said she hoped to bring in Phyllis Bixler, an expert on Frances Hodgson Burnett. Burnett wrote the book "The Secret Garden", which is the basis for the play. Lucy Simon, the musical composer, is another option, she said.
Part of the sound Lied will bring to "The Secret Garden" and other productions is due to curtains behind the walls, said Lee Say Lier, Lied's technical director. These curtains can be
"People who have come to our concerts in the past will be surprised what a treat it will be, from a sound standpoint."
Stephen Anderson Music and dance department head
Stephen Anderson
raised or lowered depending on the needs of the performer. Lied can then be "tuned" to each artist. For example, the acoustic curtains will probably be lowered for the King's Singers, who have a smaller sound than the amplified voice and instruments of McFerrin and the Kansas City Symphony.
"During a rehearsal, if it doesn't sound just right we'll adjust it," he said.
"People who have come to our concerts in the past will be surprised what a treat it will be, from a sound standpoint," he said.
Productions at Lied will not be limited to performers outside KU, said Stephen Anderson, head of KU's music and dance department. He said musical and dramatic performances by KU students and faculty would also benefit from Lied's acoustics.
Among the performances by KU students next year will be the University Symphony Orchestra, the University Dance Company, and a production of "The Grapes of Wrath" by the University Theatre Series, Vespers, KU's annual Christmas choral concert, will also be held at Lied.
Anderson said the new surroundings would only be secondary to the actual performances.
Fall 1993
Lied Center
"The Secret Garden." Sept. 29-Oct. 3
Lied Center Series, Wed-Sat 8 p.m..
Sat Sun matinees 2 p.m., Sunday 7
p.m.
Concert Wind Ensemble, Oct. 6, 7:30
p.m.
University Symphony Orchestra, Oct.
8. 7:30 q.m.
PERFORMANCE CALENDAR
Sanka Juku, Oct. 13, 8 p.m.
Guamen String Quartet, Oct. 17,
3:30 p.m.
KU Chairs, Concert Choir, University Singers, and Chamber Choir with Concert Worship Ensemble, Oct. 20,
7:30 p.m.
Opera singers Joyce Castle, David Halloway, Patricia Wise, Oct. 23, 8 p.m.
Benefit Concert for St. Lawrence
Cultural Student Center: Artur
Pizarro and Sequera Costa, pianos,
Oct. 31, 2:30 p.m.
San Francisco Symphony, Nov. 9.8 n.m.
University Symphony Orchestra, Nov.
7, 3:30 p.m.
Jazz Singers, Nov. 11, 7:30 p.m.
King's Singers, Nov. 14, 3:30 p.m.
Pretty Ugly Dance Company & Amanda Miller, Nov. 17, 8 p.m.
Concert Wind Ensemble, Nov. 22.
7:30 p.m.
University Band, Nov. 30, 7:30 p.m.
69th Annual Vespers, Dec. 5, 3:30 and
7:30 p.m.
Tulsa Ballet Theatre in "The Nutcracker," Dec. 10, 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
university Theatre Rally, Aug. 22, 7 p.m.
KU Theatre for Young People: "Step on a Crack," Sept. 15, 7 p.m.
"Assassins," book by John Weidman, music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, Oct. 15-17, 21-23, 8 p.m., 2:30 p.m. matinee on Oct. 17
"The Boys Next Door," by Tom Griffin
Nov. 12-14, 18-20, 8 p.m. except
2:30 p.m. matinee on Nov. 14
Holiday Concert: University Dance
Company, Dec 3-4, 8 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall
Swarthout Recital Hall
Faculty Recital: Susan Brashier,
Assoc. Capt. 20, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital. Susan Brown oboe, Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: John Boulton, flute.
Sept. 27, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: Larry Maxey, clarinet,
Oct 4, 7:30 p.m.
Tubafest Visiting Artists Recital, Oct.
7. 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: David Bushouse, born. Oct 11. 7:30 p.m.
Tubafest "Grand Recital," Oct. 14, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: Claude Frank, piano.
Oct. 24, 3:20 p.m.
Tubafest Faculty Recital, Nov. 1.
7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: Dan Gailey, saxophone, 7:30 p.m.
Undergraduate Music Honor Recital,
Oct, 27. 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: David Vining. trombone
7:30 p.m.
Tubafal Recital: Ku Tuba/Euphonium Consort, Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: Kansas Woodwinds,
Nov. 15, 7:30 p.m.
Special Theatre Production:
"Silence! The Court is in Session," by
Vijay Tendulkar, Nov. 20-21, 2:30
p.m.
Faculty Recital: Vince Gnojek, saxophone, Nov. 29, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: Michael Kimber, viola, Dec. 6, 7:30 p.m.
Inge Theatre
"An Evening with Sam," three short plays by Samuel Beckett, Sept. 30- Oct. 3, Oct. 5, 8 p.m.
University of Kansas Opera: "Old Maid and the Thief," by Giancarlo Menotti and "A Hand of Bridge," by Samuel Barber, Nov 3-6, 7:30 p.m. "Displaced Persons," by Ron and Ludvika Popenhagen, Dec 2-5, 7-9, 8 p.m.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
.
CAMPUS
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1993
Surviving at KU
Center helps new students adjust to the University
By Jess DeHaven Kansan staff writer
Where are my classes? What if I'm buried in homework? Exactly when in the semester will I go broke? AAAAHHHH!
ANXIETY
MATH 101
HUMIDITY
MONEY$
TRAFFIC
REGISTRATION
ENROLLMENT
SECTION D
For most students, returning to KU means seeing friends and moving into apartments, but for those who are new to the university, questions about basic survival can cause many nervous breakdowns.
Kathryn Kretschner, director of new student orientation, said many new students had concerns about how to get through registration.
"A lot of students want to know about fee completion, financial aid, picking up options and where to get parking permits," she said. "We seen many concerns about some of the most practical things."
Angela Latham, Shawnee junior, said that practical concerns could cause stress for new students.
"You want to know where parking is and how much it costs," she said. "All the parking rules are really annoying and complicated, and it can cause you a lot of stress."
Kretschner said Hawk Week activities could be helpful in introducing new students to KU.
new school year.
"I would encourage students to par-ticipate in as many Hawk Week activities as possible," she said.
"There are tours of the museums and libraries and also class schedule tours where we take students around campus and point out the buildings where their classes are located.
"The big thing is Traditions Night on Thursday," she said "If they really want to learn the traditions and how to wave the wheat, that's a great way for them to feel a part of KU."
Marshall Jackson, administrative assistant at the Student Assistance Center, said that knowing what resources were available to students was often helpful to them.
"The most important thing to know is that they have resources available to them if they just ask," he said. "Many times students hesitate to come forward because they think that they should know everything, but we don't expect them to."
nonexpert teacher
Academic success was another
common concern among students,
Kretschner said.
"There are several good ways to get ahead academically, including making use of the Student Assistance Center workshops," she said. "Attending class also is very important. If students think that that's a good time to sleep in, we strongly recommend against that."
Kretschmer said students often had concerns about professors, which could be alleviated by talking to the instructors.
"Getting in touch with professors is one of the most important things students can do to make themselves feel more comfortable," she said. "One
See SURVIVAL, Page 11.
Inquiring minds want to know ...
Kathryn Kretschmer, director of New Student Orientation, provides answers to a few commonly asked questions.
Students who did not pay all fees through mail in enrollment need to complete the process. Students with last names beginning A-O should complete the process at the Kansas Union from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Aug. 19, and those with last names beginning P-Z should attend 9 a.m.-moon, Aug. 20. Those who enrolled Aug. 16-19 should pay fees noon - 4
Flying high
p. m., Aug. 20. All students should update fail addresses from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Aug. 19 or 9 a.m.-noon, Aug. 20 at the Union.
How do I complete registration?
Where can I pick up my options?
How will I find my classes?
where can pick up my options
Information on where to pick up bus passes,
SUA move passes and sports passes will be
available Aug. 16-19 in the Kansas Union.
What if I need to add or drop a class?
What if I need to add or drop a class?
Appointments for add/drop are listed according to the last two digits of students' KUID numbers. A list of add/drop times is on page 23 of the Fall Timetable; however, all a.m. times listed should be p.m. and all p.m. times should be a.m.
Tours of campus will be conducted at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Aug. 18-20. Tours start at the Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall.
Aust of add/droptimes also is posted outside the Enrollment Center in Strong Hall.
On June 26, Antionette Nelson sped her car across campus and launched it off the edge of Mount Oread, a stunt that even Evil Kneivel never tried. For a summary of other summer news see page 8.
4) The car came to rest wedged between a tree and the northeast corner of Malott Hall. Nelson was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
4) The car came to rest wedged between a tree and the northeast corner of Malott Hall. Nelson was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
2) After clearing the sidewalk, the car flew through a tree, ripping off several branches.
3) The car landed in the grass, rolled through some bushes and ripped out a light pole.
1) Nelson's '86 Honda left the four foot wall and sailed 138 feet, completely clearing the Wescoe access road and the parallel sidewalk.
INSIDE
second-rate decorating
Non-traditional students encounter adversity
This week, returning students are prying fourth-generation couches out of compact cars and unrolling beerstained rugs. The ritual of apartment decorating on a low budget has begun.
This week, returning
Page 6.
Bv J.R. Clairborne
Freshmen coming to the University of Kansas this week are scurrying around worried about living arrangements, money and classes.
Kansan staff writer
But non-traditional and transfer students are facing more than the typical new student headaches.
For many non-traditional students, the adjustment of going back to school can be a tough transition, said Gerry Vernon, president of OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization. OAKS is made up of students who did not go directly to college from high school or are returning to finish a college degree.
Readjusting to classes and homework can take more than a semester for some, Vernon said. Vernon, Colby graduate student, came to the University to finish his undergraduate degree in 1989. He was 31 years old with a family.
Place family, school and work together
makes jugging very difficult to deal with," he said.
Lee Aderman, Des Moines, Iowa, graduate student, said that it was hard for some transfer and non-traditional students to balance their jobs and schoolwork.
Alderman, who started his undergraduate work at 22, took part in a survey conducted by KU graduate students that evaluated the needs of non-traditional students. He said the survey found that many of the students considered work and family more important than their classes.
Like Alderman, many of these students have families and don't give a second thought to missing class to be with a sick family member.
They have all these extra forces that traditional students don't have that pull them away from campus," Alderman said.
Despite the distractions, Vernon said, he said he thought the University had identified some of the needs of these students and offered services to help.
Entered services is the Student Assis-
One of those services is the Student Assis-
nurturers' services include sessions during New Student Orientation that focus on the needs of non-traditional and transfer students, he said.
tance Center in Strong Hall. The center helps non-traditional and transfer students meet their needs by offering assistance with matters such as age-related issues, commuting, child or dependent care and veteran and marital status.
Jefferson said the key to involvement at the University was to ask plenty of questions and pay attention to news of future campus events.
dentis, we said.
Sandra Jefferson, Overland Park senior in social welfare, said she avoided much of the confusion of adjusting to campus life by discussing problems with her teachers and taking advice from her daughter who attended Johnson County Community College with her.
"People were extremely helpful if you asked them," she said. "I can't get back to age 18 or 20, but I sure can find out what there is to offer there."
Support services
Where non-traditional and transfer students can get help:
Student Assistance Center — 133
Strong Hill. B44-4044
111 Caruth-O'Leary, 864-6448
Veteran Certification/Residency application — 121 Strong, 864-4472
Veterans Commission of Kansas — 745 Vermont St., 843-5233
OAKS—Non-traditional students organization — organizations and Activities Center, Kansas Union, 864-7317 KU independent Care Referral Service
Legal Services — 148 Burge Union,
864-5665
B138 Office of Minority Affairs — 145
Strong. 864-4351
New Student Orientation --- 45 Strong
864.4270
Office of Admission, evaluation of transfer work - 126 Strong, 864 5136
.
KANBAI
2D
Wednesday. August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Director offers information for women
Abortion issues focus of program
The aqua-colored office in Twente Hall is a dead giveaway.
By Katie Greenwald
Kansan staff writer
Its occupant won't settle for the norm
Alice Leberman, director of the baccalaureate program in the School of Social Welfare, activist, mentor, friend, wife and mother of two, laughs about her office.
"Everyone else has institutional beige," she says about the other offices in Twente. "I guess all I need to add to my office is a couple of pink flamingos."
She may laugh and joke a lot, but Lieberman, who has been at the University since 1988, takes her work seriously. In addition to teaching, she co-directs Options for Women, a non-University program that recruits and trains licensed social workers. The social workers provide counseling and information consistent with Kansas statutes on issues related to unplanned pregnancy.
Lieberman started the program last year with Liane Davis, associate dean of social welfare, in response to the gag rule that kept federally funded family planning clinics from discussing abortion with clients.
cusing abortion violations.
"We wanted the freedom to use the word," Lieberman says. "This is for women who both have and have not made choices about their reproductive futures. We have no interest in promoting abortion."
Lieberman says that such a free service is especially important in rural areas.
"We've helped quite a few women, and not all of them have chosen abortion."
"We focus on the rural areas because they have the toughest time locating people to help them," she says. "They just need professional guidance and support."
About 30 social workers participate in the program. The goal is to have one social worker for each of the 105 counties in Kansas.
Alice Lieberman is the director of the baccalaureate program in the School of Social Welfare and also is co-director of Options for Women, an organization that provides counseling for women with unplanned pregnancies.
Client referrals come from abortion clinics public health clinics and other agencies.
In early Jply, Lieberman and several other members of the Kansas Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers met with Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., to discuss the Freedom of Choice Act, Lieberman and Kassebaum have differing opinions about it.
Lieberman says Kassbeaum favors a 24-hour wait period before an abortion can be performed and parental notification in cases of teenage pregnancy.
--formed and parental notification in cases of teenage pregnancy.
kassebaum's idea behind parental notification is that it forces parents to take responsibility for the women, Lieberman says.
But Lieberman says the anti-abortion movement often defeats its purpose with the parental-notification clause.
ALICIA
"Quite often when they're forced to tell parents, parents push them to abortion even if they haven't made up their minds," she says.
Lieberman, who is an adviser for the KU ProChoice Coalition, says she thinks that it is important to let people make their own decisions when it comes to their reproductive futures.
"When we start telling people what they can or can't do with their bodies, we're no better than China and its one-child policy," she says.
--were what Rush Limbaugh's fans were called, asked if the woman knew how demeaning it was to call herself that. She said "ditttohead" made the woman sound as if she didn't have a mind of her own.
Lieberman and her identical twin, Mary, both agree that being a twin is difficult.
I nk people see you as competing with each other even when you're not," Alice Lieberman says.
That perception affected both of them for a while.
Mary Lieberman also is a social worker, but she did not get into the field until later.
"Alice is one of the few people I know who never spent one day of her life wondering what she was going to do," Mary Lieberman says. "She has exactly the life she wanted and planned."
And Alice leads the charge, Mary says.
"She has to be fighting for something," Mary Lieberman says. "It satisfies the part of her that has to go against the wind."
That is one reason Alice Lieberman got involved in social work. Her religion is another. She grew up Jewish in Texas.
The basis for Judaism - helping others and protecting people's dignity - leads many Jewish people into careers that serve others, Lieberman says.
Teaching is one such profession. Lieberman says she loves teaching because of the students.
"Undergraduates are exploring and testing new ideas, so you always know what they're thinking," she says.
Alice recently discovered that she could like someone with whom she completely disagreed
A young woman who called herself a "ditto-head" came up to Lieberman before class one day. She was worried that Lieberman, because she was in social work, might be too liberal.
Lieberman, upon hearing that "dittoheads"
"Oh, that just what we call ourselves," the woman said.
"I love my students," she says. "I adore them.
Even the ones that drive me crazy."
But Lieberman still likes her.
Laura Template, a friend and former student who now works for Social and Rehabilitation Services in Atchison, appreciated Lieberman's teaching style.
"She gave you a lot of information and she presented it in an entertaining way," Template says.
Vergie Meckfessel Anderson, a social worker at troquois Mental Health Center in Greensburg and a former student, says that Lieberman is very much an advocate.
She says Lieberman is very warm and caring. "Alice was concerned about the whole persuasion," she says.
"She is committed to try to bring about change for the better," Anderson says.
Lieberman and the School of Social Welfare advocate the strengths perspective.
"Social work historically has always looked at client problems as a pathology, as a sickness." Lieberman says.
The strengths perspective instead teaches students to find their strengths, as well as those of their clients, and to build on them. Lieberman credits her husband, Tom McLendon, for her ability to do this.
"I wouldn't be able to do half the things I do not for him," she says. "Tommy is very good about saying, 'You go do that and I'll take care of the fellas.'"
The "fellas" are their sons Ethan, 12, and Jared, 6.
in Donald, associate professor of social welfare, said family was very important to them, so they made the effort to find something that worked.
"We were lucky because there was that fit," he said. "We support each other."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
3D
ALWAYS COMPETITIVE PRICE OPTIONS & TERMS
34 YEARS
OF SOUND EXPERIENCE
AUDIO/VIDEO
"SPRING 1993"
BEST OF CLASS
AWARD WINNING DEALER
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AWARDS
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OVER 2000 AUDIO/VIDEO ENGINEERS HAVE SELECTED
OVER 2000 AUDIO/VIDEO ENGINEERS HAVE SELECTED "THE YEARS MOST SIGNIFICANT VALUES" CHOSEN ON THE BASIS OF:
1. Design & Engineering Excellence.
2. Sonic Integrity & Sound Fidelity.
3. Reliability Record of The Unit.
4. Manufacturer's Ability to Service.
5. "Value" Price Class vs. Performance.
SPEAKERS OF THE YEAR
TOP 10 BRANDS WINNING MODELS by $ CLASS
1. BOSTON ACU. PSB - (Alpha) Ea. 125.
2. KLIPSCH BOSTON - (HD-8) 150.
3. B & W SIGNET - (SL-260) 225.
4. SNELL KLIPSCH - (KG-4.2) 375.
5. MIRAGE SNELL - (TYPE-EIII) 525.
6. PARADIGM B & W - (DM-640) 800.
7. PSB KEF - (104.2) 1,250.
8. SIGNET MIRAGE - (3Si) 1,500.
9. MARTIN/LGN. ALON - (IV) 1,800.
10. ALON MARTIN/LOGAN - (QUEST) 2,250.
238-Manufacturers Considered
RECEIVERS OF THE YEAR
TOP 10 BRANDS WINNING MODELS by $ CLASS
1. DENON ONKYO - (TX-910) 250.
2. YAMAHA YAMAHA - (RX-360) 275.
3. SONY ES DENON - (DRA-345R) 325.
4. NAKAMICHI NAD - (701) 375.
5. ONKYO DENON - (DRA545R) 385.
6. NAD NAKAMICHI - (RE-3) 425.
7. KENWOOD NAD - (705) 500.
8. SONY YAMAHA - (RX-770) 575.
9. ROTEL DENON - (DRA-835R) 800.
10. PIONEER DENON - (DRA-1035R) 1,050.
41-Manufacturers Considered.
CASS DECKS OF THE YEAR
TOP 10 BRANDS WINNING MODELS by $ CLASS
1. NAKAMICHI ONKYO - (TA-201) (B/C/HX Pro) 250.
2. DENON NAKAMICHI (DR-3) (B/C/HX Pro) 425.
3. SONY ES SONY ES - (TC-K707ES) (3Hd) 489.
4. YAMAHA ONKYO - (TA-R301) (AUTO-R) 300.
5. ONKYO DENON - (DRR-730) (AUTO-R) 350.
6. NAD YAMAHA - (KX-R425) (AUTO-R) 400.
7. LUXMAN ONKYO - (TA-RW313) (DUAL-D) 275.
8. SONY YAMAHA - (KX-W262) (DUAL-D) 325.
9. H. KARDON DENON - (DRW-840) (DUAL-D) 425.
10. PHILIPS SONY - (TC-WR901ES) (DUAL-D) 650.
46-Manufacturers Considered.
CD PLAYER OF THE YEAR
TOP 10 BRANDS WINNING MODELS by $ CLASS
1. DENON ONKYO - (DX-710) 225.
2. YAMAHA DENON - (DCD-595) 275.
3. SONY ES NAD - (5000) 525.
4. CAL. AUDIO CAL-AUDIO - (ICON-MKII) 875.
5. ADCOM YAMAHA - (CDC-635) (5-DISC) 325.
6. NAD DENON - (DCM-340) (5-DISC) 350.
7. NAKAMICHI YAMAHA - (CDC-735) (5-DISC) 450.
8. ONKYO SONY ES - (CDP-C701ES) (5-DISC) 550.
9. LUXMAN ADCOM - (GCD-600) (5-DISC) 650.
10. SONY NAKAMICHI - (MB-2) (M-BANK) 850.
54-Manufacturers Considered.
A/V SURROUND OF THE YEAR
TOP 10 BRANDS WINNING MODELS by $ CLASS
1. YAMAHA ONKYO - (TX-SV313) 400.
2. DENON YAMAHA - (RXV-470) 475.
3. ONKYO DENON - (AVR-1000) 600.
4. NAKAMICHI SONY ES - (STR-GX69ES) 650.
5. SONY ES NAKAMICHI - (AV-2) 800.
6. LEXICON DENON - (AVR-2000) 850.
7. ADCOM YAMAHA - (RXV-870) 900.
8. PIONEER DENON - (AVR-3000) 1,325.
9. KENWOOD YAMAHA - (DSPA-2070) 1,850.
10. LUXMAN LEXICON - (CP-3) 2,775.
18-Manufacturers Considered.
PRODUCTS OF SPECIAL MERIT
TOP WINNERS WINNING MODELS by $ CLASS
VELODYNE SUBWOOFER - (F-1500) 1,500.
MITSUBISHI VIDEO TV MONITOR - (40") 4,500.
SONY XBRII VIDEO TV MONITOR - (32') 1,975.
DENON COMPACT SYS. - (D-80) 1,000.
YAMAHA COMPACT SYS. - (YST-99CD) 450.
CAL. AUDIO LAB CD PLAYER - (TERCET-MKII) 1,500.
DENON SURROUND AMP - (AVC-3030) 1,275.
TARA LABS INT. CONNECT - (QUANTUM CD) 65.
AUDIOQUEST SPEAKER CABLE - (CRYSTAL) 6.75ft
STRAIGHT WIRE MEGALINK DIGITAL 135.
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4D
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR
A Guide to Going Out
Classes don't start until Monday, so what are you going to do 'til then? Here's a list of what's going on through this weekend.
ku
HAWK WEEK
Wednesday
Student Employment Job Fair
— 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Kansas Union
Lounge
Lounge
Beach-n-Boulevard — 7-9 p.m. Wescoe Beach
Thursday
ter
Union Fest — 10 a.m. 3 p.m.
Plaza in front of Kansas Union Ice Cream Social — 5:30-6:15
p.m. Boots Adams Alumni Center
Friday
Traditions Night — 7 p.m.
Memorial Stadium
Rock-A-Hawk — 4-6 p.m. Templin Hall lawn
Saturday
Downtown Promotion Day
Downtown Promotion Day
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Downtown
Lawrence
Sunday
Opening Convocation — 3
n.m. Lied Center
Benchwarmers Sports Bar
LIVE MUSIC
Movie on the Hill — 9-11 p.m.
Campanile Hill
& Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St.
841-9111
5419111
Thursday — Turquoise Sol
Friday — Millhous Nixons
Saturday — Broken Inglish
Wednesday — Lonesome Hound Dogs
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
841-5483
Thursday and Friday — Tenderloin
The Crossing, 618 W. 12th St.
Saturday — Baghdad Jones
Thursday — One Leg Grue-
some.
832-0061
Friday — Draco Magnet Saturday — Danger Bob
1016 Massachusetts St.
865-4055
Hockenberry's Tavern,
Wednesday — Mountain
Clyde
Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
749-3320
Thursday — Motherwell
Friday — Nic Cosmos
Saturday — Room Full of Walters
HAWK WEEK
Thursday — Joe (7.40) Carrasco
Friday — Monterey Jack
Saturday — L.A.Ramblers
Sunday — Acoustic open microphone
HAWK WEEK
microphone
Varsity, 1015 Mas-
Movies through Thursday (Weekend times may change.)
sachuetset St.
841-5191
In the Line of Fire-R
5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Before 6 p.m., $3.25. After 6 p.m., $5. Seniors and children always $3.
Cinema Twin, 3110 Iowa St.
Cinema Twin, 3110 Iowa St
841-5191
Cliffhanger-R
9:40 p.m.
Indecent Proposal-R
2:45, 5:00, 7:30, 9:40
Aladdin-G
2:45, 5:00, 7:20
1:15,4:10,7:05,9:55
Dickinson, 2339 Iowa St.
$1.25 all times
The Fugitive-PG-13
1:30,4:20,7:15
The Secret Garden-G
0:05 4:20 7:00 D:30
Jurassic Park-PG-13
841-8600
1:20, 4:15, 7:10, 9:50
My Boyfriend's Back-PG 13
9:35 only
Jason Goes to Hell R
2:10, 4:45, 7:10, 9:45
Son in Law-PG-13
2:00, 4:30, 7:00
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa St.
841-5191
13
Robin Hood: Men in Tights PG 13
841-5191
The Firm R
2:15, 5:00, 8:00
Heart and Souls-PG-13
2:30, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
2:45, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
Free Willy-PG
2:30, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Sleepless in Seattle-PG
2:45, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
Before 6 p.m., $3. After 6
p.m., $5 for adults, $3 for children 12 and under.
Liberty Hall, 642 Mas-
sachusettts St.
749-1912
Much Ado About NothingPG
4:45, 7:15, 9:30
Like Water for Chocolate
4:30 Thursday only
The Story of Qui Ju-PG
7 p.m. Thursday only
Hard Boiled starts Friday
Before 6 p.m., $3.25. After 6 p.m., $4.75.
RECREATION
Robinson Recreation Center
864-3491
Clinton Lake State Park 842-8562
864-3491
Open 6 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Bicycle and hiking trail open every day. Camp grounds open through October.
Fishing boat rentals every day
7 a.m.-7 p.m. $10 an hour or
$50 a day
Clinton Lake Marina
749-3222
Putt-Putt Golf Course, 3107 Iowa St.
Wednesday through Saturday
10 a.m.-11 p.m. Sunday 11
a.m.-10 p.m.
Alvamar Golf & Country Club, 1800 Crossgate Drive 842-1907
Wednesday and Thursday
a.m.-dark
Closed Friday from 7 a.m..3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 6:30 a.m..dark
Alvamar Orchards Executive Golf Course, 3000 W. 15th St. 843-7456
Wednesday through Friday
7:30-dark
See ENTERTAINMENT, Page 5.
100
100
100
It Makes Cents!
We've Got Items To Fit Every Budget.
*Appliances
*Clothing
*Dishes
*Domestics
*Furniture
NEW MERCHANDISE DAILY!
NEW MERCHANDISE DAILY
The Salvation Army
Thriftstore
1818 Massachusetts
Available at
NOT JUST FOR BOWLING ANYMORE!
Kansas Union Jayhawk 7461 KANSAS CITY
• 864-3545 •
ARCADE
Kansas Union Jaybowl • Level 1 • Kansas Union
• 864-3545 •
ARCADE
bowling pin
The Jaybowl Recreation Center has something for everyone! Whether you want to sign up for a league, play video games, shoot a game of pool or go camping
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
for the weekend, you'l find it at the Kansas Union Jaybowl! Visit Wilderness Discovery now open in the Jaybowl!
841-7421
VISIONS
806 Massachusetts
Optical
Dispensary
Billiards Bowling Video Games Wilderness Discovery
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
for Driving
by BAUSCH & LOMB
The Etc.
Shop
TM
928 Massachusetts
Tropical Chair
Our Swivel Rocker is the Papasan that moves for relaxing comfort. Your choice of pad. Reg. $129.99. Sale $99.98.
Double Papasan with your choice of pad $19998 Reg. $249.99
This week at Pier 1, we're saving you a seat. And big money. With low sale prices on some of the most comfortable seating ever—our big, soft Papasan chairs. You owe it to yourself to come in for a test sit...you won't believe it! But you will believe the savings. Because all Papasans are on sale now at Pier 1.
...
100
save big
Our Papasan Chairs are built bigger and better than those offered by others. Handcrafted of stained rattan. Complete with your choice of pad. Reg. $129.99. Sale $99.98.
Chintz Pillows come in a great selection of colors and versatile sizes. 17" Reg.$7.99 Sale $6.38. 20" Reg.$9.99 Sale $7.98. 27" Reg.$12.99 Sale $14.38. All Chintz Pillows 20% off regular prices.
M M M
VISA
MAY14
Papasan Footstool
complements any Papasan. Choice of pad.
Reg. $39.99. Sale $29.98.
736 Massachusetts.
Pier1imports apparel store
Back to School Hours
thru Aug. 29
Mon-Fri 9:30-8:30
Sat 9:30-5:30
Sun 12-5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
5D
Entertainment
Continued from Page 4.
Saturday and Sunday 7 a.m.-dark
Twin Oaks Golf Complex,
K-10 and City Road 1057
542-1747
Wednesday through Sunday
10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Kansas Union Jaybowl,
Level 1, Kansas Union
864-3545
Wednesday and Thursday
— 9 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday — 9 a.m.-12 a.m.
Saturday — 12 p.m.-12
a.m.
Sunday — 12 p.m.-9 p.m.
Royal Crest Lanes, 9th and lowa streets
842.1234
Wednesday through Friday 9 a.m.-11 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday — 11 a.m.-12 a.m.
V
MUSEUMS
Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art
864-4710
8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday
- Saturday; noon - 5 p.m.
Sunday
Dyche Museum of Natural History
2014.45.40
864-4540
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday
Saturday; 1 p.m.-5 p.m.
Museum of Anthropology
Spooner Hall
864.4245
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday
Saturday; 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Sunday
Wilcox Classical Museum
103 Lippincott
864-3170
8:15 a.m. - noon and 1- 5 p.m. Wednesday - Friday
Clyde Tombaugh Observatory 500 Lindley
864-3166
9:00 a.m. Friday
8-9:30 p.m. Friday
■ Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St.
84141409
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Wednesday
Saturday; 1:30-4 p.m. Sunday
Talking about sex makes woman pass out
LEAD STORIES
A Cincinnati woman charged recently that a 42-year-old man sexually assaulted her after taking advantage of a medical condition that usually causes her to faint when she hears the word "sex." Allegedly, the man accosted her in her apartment building, uttered the magic word and then assaulted her after she fell to the floor. In a court appearance in July, the woman fainted twice when prosecutors used the word "sex" in descriptions of her condition.
■ Northwest Missouri Community College basketball coach Ed Corporal resigned in June after the St. Joseph News-Press reported that almost all of the breathtaking athletic credentials on his resume were false, most of them almost effortlessly disproved by checking easily accessible sports record books. Among the honors Corporal claimed were an NBA career with the New Jersey Nets, three straight years on the Southeastern Conference all-star basketball team (with Charles Barkley) and the University of Florida's "all-decade" team for the 1980s. When informed that none of the institutions had ever heard of him, Corporal was at first defiant: "Why they wouldn't have records of it, I don't know. I don't have any reason to make things up."
LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS
Four people were arrested in Sacramento, Calif., in January after they kidnapped a woman and threatened to kill her unless she entered her bank and withdrew money for them while they waited outside in a truck. Once inside the bank, the woman merely notified the security guard, who called police, who came and arrested the men.
In June, Hawthorne, Calif., police arrested Joseph Thomas Harper, 18, for robbing a Lawndale convenience store. He called them to report that his wallet, which police had found after he dropped it while fleeing the store, had been stolen. And in July, police found the wallet of George L. Klipola, 20, after he dropped it while allegedly rappelling down from a skylight to burglarize a Stroudsburg, Pa., jewelry store.
WEIRD
In June, a sheriff's bomb squad in Madison, Wis., alerted by a Valley Bank branch bulglar alarm, found a bottle containing nitroglycerin set to explode when connected to an electric detonator. Deputies concluded that the burglar had fled because the extension cord he had brought for the detonator had come up about three feet short of the nearest electrical outlet.
Boynton Beach, Fla., police believe that it was a drug-addicted burglar who broke into Nathan Radlich's house in May and stole a tackle box that contained the ashes of Radlich's late sister, Gertrude. Because more valuable items were not taken, police believe the burglar thought he had stumbled upon a cache of cocaine.
Christopher White, 22, was arrested in Boothwyn, Pa., in July and charged with burglary after police were summoned to the offices of a housing development in the middle of the night by a 911 operator. Police said White had attempted to dial a 900 sex service from the office but had inadvertently dialed 911, whose equipment automatically records the number from the calling phone.
Columbia, Mo., inmate Barry Rhodes, 35, escaped from the grounds of the Boone County Jail in June by jumping onto a John Deere tractor and driving past security guards at 15 mph. He was quickly captured.
Ray Douglas Thomas Jr. 37, was arrested in July in San Antonio and charged with the theft of 13 bags of potting soil from a builder's supply store. While being chased by police, Thomas tried to leap from the driver's seat of his moving car, got his sleeve caught in the door, was dragged 60 feet, fell free and was run over by the car's rear wheel, at which point police easily nabbed him.
ing to trace a thumbprint they thought would identify the person who burglarized the offices of Hayden Communications. The burglar made off with $75, but while in the office apparently took time out of play with Leslie Hayden's container of Silly Putty, in which the thumbprint was left.
William Gerald Fedorka, 44, was arrested in Fountain Valley, Calif., in July, shortly after he allegedly robbed a Bank of America. Fedorka dropped the bag of money when the chemical dye pack exploded; he then tried to escape by driving his distinctive pick-up onto the Riverside Freeway, which rush-hour traffic had turned into what the arresting police called a parking lot. Fedorka was easily spotted and apprehended.
THE RIGORS OF BURGLARY
Recently, several men were arrested after they fell asleep while allegedly committing burglaries. In June, Green Forest, Ark., police found Eddie Leon Spencer, 24, and Michael Shannon Bradley, 24, asleep in a car in the parking lot of a restaurant they had reportedly just burglarized.
In March, Brian Main, holed up in a house in Anaheim, Calif., after a bungled burglary attempt, fell asleep during a standoff with police and was arrested. In January, Daniel Marcos Sanchez, 26, was arrested in Glendale, Calif., after he was discovered asleep, surrounded by burglary tools, in the homeowner's car in the garage. Chad Eric Phillips, 18, was arrested in Bradner, Ohio, in March and charged with burglary after he fell asleep in a pickup he was reportedly trying to steal from a home.
Toronto police in June were try-
THE WEIRDO-AMERICAN COMMUNITY
Alexander Abraham Anderson, 41, was arrested for smashing large plate-glass windows with a sledgehammer at the studios of WTVT-TV in Tampa in June. Anderson said he was angry at the station for invading his privacy by entering his living room every day via the television set.
I DON'T THINK SO
In a July report on lawsuits brought against the Hooters bar and restaurant chain by wattresses charging sexual harassment by management, an Associated Press writer quoted Hooters attorneys and company officials as saying the name Hooters had nothing to do with women's breasts but referred to owl.
HE WORKS IN MYSTERIOUS WAYS
The Calvary Baptist Church in Salem, Va., had Harvey and Panline Richardson age 82 and 74, charged with trespassing when they tried to attend Sunday services in February. The feud started when the church denied the Richardsons, members for 39 years, the right to vote on church business because they had missed services for eight months beginning late year, mostly due to various illnesses.
In Phoenix, Ariz., in April, Paul Vernon Johnson, 26, stopped during his sexual molestation of a 13-year-old boy when the boy cried out, "Jehovah, help me." Johnson said he was once a Jehovah's Witness, and he regarded the boy's cry as an omen.
The Wilmington, N.C., Star News reported in April that some parents from Gaston County had demanded that Africa and Germany be removed from maps and globes in local classrooms because they believe those places are anti-Christian. They also called for the suppression of Greek letters from the curriculum because they believe their use constitutes an endorsement of homosexuality.
The London Daily Telegraph reported in November that the new state-of-the-art telescope operated by NASA and the Vatican Observatory in Arizona will be used to search distant galaxies for signs of intelligent life so, if any humans are discovered, the Catholic Church will be prepared to baptize them.
In June, the 40,000-member Christian Motorcyclists Association held its annual national fund-raiser, "Run for the Son," in Sedalia, Mo. MCA's purpose, said an organizer, is to ride
"the highways and byways to promote the gospel of Jesus Christ."
And later in June, the weekendlong "Christian Woodstock" rock music festival, "Creation 93," was held near Mount Union, Pa. It featured a "fringe stage" for punklike bands, which, wrote an Associated Press reporter, sounded like mainstream punk rock but, according to lyrics sheets, made clear Biblical references. Also in June, the Austin (Texas) American-Statesman profiled local Christian rock concert organizer Blanche Pall, who promotes heavy-metal acts like Mortification and constantly argues with ministers over whether the music is satanic.
A floating shrine in the Bocae River in The Philippines capsized in July, drowning more than 300 worshipers who had boarded it in prayer as part of the annual nine-day religious festival in the town of Bocae.
Oral Roberts University withdrew its City of Faith complex from the Tulsa, Okla., real estate market in June after failing to attract a buyer in more than a year and a half. The three towers (one 60 stories high, unusually tall for Tulsa), once ORU's medical school, were built after Roberts revealed that God told him to build it.
Postal carrier George Yoerger resigned in Moville, Iowa, in June after refusing to deliver copies of Time and Newsweek because the covers featured sexual themes.
TOUGH TIMES FOR MEN
after a three-month period, four men were reported to have suffered injuries to their genitals. In a reported incident in Manassas, Va., in June, a woman sliced off her husband's penis after he allegedly raped her. In Waynesville, N.C., in July, Cynthia Mason Gillett, 28, was charged with setting her husband's genitals on fire while he slept. In April, Jose Dogelio, 31, was shot in the penis by a woman he was "fashing" on a Dashmarinas, Philippines, street. And in Ransomville, N.Y., on July 4, a 28-year-old man was injured when a firecracker fell back to the ground and bounced up his shorts before exploding.
Tough issues addressed in 'Search for Bobby Fischer'
Rv Patricia Bibbv
Associated Press
"Searching for Bobby Fischer" is one of those rare, special movies that speaks to a myriad of tough issues in a tale that's intrinsically warm and entertaining.
What makes this film so refreshing is that it's not afraid to have heart and, at the same time, it doesn't assault the viewer with its message. There's no cloying sentimentality, just the lessons learned from the struggles of an exceptionally gifted 7-year-old boy, Josh Waltzkin.
based on the true story of Josh's discovery of his prodigious talent as a
chess player, the film loosely uses as its backdrop the mysterious disappearance of chess legend Bobby Fischer. The similarity between Josh's ascension as a prodigy and Fischer's are remarkable. Among other things, both lived in New York and successfully played speed chess at a very young age in Washington Square Park.
Josh, played by Max Pomerance,
making his acting debut, has an anie
command of the game and can reason
through numerous sequential moves
in his head without so much as touching
a piece. When he plays the park
veterans, some of whom finance their
vices with their chess earnings, Josh
can barely reach the board, nonetheless, he beats the men.
This brings whispers that Josh might be the next Bobby Fischer.
might be the next Bobby Peele. It's those stirrings that set the boy on a course of baldfaced competition, engineered in large part by his father, Fred (Joe Mantegna), his teacher, Bruce Pandolfi (Ben Kinglesley) and his park coach, Vinnie (Laurence Fishburn).
At first, Josh is an eager participant. What child couldn't want his father doting on him, constantly telling him that he's the best? And Pandolini weaves a mystical spell over the chess board, which he emphatically refers to as an art, not a game.
But as Josh climbs the tournament ranks, it's no longer clear who he is winning for — himself, his father or his teacher. And his odyssey becomes tainted with the downside of competition — the contempt for other players and the fear of faltering. And somewhere amid this is a kid who wants to play Clue and eat pizza.
"Searching for Bobby Fischer" spins its gold as it pits parents' sometimes impossible expectations of their children against the children's best interests.
This gentle, endearing story also would not ring as true if it weren't for Max Pomerance, who himself is a ranked chess player. With his sloe-
eyed stare, he seems to comprehend more than a boy's share of the complexities and sadness around him.
Another boy making his screen debut is Michael Nirenberg, who plays Josh's rival, Jonathan Poe. Michael also does a remarkable job at bringing a whole range of delicate emotions into play as a rather melancholy boy determined to win.
And Mantega is marvelous as the anguished and driven father who can telegraph more with his pursed lips than many actors can with their entire bodies. Bonnie Allen plays Josh's mother, Bonie Waitzkin, who often is at odds with her husband's ambitions for their son.
the Greenery
Parent's Special $35
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Restaurant
Jianqiang
Hangar #4
113 Beautifully appointed guest rooms
Hangar #4 Club, come in and enjoy your favorite beverage
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6D
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1
BEEF CRATE
Crate Creations Do-it-yourself shoppers can use everyday objects to transform rooms from drab to dynamic. Crates can be bookshelves, carrying baskets or catch-alls. Sheets draped over old furniture have new appeal, and plants bring life to dead space. Cinder blocks support any structure, from desks to beds to televisions and stereos.
- - - - -
Bottom-Dollar Decorating
Scavenged and cheap items can be building blocks to a humble abode
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
Joe Guerren, Leavenworth senior,
just moved into his new apartment.
Like most students, expensive furnishings were not in his budget.
"I used every resource possible to find my furniture and not buy it." Guerrein said. "I brought stuff from home, and I got my couch from my girlfriend's brother."
As students leave comfortable homes this week and arrive at less-than-elegant apartments, residence halls and houses in Lawrence, they begin their search for the best kind of furnishings and decorations — cheap ones.
Ultimately, that means being creative and resourceful.
When it comes to personalizing a
For instance, that lime-green low-seat that has been in the attic since 1971 is more aesthetically pleasing with a "101 Dalmatians" sheet draped over it.
In fact, "cover everything" is a general rule for decorating on a budget. Sheets can be excellent couch covers and table cloths. Fabric with ribbons make instant curtains.
Other students have painted and stenciled old dressers, tables and lamps. The drabbest rooms and furniture can be made to look new with sheets, fabric remnants and paint.
"We did up a bunch of pillars and blocks we'd found with marble and fleck-stone paint," said Julie Thies, Overland Park senior. "A lot of it's do-it-yourself."
"We use contact paper to border the windows and walls," said Thecheten Brown. Lake Quivira senior. "It's good for coverling bulletin boards and wastebaskets. You can also use wrapping paper. Just make sure you have lots of Ticky Tack."
room or apartment, the key can be as simple as bringing a little bit of home along. Photos of friends and family make sentimental decorations, as do favorite posters.
"I put up posters from Rock Chalk and other organizations I'm involved in," Thies said. "I also hang all my hats on tacks. It looks good and makes it easy to grab a bait in the morning."
Another important aspect of furnishing a college room or apartment
Decorating on a budget
Here's a few items for bargain shoppers:
- Old couch from thrift shop or garage sale — about $40
- Closet for furniture use for our taints — $7 for a single twin flat table
- Small dresser or table from thrift shop or garage sale — about $25
- Acrylic paint to decorate dresser — $5 a bottle
- Paper to border walls and
contact paper to border walls and
cover wastebaskets—$2 a roll
Footocker trunk for coffee table —
$200
is making the most of little space
I brought my day bed from home and made it into a couch for the living room," said Kristin Brandt, Joplin, Mo., sophomore "We use a storage trunk for a coffee table and one of the desks from the bedroom for a TV stand.
Shelves also are all important space savers. Crates used to transport items can be flipped over and used as book shelves.
"We used cinder blocks and wood for shelves and an end-table," said Cory Vance, Lawrence sophomore.
David Feist, Topeka senior, has plants in carriers and on tables in his apartment.
"Plants add so much," he said. "They give three dimensions to a room and they're not hard to take care of, especially if you buy fake ones."
10
small potted plants — $3.50 each
Small throw rugs — $6 each
Ticky Tack to hang posters and photos — $1 a package
total: about $1.12
Call us for the facts!
KUInfo
864-3506
7am-2am
6
Hair Experts Design Team
Now is the time to DISCOVER OUR DIFFERENCE 841-6886
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CITY OF LAWRENCE-WATER
DROP IT!
JUST IN CASE.
When you walk alone, you run the risk of being attacked. It's not worth the risk. Don't walk alone at night. Plan for a friend to escort you to your destination.
BUTJUSTIN CASE, Secure Cab provides safe and free rides. Secure Cab runs nightly between 11:00 p.m. and 3:00 a.m. Clip this number out and keep it with you. Just in case.
A
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SECURE CAB Just in case.
Use is limited. Please respect this service by using it responsibly.
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Legal Services for Students
Where is the best place for KU students to receive legal advice?
Get Ready...Get Set...GO!
The Student Assistance Center Presents
Academic Excellence
efficient study methods--study smarter, not harder Wednesday, August 25, 7 to 8 pm, 330 Strona
taking control of your time and your life Thursday, August 26, 7 to 8 pm, 330 Strong
Time Management
skills for success in Math 115 & 116 Monday, August 30, 7 to 9am, 4035 Wescoe
Taking Control of Calculus
Learning a Foreign Language
Listening and Note-taking
overcome mental blocks, improve comprehension Tuesday, August 31, 7 to 9 pm, 4035 Wescoe
Listening and Note-taking learn and practice the Cornell Method Wednesday, September 1, 7 to 9 pm, 4035 Wescoe
Preparing for Exame
time management, memory, test anxiety, strategies Tuesday, September 14, 7 to 9 pm, 4035 Wescoe
For a complete listing of all our Fall semester programs, come by 133 Strong Hall
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Since
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7D
WATKINS
"We Care For KU"
Q
Looking into your health care options?
$ \sqrt{h} $
HEALTH FAIR '93
September 16 & 17
Watch for details about this annual event!
CHOLESTEROL CHECKS/HEALTHY SNACKS
HEALTH LITERATURE/PRIZES & MORE!
Did you know?
Watkins Health Center has 11 physicians to provide care for the health needs of KU students. 9 of the 11 physicians are University of Kansas graduates. 10 of the 11 physicians are Board Certified. which signifies that they have received additional training beyond medical school in a specialty area and passed a comprehensive exam.
How Convee-eenient!
Watch this fall for new. 1-hour out-patient parking meters on the south side of the health center. Watkins is located east of Robinson Center on the south side of the campus.
To Your Good Health!
The Health Education Department (864-9570) offers information on current health issues. Health Educators are available to present programs on health-related topics for your organization or living group.
Allergy Injection Clinic
Urgent Care Clinic
Cholesterol Screening
CPR Training
Wart Clinic
Gynecology Clinic
Pharmacy
Health Education
Sports Medicine Clinic
Physical Therapy
Nutrition Counseling
The Center for Health Care for KU Students
Anonymous & Confidential HIV Testing
For Your Information
Optional Health Insurance is available by calling 1-800-521-2623.
Your Wellness Partner
Wellness is more than freedom from illness. It involves the decisions that you make about the physical, emotional, mental, social, and spiritual sides of you. These decisions to be healthy rest with you. If you have health concerns or questions, Watkins Health Center offers many services to expand your knowledge regarding your healthier life - present and
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Appointments (except Nutrition)
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864-9500
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Physical Therapy
Counseling & Psychological Services Career Counseling & Planning Service
Watkins Regular Clinic Hours:
Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Saturday 8:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
Watkins Urgent Care Hours: (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30-10:00 p.m.
Saturday 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Sunday 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Closed these holidays:
New Year's, Memorial Day,
Thanksgiving, Christmas
Watkins Pharmacy Hours:
Watkins Pharmacy
MondayThursday 8:00 a.m. 9:00 p.m.
Friday 8:00 a.m.6:00 p.m.
Saturday 8:30 am - 12:30 pm
Sunday 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
8D
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ADMINISTRATION
University names new administrator
Kansan staff report
The KU administration received some unusual attention during the usually quiet month of June.
David Shulenburger was named vice chancellor for academic affairs June 7 after serving as acting director since January and after a
national search to fill the pleted.
Shulenburger joined the KU faculty in 1974 as an assistant professor in the School of Business, where he held several administrative positions, including associate dean and undergraduate program director.
He was associate vice chancellor for academic affairs from January 1988 to January 1993.
Shulenburger replaced Del Brinkman, who resigned from the position in Fall 1992.
Chancellor Gene Budg made front page headlines in Kansas City, Mo., when he was one of five new members named to the Kansas City Royals Board of Directors.
JOHN WILSON COW
D. Shulenburger
It was the first step in a plan by the late Royals owner Ewing Kaufman to keep the team in Kansas City well into the future.
---
Gene Budig
Kauffman released the complex plan April 19. The board will form a limited partnership and take over Kauffman's control of the baseball team Kauffman died of bone cancer Aug. 1.
PETER G. HOWARD
Del Brinkman
Del Brinkman, former vice chancellor for academic affairs, changed his plans to become an instructor in the School of Journalism when he accepted the position of Journalism Program Officer with the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation on June 21.
In his new position, which he began Aug. 2,
Brinkman will coordinate grant programs for professional journalists and journalism education.
Brinkman was dean of the School of Journalism from 1975 to 1986, when he began serving as vice chancellor for academic affairs.
CAMPUS in brief
A Summary of Summer Events
BASEBALL
'Hawks make history advancing to world series for first time
Kansan staff report
The Kansas baseball team made history this summer when it advanced to the College World Series for the first time.
The World Series appearance means Kansas was the first university to win a bowl game, advance to the Final Four, have a women's basketball team in the NCAA Tournament and have a baseball team in the College World Series in a single year.
Kansas, seeded eighth out of the eight teams in the Series, quickly exited the double-elimination tournament with losses to Texas A&M and Long Beach State, and finished the season with a 45-18 record.
In the first game, Texas A&M All-American pitcher Jeff Granger pitched against the Jayhawks, who countered with junior pitcher Chris Corn. Corn gave up three earned runs in six innings, but Granger yielded only one run in eight innings, to give Texas A&M a 5-1 victory.
the next game against Long Beach State was advertised as a great pitching match-up between Jayhawks freshman pitcher Jamie Solitttorr and 49er star Mike Fontana.
the first few innings lived up to the billing.
Splittorff shut out the 48ers for five innings,
and Jeff Niemeier's home run was the only hit
Fontana yielded.
In the sixth inning, however, the 49ers scored three times, even though only one of the runs were earned. Long Beach State added one run in the seventh inning and two more in the ninth.
The Jayhawks could not match that offensive outburst, as Fontana gave up only one more hit, and pitched a complete game for the 49ers. The final score was 6-1.
On June 7, the team was welcomed back home by a crowd of approximately 300 fans cheering "Go KU!" and performing the Rock Chalk chant.
POLICY
Kansan staff report
Administration bans smoking in many University buildings
KU's administration extinguished smokers' cigarettes when a no-smoking policy went into effect July 1.
As a result of the policy, smoking is now banned in all campus buildings excluding student housing, the Kansas Union, the Adams Alumni Center and the Kansas University Endowment Association building. But even those buildings, with the exception of student housing, recently developed policies that will ban smoking.
For the last 10 years, about 10 percent of the student population has been smokers, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said that although no penalties have been set for violators of the policy, action would be taken on the basis of complaints.
KU buildings do not have proper ventilation and can not separate people to allow for smoking, Meyen said. The increasing risk of secondhand smoke to non-smokers convinced him that the ban was needed.
Smokers, who have decided that the new policy is a sign to quit smoking, but are having trouble quitting, can enroll in smoking cessation classes this fall. The classes are free of charge to faculty and staff and $5 for students at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Policies that ban smoking are now being developed on campuses across the country, including Northeastern University in Boston.
the classes offered are based on a system taken from a book called "The No-Nag, No-Guilt, Do-It-Your-Own-Way Guide To Quitting Smoking" by Tom Ferguson. Students must pay $5 for the book.
BUSINESS
Lawrence gets new businesses despite weak national economy
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence had several new businesses open during the summer months.
Despite a weak national economy, restaurants and discount clothing stores were among the new businesses that have appeared in Lawrence since the spring semester.
New restaurants include Applebee's, 2520 Iowa St. and the Red Lyon Tavern, 944 Massachusetts St.
the 1/2 Price Store is now in the former Wal-Mart building at 2727 Iowa St. Wal-Mart opened at a new location this summer at 3300 Iowa St.
The Concise Market, a comic book store, is at 711W. 23rd St.
Other businesses that are planning to open
soon are two Walgreens, one at Sixth Street and Kasold Drive and one at 23rd Street and Alabama, and Sidewinders, a saloon. Mike O'Donnell, director of the Small Business Development Center in the business school said Lawrence and the surrounding area had been spared some of the nation's economic problems because of a growing population.
WESCOE
Wescoe suffers minor damage due to expanding foundation
Kansan staff report
A study conducted this spring by a geological firm concluded this summer that the base of Wescow Hall has risen, not sunk as was previously thought by KU officials.
Core samples were drilled from the building to determine the cause of the problem and possible solutions.
James Modig, director of Design and Construction Management of Topeka, said that an expanding shale foundation beneath Wescoe had shifted and warped the first floor of the building, causing the floor to rise up four inches from its original position.
Modig said the release of pressure from removed topsoil and the expansion of the shale's clay particles as they absorbed ground water were the reasons for the problems.
Damage is primarily to the southeast section of the first floor, which has rippled hallways and warped ceiling tiles.
Ground water from the soil around Wescoe and a tunnel below the building that was part of the old Robinson Gymnasium made the clay in the shale act as a sponge. Mogli said
rue study made several recommendations to keep Wescoce's first floor level, such as removing and relieving the floor, replacing the dividing walls and keeping the ceiling separate from the building's foundation.
According to the study, any solutions would be short term because the shifting is expected to continue. Water will continue to saturate the ground around the building and cause the clay shale to expand.
KU MEDICAL CENTER
Med Center receives $500,000 to study Parkinson's disease
Kansan staffreport
The American Parkinson Disease Association gave the University of Kansas Medical Center a $500,000 grant for research of Parkinson's disease July 11.
By giving the research team a $500,000 grant, the association bestowed the Med Center with an honor only three other university medical schools across the nation received.
The grant will be awarded in $100,000 increments during the next five years. The association's board of directors — with more than 20 scientists and doctors renowned for their work in the Parkinson's disease field — votes
on who will receive the grants.
The board bases the decisions on the universities' research and accomplishments in the field, said Kimberly Kirkland Seidman, the association's West Coast director. Other centers financed by the association are Emory University in Atlanta, Robert Wood Johnson University in New Bruswick, N.J., and Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland, Ore.
William Koller, who directs Parkinson's research at the Med Center, said the grant was not a lot for research. Some grants can total $10 million. But this grant can be used for whatever the team needs, unlike some grants, which require research on one topic.
Parkinson's disease affects more than 1 million Americans. Although it is most common in the elderly, it can strike people in their 20s or 30s.
KE's study has focused for years on issues such as environmental factors that may affect whether people get the illness and what can be done to stop the disease's symptoms, Koller said.
The accomplishments of the research team include a study of Kansas residents. The study revealed that those who live in rural areas and drink well water are twice as likely to get Parkinson's disease.
KU HEALTH INSURANCE Students surprised by increase in KU medical insurance bills
Kansan staff report
Students receiving their KU insurance bills might be surprised to find rates that increased by 31 percent during the summer.
Student Senate approved the increase in March, but many policy holders were unaware of the change until they received their latest bills.
bms
Policies for KU students are offered by G-M Underwriters Agency Inc., of Rochester, Mich.
Jim Boyle, associate director of Watkins Memorial Health Center, said the increase was long overdue because insurance premiums had been too low since 1991.
soul said that increases during the past four years were more than 2 percent, but this year's increase was necessary because the premiums had not kept pace with inflation.
If the rates had not gone up, Boyle said, reduced coverage would have resulted.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield had provide, insurance coverage for KU, but losses of $1 million in 1982-93 caused them to drop their coverage of students for this year.
Steve Vogelsang, head of Student Senate's health advisory board, said KU's increase was still better than the nation's medical consumer price index of 12 percent and the rates of any other university in Kansas.
The annual premium for a single policy for 1993-94 is $739 and the premium for a family policy is $2,474. In 1991-92 and 1992-93, the premiums were $565 for an individual and $1,800 for a family.
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"YEAR'S BEST!
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THE STAR • THE STORY • THE SETTING
1001
K. U. Students...This is your night! Grand Opening
of the Lied Center Wednesday, September 29 8:00 p.m. Half Price Tickets this night
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
tickets $17.50 and $15.00 (this performance only).
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call (913) 864-ARTS.
K
We're anxious to get you back "On Wheels"!!
15 routes to choose from. One near you!
Student semester pass gives you unlimited rides for $50.
Fall Bus Passes pre-ordered through Options can be picked up in the Kansas Room, 6th floor Kansas Union August 16-20. After August 20, passes can be purchased from the Business Offices, 4th floor Kansas Union. But please pay fees before obtaining a bus pass!
Bus schedules available at the Kansas Union Candy Counter or at the Options table in the Kansas Room. Funded by Student Senate.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
9D
Jayhawk traditions
Every campus has its own landmarks and myths. Here are a few found at The University of Kansas.
1
Donated by alumni and current members of the Chi Omega Sorority's KU chapter in 1955, the Chi Omega Fountain is also a place where students have been known to take a dip. Fraternities and sororites have been known to throw their brothers and sisters in the fountain on their birthdays.
The fountain cost $5000 and was dedicated to the deceased members of the Chi Omega Sorority.
Built in 1910 as a reserve water supply in case of a large fire, Potter Lake, named for former Senator T.M. Potter, was instead used as a reserve bathing supply by many students in the early 1920s. During that time, three students drowned in the lake. Since then, bathing has been discouraged.
Potter Lake
Campanile
Chi Omega Fountain
Snow Hall
Spencer Research Library
Strong Hall
Lindley Hall
Marvin Hall
Jayhawk Boulevard
Bailey Hall
Hoch Aud.
Lindley Hall
Marvin Hall
THE CHRISTIAN TRANSFIGURATION CENTER
Distant iron melodies heard echoing throughout campus come from 53 bells housed in the 120 foot high Campanile, which was started and completed in 1950 as a memorial to the KU students who died in World War II. The bells, added in 1951, range in weight from 10 pounds to 13,400 pounds. Graduating students walk through the tower during the graduation ceremony to begin their walk down the hill. It is considered bad luck to walk through the tower before graduation.
KANU
Hoch
Aud.
PENNELLIER
Nescoe Hall
THE MUSEUM OF SPORTS
A metal bust of former Chancellor E.H. Lindley, who served from 1920 to 1939, was a gift of the class of 1929. It was sculpted by Bernard "Poco" Frazer in 1954. The bust, located on the first floor of Lindley Hall, is dark bronze in color except for Lindley's nose. It is shiny and smooth as a result of student's hands rubbing it for good luck before big exams, a tradition that is decades old. In 1969, renovations on the nose were considered, but nothing was ever done to fix it.
HGCH AUDITOS
Many students now know it as a construction area surrounded by a fence, but seniors may remember sitting through their freshman lecture courses in Hoch Auditonum. Completed in 1927, Hoch was to be used as a basketball court and basketball arena but the cost $350,000 and was named for former Governor E.W. Hoch.
A plan to restructure the auditorium's roof, which called for the installation of lightning rods, was a month too late. Lightning struck the roof on June 15, 1991, causing a fire that gutted the inside of the building and destroyed the roof. But Hoch will rise from the ashes in the fall of 1995, when the $18 million construction project currently underway will be completed.
The front area outside Wesco Hall was constructed along with the building beginning in 1971 and was completed in 1974. Wesco Hall was named for former Chancellor W. Clark Wesco, who served from 1960 to 1968. Front of the building is called the "beach" because of the large number of students it attracts to eat, lie in the sun and talk between classes. On a warm day, the beach is flooded with students.
The bronze Jayhawk statue that rests in front of Strong Hall was donated by the KU graduation class of 1956. It was sculpted by Elden Titen and erected in the Kansas Memorial Student Union in 1959 before it was moved to its current location in the early 20th century, that the bird will fly away from its perch if a virgin graduates from KU. We are not saying the legend is true, but we also have noticed that the bird is still there.
Photos by John Gamble Research by Dan England
John Paul Fogen. KANSAN
The Law School Admission Test is on October 2
Are you prepared? We are.
Save time, save a stamp Drop it at the Kansas Union
Your payments for
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KPL ELECTRIC
Call us about Summer and Fall Classes.
800/443-PREP
THE PRINCETON REVIEW We Score More!
can be made at the drop box in the Kansas Union, Information Counter, Level 4
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MANUFACTURER
BANCH & CAMPUS
928 Main
Why rent a TV?
Buy a TV from us at the beginning of the semester and we will buy it back from you at the end of the semester.
(or whenever you no longer need it)
Come in and ask us for details.
Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply
718 New Hampshire 843-4344
10D
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WHERE TO GET
HELP
We all need it at one time or another. Here's a (partial) list of what's out there for the KU student.
COUNSELING
The KU Psychological Clinic count
The KU Psychological Clinic counsels students on any problem. Students who want counseling are screened, and they are assigned a therapist for long-term counseling if they meet requirements. Fees are based on a student's ability to pay and on the services provided. Graduate students provide the counseling.
The clinic accepts walk-ins. For more information, call 864-1421 or to
31.5 Fraser between 7 a.m. and 7 m.
pail, All screening and counseling
sessions are scheduled between
12:30 and 4:30 p.m.
KU Counselling and Psychological
KU Counseling and Psychological Services provide counseling for a wide range of personal problems including those related to depression, sexuality, relationships, stress and career decision making. CAPS is staffed by experienced counselors from the professions of clinical and counseling psychology, social work, psychiatry and students in training for various mental health careers. Appointments can be made by calling 864-CAPS (2277) or in person on the second floor of Watkins Memorial Health Center. Business hours are 8 a.m. -5 p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday and 8 a.m. -8 p.m. on Tuesday and Wednesday. Limited evening
hours are available by appointment only.
Headquarters provides crisis intervention and a listening ear for anyone who needs counseling.
Headquarters will contact a counselor with Rape Victims Support Services for rape victims who need guidance through the emotional trauma of an attack and help through the legal and medical processes.
contact Headquarters, call 841-2345. KU info at 864-3506, also can contact counselors with RVSS. For more information about RVSS, call its business and information line at 843-8985
EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT
The College Advising Support Center has eight advisers who provide academic advising and counseling for undergraduate students. The center is open year round.
Most professional schools will supply prospective students with an adviser, but students cannot get
but students who can help there should contact the center.
The center can help with add-drop problems.
Walk-ins are accepted, but the cen
ter recommends that students make appointments.
To make an appointment, call 864- 4371. The center is at 4017 Wescoe.
The Student Assistance Center supplies educational support for KU students. Includes:
It provides:
Workshops to help students improve their study skills and use ofkill resources.
A tutor-listing service to match students with prospective tutors
Study Skills 10.603
Learning and Study Strategies
Learning and Study Strategies Inventory, a computerized evaluation tool
An enrollment information table in the Strong Hall Rotunda
Confidential, one-on-one conferences
Student advocacy
for more information, call 864-4064.
The center is in **133 Strong Hall**.
Supportive Educational Services
Prairie Educational Services offers academic and personal services for students who meet the federal government's definition of low-income or first-generation college students.
Assistance with financial aid
It provides:
Counseling, peer and faculty support
Assessments of math and reading skills
For more information, call 864-3971. SES can assist 240 students each semester. To apply for its program, go to the Supportive Educational Services building, south of the Military Science building. If you meet the requirements and desire to participate in the program, you will be assigned a service coordinator to assist you.
Human-Sophomore English Office offers a minority tutoring program. It aids with composition and revision of writing assignments. Students must be referred by their freshman or sophomore English instructors.
The Freshman-Sophomore English
Sign-up begins Aug. 26 at 3081
Wescoe. For more information, call
864-4523
EMPLOYMENT
Student Employment Center helps students find jobs and scholarships. For more information, go to the office at 33 High Hall or call 864-4725
University Placement Center helps
University Placement Center helps students find part-time on- and off-campus employment and puts students into a full time job in contact with employers. For more information, go to the office at 110 Burge Union or call 864-3624
DIAL-A-JOB
Call 864-4623 for a weekly update of available on-campus jobs.
150 Personal Office places students in Kansas and Burge Union employment.
For more information, go to the office at 520 Kansas Union or call 864-4922.
Several University schools have separate placement offices:
Business
125 Summerfield Hall Call 864-5591
Journalism
Journalism
102 Stauffer Flint Hall
Call 864-4755
Law
204 Green Hall Call 864-4377
4010 Learned Hall Call 864-3891
Engineering
LEGAL
Legal Services for Students provides advice and consultation on most legal matters and is a free service to students of current KUID. It can help students with
Preparation, drafting and review of legal documents
- Negotiation and correspondence with adverse parties or their attorneys in an effort to settle cases without litigation
- Notization of legal documents
- Incorporation of non-profit, student organizations registered with the University
Referrals to appropriate resource persons or groups within the community
Limited court representation in
Limited court representation in landlord tenant and consumer cases
Legal Services for Students does not provide advice over the phone. To make an appointment, call 864-5665 or go to 148 Burge Union.
SAFETY
Safe Ride is a free cab service, fund-
A ride is a free cab service, funded by Student Senate, for students enrolled at the University. To get a ride home between 11 p.m. and 3 a.m. from anywhere in
Call 864-SAFE
location.
A clearly marked car will arrive in 5
A clearly marked car will arrive in 5 to 15 minutes.
Show the driver your KUID and you will be taken home.
Safe Ride operates every day school is in session, including finals. It will begin August 22.
The KU Police Department provides
law enforcement and security for the University.
Programs for groups on crime-relat ed topics
A ride-along program, in which students can ride with a police officer for one day a semester
Engravers, which students can check out to engrave their property with identification
Bicycle registration, which speeds recovery and identification if your bicycle is stolen
Information and statistics on crime if you need help in an emergency, call 911.
5572 or go to the KU Police Department in 302 Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
To report a crime or a possible crime, call the Crimestoppers Hotline at 864-8888.
Headquarters provides crisis intervention and a listening ear for anyone who needs counseling.
to contact Headquarters, call 841-
2045. LLC calls at 841-2560, also car
Headquarters also will contact a counselor with Rape Victims Support Services for rape victims who need guidance through the emotional trauma of an attack and help through the legal and medical processes. 841
O2435 Hear me Haunted
2345. KU info, at 864-3506, also can contact counselors with RV5S. You can get more information about the rape victim service on its business and information line at 843-8985
SUPPORT SERVICES
The Student Assistance Center's
Support for students with disabilities
The Student Assistance Center's Options program provides support in academics, transportation, housing, admission and orientation for students with disabilities. The center helps those with the following disabilities:
Visual impairment
Physical/Health disability Learning disability Attention deficit disorder
The center can connect you to special equipment available on campus, such as print enlargers and voice-synthesized computers.
For more information, call 864-4064 or go to 133 Strong Hall
Support for nontraditional students
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization supports students who are married, are veterans, have children or are over 24.
it provides study groups, test banks, peer support and advice. It also provides information, activities and advocacy for the nontraditional student. You must fill out a questionnaire to become a member. Membership is free.
For more information, call 864-4861,
to go 400 Kansas Union or write to
Linda Marshall, Student Assistance
Center, University of Kansas,
Lawrence, KS 66045.
HELP continued, Page 11.
THE KUSTUDENTALUMNIASSOCIATION MAKESTHINGS HAPPEN!
FALLCALENDAR
August 18, Adams Alumni Center...Officer Retreat
August 19,5:30 pm, Adams Alumni Center...Get the Scoop from Boots August25,7 pm,Adams Alumni Center...Kick-Off Meeting August23-25,10 am -2 pm,Wescoe Beach...OAC Info Fair August26,SAA/SF National Convention,Columbus,Ohio September7-10,10am-2pm,Wescoe Beach...Celebrate KU September8,7 pm,Adams Alumni Center...General Meeting September14-15,10 am-2pm,Wescoe Beach...Membership Pick-Up September22,7 pm,Adams Alumni Center...General Meeting
- Sing"I'm a Jayhawk" and other traditional songs.
- Tour the Alumni Center, learn about the Student Alumni Association,and pick up an application.
NEWSTUDENTS!
THREEWAYSTOJOIN
- An awesome beginning to the 1993 school year.
- Make your own sundae-Free ice-cream, toppings and soft drinks!
- Enjoy great tunes spun by KLZR disc jockey,Bob Newton.
- Meet deans, faculty and other students.
Get the Scoop from Boots!
- Head down to the stadium for Traditions Night right after.
- Pick up membership application at Adams Alumni Center (Third Floor), 8am-5 pm, Monday-Friday. See Jodi B.
- Look for us on Wescoe Beach on Sept.14, 15.
- Fill out the membership application below!
Enclosed is my check for $15 payable to SAA.
Return to: Student Alumni Association
Kansas Alumni Association
1266 Oread Avenue
Lawrence, KS 66045-1600
Or drop in Campus mail
Thursday, August19,5:30pm K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center A HawkWeek Tradition
Name___Class Year___Major___
KU Address___Zip___Phone___
Home Address___Zip___
SAA
KU STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
SAAOFFICERS
President...Andy Pitts
Vice-President...Londonne Corder
Secretary...Alison Lusk
Special Events...Luke Wilson
Membership...Kelly Harrell
Campus Affairs...Mike Leitch
Publicity...Ann Perry
Community Service...Jenny Bagby
Career Opportunities...Chad Moon
Finance...Dominique Schulte
Social...Leo Duncan
Athletic...Michael Weishaar
ng/Alumni Weekend..Jeff Carvey, Andy Wic
Homecoming/Alumni Weekend...Jeff Carvey, Andy Wickless
SAA Phone: 864-4760
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
11D
I
KU Info operator Jennifer Paparek, Lawrence senior, looks up a phone number for a caller. During emergencies, KU Info receives as many as 250 calls per hour.
From KU history to the weird, KU Info is your know-it-all call
By Katie Greenwald
Kansan staff writer
"Did Andy Gibb commit suicide?" said Michaela Hayes, KU Information Center employee.
"Just a second, I'll see if I can find it."
Susan Ekins, coordinator for KU Info, said that although KUInfo usually answered questions about KU services, it had received some fairly bizarre phone calls.
"Our business is not to answer trivia questions, but if we know, we'll tell you." Elkins said.
KU Info began in 1970 as a rumor control, Elkins said. But due to its popularity, it became a permanent part of the University.
"You spell 'jacuzzi', j-a-c-u-z-phone."
Haves said and hung up the phone.
The center's office, which overlooks Memorial Stadium, is crammed full with reference books, newspaper clippings and files that contain a little bit of information about everything.
Employees should be able to answer any question regarding University events unless something has changed and the info center has not been told.
"Events in the news are kind of tough," Elkins said.
When a severe snowstorm hits or another emergency occurs, KU Info is flooded with calls from students.
"During emergencies, we become essential," said Lesie Jones, Miami graduate student. "We have gone from 50 calls an hour to 250 calls an hour."
During one snow day in the spring when classes were canceled, the center received 2,000 calls, he said. Other busy times were when Hoch Auditorium caught fire and when several buildings were evacuated this spring because of fumes from a chemical leak.
The most popular question was "What are Robinson Center's hours?" said Jones, who has worked for the center for one year.
On anormal day, common questions students ask are about the hours of many KU facilities.
He said that keeping up with current information was one of the things he liked about working at KU Info.
"I also like being able to help people," Jones said. "One way or another, we can always help them."
Hayes, Dallas senior, said that finding the answer was what she liked best about working at the center. Not finding the answer is what Hayes likes the least.
"I like it when I can find the answer and not have to refer them to someone else," she said after an unsuccessful search for Audrey Hepburn's dates of birth and death.
But she did find the answer to the first caller's question. Andy Gibb did not commit suicide. He died from an inflammatory heart virus.
HELP: More services for KU students
Continued from Page 10.
Support for minority students:
The Office of Minority Affairs offers
The Office of Minority Affairs offers programs aimed at enhancing the educational success and opportunities of African Americans, Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans and American Indians.
It offers individual advising, departmental referral, scholarship information and emergency grants.
The office also has a library and cul-
tural al video collection, offers advising for organizations and co-sponsors celebrations of heritage.
For more information, call 8G4-4351 or go to 145 Strong Hall.
The Freshman-Sophomore English
- Asian American Student Union
- Black Student Union (BSU)
office has a minority tutoring program it aids with composition and revision of writing assignments. Students must be referred by their first year or sophomore English instructors. Sign-up begins Aug. 26 at 3081 Wescoe. For more information, call 864-4523.
Many student peer support groups are available to give assistance and support including:
Hispanic American Leadership Organization (HAI O)
■ Lesbian-Bisexual-Gay Services of
Kansas (LesBiGayOK)
Hillel (KU Jewish Student Organization)
- international Student Association
- Native American Student Association (NASA)
OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization
**Women's Student Union (WSU)**
a contact of these organizations
864-
i contact one of these organizations,
refer to the KU directory or call 864-
3506 or 864-4861
Support for international students;
International Student Services offers
international and national training.
International Student Services offers immigration and personal counseling, a program that provides homes for students during breaks and programs that advise students on various issues.
For more information, call 864-3617 or go to 2 Strong.
The Applied English Center provides
The Applied English Center provides English-language courses for students who are not native speakers. It also offers orientation to the United States and KU, as well as field trips and cultural events. Call 846-4606
For more information, call 864-4606 or go to 204 Lippincott.
Support for victims and survivors of sexual assault and harassment;
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has trained staff members who provide programs, workshops and assistance to students regarding the prevention and education of sexu-
a request for hardship.
For more information, go to 115
Strong Hall or call 864-3552
al assault or harassment.
Strong Hall or call 864-3552
Women's Transitional Care Services gives shelter and peer counseling to battered women and their children.
To receive help, call the 24-hour crisis hot line at 841-6887.
If you think you have been sexually harassed, you can file a grievance at the Office of Affirmative Action. For more information, call Tom Berger, grievance officer, at 864-3686 or go to 31.3 Strong Hall.
Ombudsman;
Contact the University Ombudsman with assistance in a variety of problems. The ombudsman can assist students with:
A complaint with University staff, faculty or office
Grading problems Discrimination
Consultation in following normal University procedures
The service is confidential and neutral. The ombudsman will work informally to solve problems between the University and a student.
Students who wish to talk to Ombushua man Robert Shelton can go to his office in 104 Smith Hall or call his number at 864-4665. Students can leave a message on his voice mail if he is not there.
SURVIVAL: Tips to succeeding at KU
Continued from Page 1.
thing we do to try and make that easier is to have meet a professor nights in the residence halls where the students can make those contacts."
Jackson recommended that students talk to professors about problems with classes.
"For almost any academic question, the first source is the professor," he said. "If students are anxious about tests, it is often helpful to go over critical lecture material with the instructor."
Jackson offered his own advice on preparing for tests.
"Don't cram. Take part in study sessions and review the material carefully," he said. "Keep up with tour daily assignments and don't try to relearn everything all in one night."
Kretschmer said many students also had concerns about how they would succeed in a large class.
"Many students come here assuming that all of their classes will be large, but there are some small ones," she said.
Jackson said that budgeting time helped control the amount of stress a student feels.
"Students need to realize that this is going to be different than high school or community college, and they need to organize their time wisely," he said. "They also need to make sure to leave some time to relax and enjoy."
Kretschmer said students also could experience emotional problems when adjusting to college life.
"Students don't often talk about homesickness, but a lot of them experience that," she said. "If that comes up, aphone call home is really the best remedy."
"Alot of students wonder 'how will I find my niche' and it can be overwhelming," she said. "Once they get involved they often find a smaller community within KU."
Ndomby Flhunsu, Kinshasa, Zaire,
senior, said new students should not
worry about trying to fit in.
"They need to know that college is nothing to fear," he said. "Relax, don't rush and be yourself and don't be influenced by others."
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
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if a Jayhawk used Jaytalk?
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Wednesday, August 18, 1992
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A RADICAL GROUP CALLED THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY TOOK OVER THE
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ACTIVITIES
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1993
Club sports allow athletic outlet
KU offers any sport you can think of
SECTION E
By Dan England
Kansan staff writer
N not everyone has the speed and agility of Kansas' all-time leading rusher Tony Sands or the sharp-shooting skills of Jayhawk guard Steve Woodberry.
Not everybody likes football or basketball. Some people would rather rghush their teeth with the big boys in rugby, parry their way to victory in fencing, or sail and water ski on Clinton Lake.
For closet athletes, a club sport could be the best option. There are 34 different club sports, including volleyball, soccer and rowing at KU.
"We've got any sport you could think of," said Venita Mitchell, club sport director.
Club sports are formed by KU recreation services. Mitchell acts as an administrative liaison, but the sports themselves are organized by students.
Faculty advisers for each sport are required, and an application must be turned in if a student wants to start a new club.
Clubs are starting every year, she said. Rock climbing was started last year, and handball and rifling clubs will be new this fall.
Club sports receive some funding through student fees that are allocated by Student Senate. Some clubs hold fund raisers, and others charge their members dues in order to cover costs, Mitchell said.
Although some of the sports are seasonal, like sailing, many of the sports continue throughout the academic year. Fall club sports begin as soon as school starts Aug. 23.
Club sports usually have two or three teams that are formed based on athletic ability, but every team gets a chance to compete with other universities. Club sports are always looking for new members, and the teams will take anyone regardless of ability, Mitchell said. Matches and tournaments are scheduled by the team leaders, usually with other Big Eight universities or area colleges.
But some clubs travel to other states or even other countries. The best team in the rugby club made a trip to New Zealand.
Rick Renrof, who has been involved with the rugby team since 1974 and is a member of the coaching staff, said this was the first time everyone on the KU squad was able to earn money to make the trip. The rugby team travels overseas every two years.
"We didn't match up too well with them, because that's their sport over there, but it was a good experience." Renfro said.
Tim Lattimer, Lawrence sophomore, played on the second team of the volleyball club last year.
"I thought I was good coming out of high school, but I found out I didn't know anything." Lattimer said. "The guys on the team were awesome. I learned a lot, but it was a heck of a lot of fun too."
How to join a club sport:
A list of clubs is posted at the Recreation Services office in 208 Robinson.
The list will contain the name of a student leader for each club who can be contacted for information on how to join.
- **Fees are usually charged, and they range from $20 to $150. Tryouts may be held for the first team of the club.**
KANSAS
INSIDE
Afew good men
ROTC provides career training and scholarships for many KU students.
TRUST
See story, Page 4.
Student leaders
Lance Wright, former student body vice president, addresses the Student Senate. Senate is the campus voice for students.
See story. Page 6.
KANSAN file photos
At top: Lacrosse is one of the many club sports at KU.
At right: The KU bowling team plays its home matches in the Jaybow at the Kansas Union. The bowling team, like many of the club teams, plays teams from the Big Eight Conference and other regional opponents.
BOWLING
VOICES ON THE HILL
Q:
WHAT DO YOU THINK IS THE MOST BENEFICIAL ORGANIZATION ON CAMPUS?
"I would say SUA because they organize campus activities and make sure everything goes right."
PETITA MEDINA
Alissa Oatman
Alissa Oatman
Denversenior majoring in journalism
CHEESE
“Student Senate — it' s the voice of the students. ”
Grant Naugle
Wichita senior majoring in mathematics
— we get over billed on our tuition, so we went to their office. The registrar came to our class and helped the entire class because we were charged with $10 late fees we weren't supposed to have."
JORDAN AND ANGELA
PRAYING FOR THE SINFISTED WOMEN
Todd Renyer
Topeka senior majoring in architecture
Kristin Rosebrough
St. Louis senior majoring in architecture
AUTHOR OF LIFE WITH YOU
"I would say the Graduate Student Council. It is the strongest advocacy for graduate students." Chris O'Brien
Lawrence graduate student majoring in history
Multicultural groups help minority students
Organizations encourage students to stay at KU
By Lia Cosmillo and Carlos Tejada
Kansas staff writers
Adjusting to a predominately white college can be a difficult adjustment for minority students, but KU offers several multicultural organizations to make students feel at home.
Many minority students attending KU for the first time find going to school with a 78 percent white student body intimidating, said Terry Bell, Tampa, Fla., senior.
The biggest problem facing African-American students is retention, said Bell, president of Black Student Union. Many students are overwhelmed by the number of white students compared to the number of African-American students, and they leave.
About 2.5 percent of the Lawrence campus is African American.
The number one goal of BSU is to encourage students to remain at KU, Bell said. One way in which this is accomplished is by encouraging a feeling of belonging.
"My focus is to bring everyone, being the Black student body, together," he said.
BSU holds meetings, support groups and social gatherings.
"BSU was established to enhance a beneficial means of communication with administrators and fellow students, to promote activities to further educational growth for all students," Bell said.
In addition to BSU, other minority groups have student associations on campus, such as the Asian American Student Union. Arthur Chiu, Joplin, Mo., senior and president of the group, said AASU played many roles.
"We are a support group and we try to advocate education of multicultural diversity on campus and throughout the community," he said.
Asian Americans make up 2.4 percent of the student population.
Chin said membership was not restricted to Asian Americans. Any who are interested in Asian concerns can join.
The main emphasis of AASU is on the Asian American Festival to be held in March, he said.
minority
autonomy
I
BEING
BLACK
WE NEED
FACULTY
GUERCY
Story continues. Page 5.
RU's multicultural groups give minority students a voice on the University's predominantly white campus.
y
2E
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
KU NOW gives women a voice
Group puts focus at state politics
By David Stewar
Kansanstaff writer
Students want to learn about and promote women's rights and equality might consider joining KU NOW, the campus chapter for the National Organization for Women, said Shelley Witt. co-president for the group.
"Our main emphasis is on influencing state politics," Witt said. "We do a lot of lobbying on bills dealing with women's issues."
Witt said KU NOW stays in contact with the Kansas NOW state lobbyist, Sue Liebeler, to let her know how KU students feel about pending legislation aimed at women's issues.
luthon altered to "We also go up to Topeka and do a lot of lobbying of representatives ourselves," she said.
KU NOW also plans special events
KU NOW will hold meetings every other Tuesday afternoon in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union New members are encouraged to arrive by 5 p.m. for a half-hour orientation followed by the meeting at 5:30 p.m.
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focusing on women and women's issues, Witt said. Last year KU NOW sponsored a speech by Faye Wattleton, former executive director of Planned Parenthood.
16-3-04 year.
There were 30 active members and
80 overall members in KU NOW last
year. Witt said.
5:30 p.m.
Witt said membership in KU NOW
requires no dares, but Witt suggests
interested members become active
with the national NOW group for $15
to $30 a year.
KU NOW welcomes both male and female students. Witt said.
we encourage everyone to join who has an interest in the equality issue. "Witt said. "We offer an orientation for all new members."
KU students and Lawrence residents march during the "Take Back the Night" rally last year. Many organizations at the University focus on and promote women's issues, including KU NOW.
KANSAN file photo
MY OFFSPRING IS
A MARCHING
JAYHAWK
MY OFFSPRING IS
A MARCHING
JAYHAWK
They're with the band
Two parents watch the Marching Jayhawks perform at halftime. The band is considered one of the nation's best.
SUA to bring wide diversity of events
By Katie Greenwald
Kansan staff writer
Student Union Activities presents a wide spectrum of events every year, and the 1993-94 academic year will be no different.
the 1983-94 academic year will be no different.
Margaret Hu, president of SUA, said the group will sponsor films, art exhibits,
concerts, comedy shows, lectures and trips.
concerts, comedy shows, lectures and more. SUA heads into the Fall semester after another series of events held on Campanile Hill during the summer session. Summer on the Hill finished its third season.
son. "We'd like to continue our Summer on the Hill series," Hu said. "They have been pretty successful."
Among the movies that will be shown are "Blue Velvet," "Naked Gun" and "Casablanca."
"Casa blanca."
"Blue Velvet" will be shown 8 tonight and tomorrow at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, "Naked Gun" will be shown at 9 p.m. August 22 on the Hill and "Casa blanca" will be shown 8 p.m. September 3 in Woodruff.
and "Casabanca" will be shown 8 p.m. September 9 in Woolworth
SUA also has planned several trips. There will be a canoe trip to the Ozarks
September 3-5.
A bus has been chartered for day trips to two Kansas City Chiefs games against the Denver Broncos September 20 and the Los Angeles Raiders October 3.
KANSAN file photo
The band Nic Cosmos performs during Day on the Hill, sponsored every year by Student Union Activities. Day on the Hill is just one of the many events put on by SUA every school year.
Comedian Jeff Cesario, who has appeared on the Tonight Show and Late Night with David Letterman, will perform October 2 at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
A poster sale begins today and runs through August 27 in the Union Art Gallery.
Saturday Night Live performer Kevin Nealon will perform November 3 at the Lied Center.
Gallery.
Blanca Ranurez will give a lecture on multiculturalism and diversity on color
campuses November 11.
SUA sells Kansas City Chiefs tickets and will sell tickets for the Renaissance Festival. The group also sells tickets for Silver Dollar City, Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun at a discount.
MATT
SUA has eight committees with about 200 members. It will have information al meetings September 14 and 15. Applications will be accepted after the meetings and interviews will follow. This will be the only time all year that applications will be accepted. If interested, contact Hu in the SUA office at 864-3477.
T
Organizations and Activies
The KU Dr. Seuss Club
- a club that supports literacy
- our university's nister club
★
the Original Klub of Kansas University Looney Tunes
-aclubforallanimationlovers-
The first meeting of our new Klub will be Tues day. August 31 at 7:30 pm in Alcove Aof the Kansas Union. Everyone Welcome.
The KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet Tuesday, August 24 at 7:30 pm in Alcove A of the Kansas Union. Newmer
For more information, look for our table during the Organizations and Activities Information Fair. August 23, 24 & 25 in front of the Kansas University
Open Up A Whole New Can Of Worms.
The KU Ad Club would like to invite you to open up a whole new can of worms
Why in the world would you want to do that? Simple.
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If everyone in America recycled only 10 percent of their newspapers, 25 million trees would be saved every year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Are you creatively talented and would like a chance to prove it under pressure? Get real world experience by working for the University Daily Kansan's creative staff. This is a two hour practicum in which you will create ads using your knowledge of QuarkXPress, Aldus Freehand, Adobe Photoshop and other programs. To inquire, call or stop by the Kansan.
Real World experience
Ask for Brian Fusco
864-4358 • 119 Stauffer Flint Hall
氖
KU Ki-Aikido Sports Club
Fail semester classes start:
5:30-8:00pm, 207 Robinson
Fall Schedule:
CUSTOMER CLASSS START:
Tuesday, August 24,
5:30-8:00pm, 207 Robinson
Tuesdays & Thursdays 5:30-8:00 pm
Saturdays 1:30-3:30
All KU students, staff, and faculty are welcome!
For more information call
鸟
(913) 842-3327
✓
KU Fencing Club
Practices:
Tuesday&Thursdayfrom 8-10:30pm Fridayfrom 6-8pm Room 139 Robinson
Koom 130 Robinson
T
Tuesday: formal instruction--Epee, Foil, & Saber
Thursday: Bouting in all weapons & skill level
Friday: Tournaments every other week.
boutingotherwise
Club Dues: $15 (first three visits free) All skill levels welcome!!
(
Come and experience the joy of whipping your
friends and enemies with 36 inches of cold steel!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
O
3E
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4E
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES NERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ROTC starts students toward a career
By Todd Puntney
Kansan staff writer
UNITED STATES ARMY
COLUMBIA
Sometimes military service is a job, not just an adventure.
KANSAN file photos
While the shugish U.S. economy is making it difficult for many college graduates to find jobs, members of the three ROTC units at KU need not worry about interviews or resumes.
**Above:** Members of the Navy ROTC line up in formation for an inspection. Drilling is constant for members of the ROTC program.
"Unlike most college students, we have a guaranteed job once we graduate," said Dan Bradley, a St Louis law student. "It's not really NOT, but you can say that."
Air Force Capt. Robert Wicks said even with budget cuts at the Pentagon, all three units — Army, Naval and Air Force ROTC — were trying to increase their numbers.
Left: Members of the three ROTC programs at the University march during graduation ceremonies in May. After graduation, ROTC graduates join one of the four branches of military service in the United States.
"As far as ROTC goes, we've not really being cut," Wicks said. "We're trying to increase the amount of people.
"A lot of people are not looking at the military as a viable option because of downsizing, when actually the amount of people that need to come in every year has stayed about the same," he said. "There are more than enough jobs out there."
Currently, about 250 cadets and midshipmen are enrolled in ROTC courses.
Although there is not a specific military major, all ROTC students must take about 30 hours of military classes, in addition to the ones required for their major. Classes range from military history to foreign policy to basic engineering. Additionally, a weekly practical lab immerses students in such things as war games, drill and physical training — all to touch the students how to become officers once they graduate.
During the summer, most students attend special schools or training camps for up to seven weeks. They can also spend time aboard a submarine or ship, with an air squadron, or at the Army's parachute school in Fort Benning, Ga.
Larry Henke. Pleasant Hill, Mo.
senior, spent almost a month this
summer on the aircraft carrier U.S.S.
Nimitz in the Persian Gulf.
"I flew to Bahrain to meet the ship, sailed around the gulf for a while, and then it dropped me off in Singapore." Henke said. "It was great because, whether in a plane or on a ship, I went all the way around the world. That's a big summer."
A wide range of scholarships are available for most ROTC students, including one that covers tuition, books and a $100 monthly stipend. Some also get bonuses for selecting a particular military field.
Midshipman or cadets are commissioned after graduation and must spend several years in the military.
After their initial commitment, which ranges from four to nine years depending upon their particular field in the military, they can choose to stay in or move into the civil world.
"A lot of employers like people with previous military experience because of the leadership and responsibility that they learned while in," said Lt.
John York with Naval ROTC. "You can't learn a lot of that from anywhere else."
For More Information
For More Information
** Army ROTC:** 864-3311
** Naval ROTC:** 864-3161
** Air Force ROTC:** 864-4676
The Earth is ours to share... Please recycle your Daily Kansan
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The Organizational meeting will be held on August 31, 1993 at 7:30pm in the Kansas Union. If you are interested in Best Buddies, you MUST attend this meeting. We look forward to seeing you. For more information call 841-2006.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
PROGRAMS Workshop topics include self-esteem, assertiveness training, and auto mechanics
RESUMEWRITING Sample resumes, cover letters, and assistance with interviewing are available
READING MATERIALS Books, magazines, and a collection of 130 note-books of newspaper articles are available
CAREER INFORMATION Collection of brochures on various careers, particularly non-traditional careers, are available
FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION Information on scholarship and fellowship programsdesigned for women
PERSONAL CONCERNS Assistance and consultation about personal issues and concerns
SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND EDUCATION PROGRAM Victim advocacy, date acquaintance rape education programs, peer education training
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
5F
Student political organizations promote campus involvement
BETTY LOWE
KANSAN file photo
Student political groups attempt to inspire debate on campus. Last year, KU Democrats brought Hillary Clinton to KU before the November election
Students advance parties' ideas, goals
By Carlos Tejada Kansas staff writer
For students interested in local and national politics, the University of Kansas has political groups that will fit just about any political animal.
Plus, student involvement in political groups on campus is a great way to meet people, said Shauna Shindler, Lawrence junior and coordinator of KU Democrats.
Shindler said the KU Democrats signed up 250 members last year and became the largest political organization on campus. The group brought Hillary Clinton to speak at KU before the election and helped the state party win Douglas County for President Bill Clinton. However, Shindler said the popularity of KU Democrats last year was due to the national elections.
Now that the situation has quieted, the KU Democrats will concentrate on other issues, Shindler said.
"This year we're going to have a lot more opportunities to bring in speakers and hold forums on issues," she said.
Shindler said she wanted the emphasis of the group to focus on educating the student body.
"I think that we want more students to get to know the political issues in Kansas and in the nation," she said.
Although the Republicans lost power in last year's elections, the KU College Republicans are not worried, said Leigh Smith, Tulsa, Okla, senior and coordinator of the group.
I think that will help because voters aren't getting the answers they want from the Democrats," she said.
Smith said the group was focusing on bringing in speakers. They have scheduled State Senate President Paul "Bod" Burke to speak in the fall and are trying to schedule either Bob Dole or Nancy Kassebaum for the spring.
Local politics will be as important as national politics for the group. Smith said
"I don't think the students at KU
realize what an impact state politics has," she said. "It has more effect on their lives than national politics."
For the Ross Perot-based group United We Stand at KU, keeping students informed would be the mission, said Richard Heap, Belleville, III., junior and member of the group.
"We feel that if students know why what's going on, the how becomes less difficult," he said. "We want to convey this to students in unique ways."
Such demonstrations could include balloons on Jayhawk Boulevard, Heap said. United We-Stand members would simultaneously release dozens of helium-filled balloons to protest a pork-barrel project on helium funded by Congress.
The group also plans to bring speakers who oppose the proposed North American Free Trade Agreement to KU. Heap said.
"You could almost be brain-dead to realize that this is not in the country's interests," he said. "It's bad economics and bad politics."
Heap said United We Stand would also work with Student Senate to inform the student body of where its fees are spent.
For the KU Libertarians, redefining an entire concept is the goal, said Allen Tiffany, Lawrence graduate student and president of the group.
"We want to redefine what liberalism is or should be," he said "Liberalism used to mean small government and the sanctity of private property.
He said modern definitions of liberalism did not follow the ideas set down by classical liberals such as John Stuart Mill and Ayn Rand.
"Basically, a lot of people don't see a difference between Republicans and Democrats," he said.
He said KU Libertarians offered an alternative to the political party structure.
Tiffany said the group would try to put out a quarterly publication. He said the publication would echo the Libertarians' ideas.
"You cannot separate individual rights from economic rights," he said.
Multicultural groups help KU students
Continued from. Page 1.
During the event, the group brings in speakers on Assin American concerns. The group also holds dimmers and banquets for members and interested people.
"It's basically a way for people to see the role American Americans play in the professional world in terms of being a minority," he said.
For Hispanic students, concerns can be expressed through the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said Octavio Hincjosa, Hutchinson senior and president of the group. He said new students might find help in adjusting to KUAtHALO.
"Here, fears about school are very typical of Hispanic students," he said. "It happens to be the same case with my own family."
Hinojosa said it was a major adjustment to move to a school with so few Hispanic students Hispanic students make up 1.8 percent of the student body.
He said Hispanic students new to KU should join HALO.
"I think that would be the best step for them, because then they'll be with peers," he said. "It's a family outside the family."
Hinojosa said the group would work on attending the Hispanic Leadership Conference in Chicago in May. He also said the group would work hard to create a positive image for Hispanics.
"It's hard to identify somebody to identify with," he said. "There are so few Hispanic students, professors, and leaders here."
The Native American Students Association also has services available for students.
story idea? 864-4810
Use Kansan classifieds.
Advertise in The Daily Kansan for Quick Results
TNT'S
COMIC MARKET
GRAND OPENING
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6E
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAN file photo
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
Lance Wright, former student body vice president, says farewell at his last meeting last semester. Student Senate offers many the chance for leadership positions.
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Student Senate offers chance for experience
Senate gives students a chance to govern
KU students can get hands-on government experience and become involved in campus events by becoming active in Student Senate.
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
active in Student Senate.
Travis Harrod, Topeka senior and head of the University Senate Executive Committee, said KU students voted for new Senate members during the spring semester of each school year.
"Every spring, two or more political coalitions nominate people to run for president and vice president," he said.
In April, students vote for candidates running for Student Senate positions.
Harrod said Student Senate members had a broad range of powers on campus.
"We have the ability to act in programs and to be active in classes and administration facilities," he said.
Student Senate members can attend any committee or administration meeting. The only conditions preventing Student Senate members from attending all meetings are the limited time of Senate positions for which to apply and the limited time to attend the meetings.
Harrod said the new Student Senate had a new set of goals this year.
"Each year the Student Senate has a different endeavor," he said. "Last year the Senate went out of its way to be more in contact with the student body to see what they wanted. This caused the students to show a bigger interest in the Student Senate."
This year the Senate plans to finish off where last year's Senate left off by trying to finance programs that the students want. Senate also wants to have more interaction
Student Senate
- Introduction meeting: 6:30 p.m. Aug. 25 in the Big 8
room at the Kansas Union.
- First official meeting: 6:30 p.m. Sept. 8 in the Big 8 Room.
All other meetings will be held at 6:30 p.m. every Wednesday in the B 8 Room.
All KU students are welcome at the meetings.
For more information contact John Shoemaker, student body president, at 864-3710.
and give the college some help. Harrod said Student Senate also would like to help finance the construction of a new health and recreation facility.
with students to increase the number of students who vote in next spring's election.
In addition to interacting with the students, the Student Senate will try to finance two new projects for the year. It hopes to expand the Hilltop Child Development Center and give the center aid for improvements.
"Before, students have lost workout time — two to five hours — to faculty members and other people," he said.
The Student Senate may work on the campus transportation system, KU on Wheels and Saferide.
Boon system, or no system. A student can become involved in Student Senate by running for office with a political coalition. If students do not want to run for a position, they can be on one of several committees that are open to all students such as finance University affairs, cultural affairs, transportation and minority affairs.
"Students are encouraged to come to get involved," Harrod said. "Any student is welcome."
University Dance Company open to students
By Tracy Ritchie
Special to the Kansan
students who have the urge to dance now have a way to express their creative energy.
"We want students to know the company is for them," said Janet Hamburg, head of the music and dance department.
Although many members are dance majors. Hamburg said some members were nondance majors who had performed in high school and wanted to continue performing
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The company is University Dance Company, whose auditions are open to all students, not just dance majors. Auditions will be 7 p.m. Sept. 1 at 242 Robinson.
The company performs all types of dance, from ballet and baroque to modern and jazz, and auditions consist of several types of dance. If a student is especially proficient in only one type, this should not deter the student from trying out, Hamburg said.
The main aim of the company is performance, and it is this that compelled Maureen DuBois, Overland Park senior and company president, to join the company two and a half years ago.
Years ago, DuBois said one of her main goals also was to increase student awareness.
"I'd like to make it a little more visible, a little more known," DuBois said.
She said the group gives many demonstrations at local schools in addition to their concerts.
Hamburg had informal concerts had been planned for 7:30 p.m. Oct. 26 and March 15 at 240 Robinson. For the first time, the fall concert will be a holiday concert, set for Dec. 3 and 4 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre. The spring concert April 21 and 22 will be the first time the company will perform in Lied Center.
The company also is involved in campus activities. They have performed at events such as the Habitat for Humanity fund raiser and the Harvest of the Arts festival.
Rehearsals are Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4 to 6 p.m., and other rehearsal times may be required.
Hamburg said the company holds master's classes and demonstrations by experts to keep the education process going. She said the company had people demonstrate flamenco dancing and had jazz festivals. Hamburg likes what the varied talents added.
University Dance Company can be reached through the music and dance department. 864-4264.
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ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColum Hall.
*for further questions about AURH contact James Cutburn, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." "Cituburb said."
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ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansar
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburh president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls. Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been having the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jane Cutburth, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents. Cathrith said,
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---
CONTENTS
The Royals
page 4
Sports Bars
page 4
ZOO
page 6
The Plaza
page 7
KC Jazz
page 7
---
CREDITS
---
Special thanks to Professor Paul Wenske's Reporting II class.
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id. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
i holds social gatherings to com- and there is a dining out club other week to go to local restauwill begin doing community serining said.
to are not ready to go to a group,
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KANSAS CITY • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
y SUA coe Beach
DOTS
iation
us Alumni Center
event is open
rial Stadium
S DAY
participating
)pm
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ry
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ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburh, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColum Hall.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
or further questions about AURH contact Jamey Cutburth, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Curbarth said.
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id. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
t holds social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local restauill begin doing community ser ning said.
o are not ready to go to a group
and, gay peer counseling is availa-
ne. Students can reach a com-
munity Information or Headquarters
ek!
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y SUA
cee Beach
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ons Alumni Center
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ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Curturh, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamee Cutubtright, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, direc tor of food service for student housing to make the food service better
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residanny's also offers live music Friday and Saturday nights as well as Saturday night Karaoke sing-alongs.
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Kansas City taverns celebrate area sports
By Jack Fisher Special to the Kansan
Kansas City sports fans are experiencing an exciting feeling — living in an area with quality sports teams.
Many fans think that the Chiefs now have a chance at the Super Bowl with the additions of Joe Montana and Marcus Allen. The Royals are doing well, and the Jayhawk football team is gearing up for what many hope is a winning season.
Sports fans may have that feeling, but what many lack is tickets. So to reproduce that out-with-the-group, beers-and-cheers feeling, fans are heading to sports bars. Bar owners have realized the potential of drawing such crowds and have blanketed their establishments with television screens.
Head east on Kansas Highway 10 and you will hit Kansas City's suburban collection of bars. First on the list is Danny's. This bar and grill is at 13340 College Blvd., just down the road from Johnson County Community College. Six televisions and one large screen TV are evenly spread between assorted stuffed wildlife and are guaranteed to show KU games.
Squire magazine claimed Danny's is the best place to meet people, said Jeff Swartz, kitchen manager, and Danny's is one of the few bars that allows people younger than 21 in all night.
A little further in the "Barnunda Triangle" is Tamer's Bar and Grill, 10146 W. 119th St. Ceiling and walls are cluttered with anything featuring a beer brands' logo, K.C.strip steaks and tacos are the Monday and Tuesday night specials.
Tina Davenport, bartender, said Tanner's is a friendly place, but only for those 21 and older. Under 21s are only allowed in if accompanied by a parent.
On the same street, at 119th and Metcalf, is Longshots. This more upscale bar of light wood, the ubiquitous brass trim and uncluttered walls has a huge 10-foot screen and 14 other televisions.
Mark Garcia, owner and manager of Longshots, and his wife both attended KU — as did two of his bartenders — so they cater to the KU crowd. The bar serves food to the underaged until 9 p.m. but looks down on under-age offenders. Seventy-five cent draws of Busch beer are a seven-day-aweek special.
Staying on the same street at 6765 W. 119th reveals Johnny's Tavern, sister bar to the one in North Lawrence. Johnny's has a strong association with KU and draws a large KU alumni crowd, said Lisa Smith, bartender. Two big screens and seven televisions are tuned to the Hawks.
Royals fans enjoying team's 25th season
Gerrv Fev
Special to the Kansan
Interstate 70 rumbles east through traffic-filled downtown Kansas City. As you leave the city behind, the road sweeps around a hill, and suddenly the scoreboard crown of Kauffman Stadium, home of the Kansas
CORRECTED TEXT HERE
cally reveals user.
Here, many KU students have the opportunity to watch a team that won a World Series in 1985 after starting as an expansion team in 1969. The Royals are in contention for another
City Royals, majestically reveals itself.
David Cone
unvison title, and now more than ever, visitors from KU will go.
"We get quite a few college groups of mostly sororities and fraternities," said Jackie Tschirhart, group sales coordinator. "Every year we have at least 50 university groups, mostly from Kansas University and some from the University of Missouri."
After arriving at the stadium, the next obstacle to overcome is tickets. The cheapest seats available are general admission, located down the left and right field lines.
Enjoy being out in that kind of crowd."
Newman said. "The seats are cheap, and you're out there with people just like you."
Even getting seats doesn't end the escapade of money spending. Snacks and souvenirs are next. The prices at Kauffman
Dustin Newman, Denver junior, said these seats may be the best.
KC
are similar to other parks in the nation. A large beer and a small hot dog cost $4.50. The overall cost to watch a Royals game sounds cheaper, but there is also the mandatory $5 parking price that some major league parks don't have.
Newman said he is not a Royals fan, but he likes to watch his favorite American League teams.
"The Royals are all right, but I don't like them," he said. "I do like the stadium, and I enjoy watching legends like George Brett in action."
The Royals will be in town for games against the Minnesota Twins Aug. 23 to 26, and all games start at 7:35 p.m. Then, the Boston Red Sox will come for a three-game series Aug. 27 to 29
ADVERTISEMENT
Comic Store Caters to Students
TnT's Comic Market-An Explosive Interest
By Jenny Scherzer
Tim Lawrence and Todd Mochamer, the owners of TnT's TnC market, located in the Malls Shopping Center, have been collecting comics in the Lawrence and the Kansas City area for 12 years. The growing popularity of the comic industry gave Tim and Todd the incentive to open their own store. Feeling that the local dealers haven't grown to accompany the renewed interests in this hobby, Tim and Todd have devised methods to accommodate all types and levels of collectors.
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By using a separate room for backstock comics and a computer system to track them, employees can easily locate a certain comic by the title, author or artist. This computer system helps the consumer obtain the book they want in the best condition available. "With traditional backstock bins people thumb through the comics, this can significantly lower the grade of the books. With our system you thumb through a catalog, choose the books you want and have them brought to you in the condition you chose. Guaranteed." said Todd.
Top and Above: The employee of TnT's Cosmic Market have some fun
Their computer system is not the only thing that separates them from other comic stores in Lawrence. According to Gareth Skarka, a former manager of Southern Fantasies, one of the largest comic and gaming stores in the southeast region, "They will easily outdistance the other stores in consumer relations and range of products. Their professionalism is reflected in their willingness to cater to the needs of their costumers."
TnT's facilities include a 400 square foot game room with two twelve foot gaming tables, dry boards, cork boards and a capacity for up to 32 people. They stock rare specialty books, signed and numbered books and original art. TnT's Comic Market is the future of collecting.
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jd. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
will begin doing community sering said.
i holds social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out club
week to go to local restauto are not ready to go to a group
and, gay peer counseling is availine. Students can reach a count
Information or Headquarters
k!
ION
y SUA
coe Beach
OOTS
Iation
ns Alumni Center
event is open
rial Stadium
DAY
recipating
pm
ing of "Naked Gun" le Hill
4
mry
pm
00pm
all, 8:00pm
KANSAS CITY • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1903
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18.1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
For further questions about AURH contact James Cutburnb, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColum Hall.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Cutburn said
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Dillard's
organization
d. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
I holds social gatherings to com- and there is a dining out club 9th week to go to local restau-
fill begin doing community sering said.
o are not ready to go to a group
pid, gay peer counseling is availne.
Students can reach a coun-
lormation or Headquarters
event is open
nation us Alumni Center
ek! ION
y SUA coe Beach
rial Stadium
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August 18 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN *KANSAS CITY* 5
DAY participating
)pm
ing of "Naked Gun" le Hill
ory
pm
60pm
all, 8:00pm
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
The organization plans campus wide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamie Cutubh, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Curbthurst said.
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Wanting change Protectors stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
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Look for us on campus during hawk week!
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art 1993-1994 Exhibitions
July 16-September 5
Common Ground/Uncommon Vision: The Michael and Julie Hall Collection of American Folk Art
August 8-September 19
Photographs from the Permanent Collection
September 10-October3
Outstanding Works of Japan's Contemporary Ceramic Art
The Intimate Collaboration: Prints from the Teaberry Press
October 3 - November 14
Gods, Guardians and Lovers: Temple Sculptures from North India. 700-1200 A.D.
October 8-December 5
November 12-February 6,1994
High Ideals and Aspirations: The Creation of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
November21-January9,1994 Gifts to the Print Collection in Recent Years
January 8 - February 27,1994 Focus Exhibition: Gericault/Delacroix
January 8-February 27,1994
January 8 - February 27, 1974
Lee Bontecou; Sculpture and Drawings of the 1960s
Richard Estes: The Complete Prints
March27 - May 29,1994 Songs of My People
June 5-July 3,1994 MunicipalArtCommissionPhotography
June 5-July 3,1994
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
4525 Oak Street
Kansas City, MO
3 blocks NE of the Country Club Plaza
(816) 561-4000
Museum Hours and Admission
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday
1 to 5 p.m. Sunday
Admission is $4 for adults, $1 for students
with ID and children 6-18 and
free for children 5 and under.
Saturdays are FREE.
6 $ \frac{\mathrm{O}}{\mathrm{th}} $
NELSON-ATKINS MUSEUM OF ART
1933. 1993
organization
id. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
o are not ready to go to a group
day, gay peer counseling is availme. Students can reach a coun-
firmation or Headquarters
ill begin doing community serning said.
t holds social gatherings to com- and there is a dining out club other week to go to local restau-
k!
ION
y SUA
coe Beach
DOTS
event is open
iation ns Alumni Center
rial Stadium
S DAY
participating
)pm
ing of "Naked Gun" le Hill
KANSAS CITY • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
om
Opm
ull,B:DOpm
ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, August 18. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburh, president of the association.
AUHR is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamey Cutburn, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
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"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents," Curbuth said.
Wanting change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
City of Fountains Country Club Plaza known for beauty
Kari McElroy
The Country Club Plaza in Kansas City has something for everyone and every occasion. The day can be spent shopping for a unique gift or stopping for a cup of coffee.
Special to the Kansan
Unlike the bland cookie-cutter sameness of most malls, the Plaza offers something unique to its visitors. A sense of style and ambiance is evident as one walks along blocks and blocks of Spanish architecture and fountains.
FUENTE DE FONTAINE
"It is the style center of the Midwest," said Beth Morrison, executive director of The Plaza Association. Built in 1922, the Plaza was the first suburban shopping center in North America she said.
With 187 shops, boutiques, outdoor cafes, elegant restaurants and theaters, one could show all day and not see it all.
Parking is not a problem at the Plaza. According to the Plaza Directory, available from the Plaza Association, there are 5,000 free parking spaces to choose from. The directory also offers an area map of the Plaza that is helpful when trying to find that special store.
The Body Shop, the Nature Company, and the Sharper Image are great places to start browsing
The Sharper Image sports a 7-foot alien game from the movie Aliens. This enormous disgusting creature can brighten up any home for only $3,000.
The Plaza can even send shoppers back to the prehistoric age.
It is Lady's job to schedule entertaining things in which visitors can get involved outside the store. For example, for the last few weeks she has been leading visitors on a hiking adventure.
A prehistoric jungle of ideas and gifts are found at the Nature Company.
"There are constantly fiers up in the store," said Ludy. "We encourage people to
"We have games that will help people appreciate the beauty of nature," said Joan Lady, special events coordinator at the Nature Company.
When it is time for a break, there is a restaurant around every corner. The variety is sure to accommodate any budget. From McDonald's to Parkway 600, the Plaza is sure to fill any appetite.
get involved with nature in and out of the store."
Every book, game, video, CD, jewelry, and poster is nature-related. All you need to know about dinosaurs and a whole lot more can be found at the Nature Company.
The small outdoor cafe enables shoppers to enjoy a cup of coffee and watch the world go by. The Classic Cup serves the perfect cup of cappuccino and caffee to boost even the most weary of shopper into the next store.
Of course, the entire Plaza can be seen by carriage for $25 per couple or by trolley for $4 per person. Friendly drivers await to take passengers on a tour and fill them in on interesting details about the Plaza and its origin.
图
The shops at the Plaza open at 10 a.m.
Mon.-Sat, and at noon on Sundays. Consult
the Plaza Directory for the extended closing
hours.
Andrew Arnone/ KANSAN
The Country Club Plaza is known for its fountains, architecture and shopping.
FOND DE LA CALLE
DE LA SAN FRANCESCO
Kansas City played large part in history of jazz
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
the names and places have changed since its heyday 60 years ago, but the sound of Kansas City jazz still blows throughout the town.
In the '20s and '30s, Count Basie and Bennie Moten's big band sound were packing them in at the legendary music halls in the 18th and Vine area of the city; places like the Boone, the Gem, and the Lincoln.
Now the city hosts such names as vocalist Karrin Allyson at the Phoenix Piano Bar and Grill and Joe Cartwright Trio at the Plaza's City Light Jazz Club.
PELAS'S City Light was "Kansas City was one of the key cities that had a major influence on jazz," said Dick Wright, KU jazz professor and host of "The
Wright said the age of large dance halls that featured crowds swinging and swaying to big band music has, for the most part, passed into history.
"The Kansas City style is still heard around the country." Wright said. "Jazz festivals sometimes dedicate a night or a set to the Kansas City sound."
Jazz Scene," a Saturday morning jazz show on KANU radio.
Wright described the Kansas City jazz style as the happy blues of Joe Williams and Big Joe Turner and the swing sound of Basie and Moten.
While interest in the blues that made Kansas City jazz famous has warned, the city still offers many venues for jazz shows. Two of the better known are The City Light Jazz Club and The Phoenix.
The city light Jazz Club at 4749 Pennsylvania Street on the Plaza is one of the only places in Kansas City that offers jazz performances seven nights a week. While the club tends to showcase local performers and bands, manager Jeff Wiltfram said the club books two to three national acts a month, including recent appearances by More by four from Minneapolis and Roseanne Vine from New York.
The Phoenix Piano Bar and Grill at 302 W. 8th Street presents the four-piece band Tim Whitmer & KC Express at its jazz happy hour each week night from 5 to 9, said Todd Schoonerer, manager of the club.
The Phoenix also has a weekly Saturday matinee show with the Scamps, a band Schoonerer said plays more of the traditional Kansas City jazz sound.
"Speedy Higgins, who's now in the Jazz Hall of Fame, often sits in with the band," said Schoonoreer "All the guys in the band are in their 60s and 70s so they know from experience how to play that blues Kansas City-style jazz."
For a more contemporary jazz sound, Schoonerore suggested seeing a performance by vocalist Karrin Allyson, a singer recently signed with a major recording label. Concord Records. Allison usually performs at the Phoenix on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturday.
For those jazz fans who want to find out more about the jazz scene in Kansas City, Wright suggested that they contact the Kansas City Jazz Ambassadors. This group publisher the bi-monthly Jazz Ambassadors Magazine.
organization
ud "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or"
t holds social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local restauwill begin doing community sering said.
August 18, 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS • KANSAS CITY
o are not ready to go to a group
and, gay peer counseling is avail-
ine. Students can reach a coun-
laboration or Headquarters
k!
ION
y SUA
coe Beach
OTS
iation ns Alumni Center
event is open
rial Stadium
S DAY
participating
)pm
ing of "Naked Gun' le Hill
rry
pm
90pm
call,&:00pm
7
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18. 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburh, president of the association.
"AUHR is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester.
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
- Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamie Cutburn, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the resi-
HEMP
100% OF OUR
PAPER
HEMP
FOR U.S.
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KANSAN file photo
Wanting change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
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i
organization
31. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
choices social gatherings to coms, and there is a dining out club other week to go to local restau-
ill begin doing community ser ning said.
o are not ready to go to a group
gay peer counseling is availine.
Students can reach a coun-
laboration or Headquarters
ek! ION
ek!
ION
O
y SUA
cee Beach
DOTS
iation
ns Alumni Center
event is open
rial Stadium
S DAY
participating
0pm
ing of "Naked Gun"
Hill Hill
ery
pm
8:00pm
all B:00pm
KANSAS CITY • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
RU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Curburth, president of the association.
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamie Cutburn, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing to make the food service better
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Curburth said.
HEMP
100% OF OUR
PAPER
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Wanting change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
K~you
a promotional feature of the University Daily Kansan
Food Guide
Everything students need to know about dining in Lawrence.
PETER HOLMES
organization
*it "For many of LesBiGaySOK's suit to be openly homosexual or*
holds social gatherings to com-
s and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local resta
jill begin doing community ser- ning said.
o are not ready to go to a group,
gay peer counseling is availine. Students can reach a coun-
laboration or Headquarters.
k!
ION
y SUA coc Beach
DOTS
iation
ns Alumni Center
event is opens,
rial Stadium
S DAY
participating
0pm
wing of“Naked Gun”
side Hill
pm
50pm
all, 0:00pm
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansar
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Curturh, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
- General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jane Cutburn, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residence." Cofftha said.
HEMP
100% OF OUR
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Wanting change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
KU
KANSAN
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
NET WT. 20 OZ/1 LB 4 OZ/567g
Barbecue page 4
Cajun page 4
Campus Eating page 5
American Food page 6
Ice Cream page 7
Diet Food page 8
Fine Dining page 9
Health Foods page 10
Pizza page 11
CREDITS
Special Thanks to Professor
Bruce Swain's Reporting I Class
Special Promotions • Josh Hahn
Cover Photo • Andrew Arnone
Creative Director • Brian Fusco
* CHOLESTEROL, FREE • 100% NATURAL • LOW IN PASTE
BETTY ROGERS
Andrew Arnone / KANSAN
CREDITS
Special Thanks to Professor
Bruce Swain's Reporting I Class
Special Promotions • Josh Hahn
Cover Photo • Andrew Arnone
Creative Director • Brian Fusco
CHOLESTEROL FREE • 100% NATURAL • LOW IN FAIT
1.
FOOD GUIDE • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
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2
organization
d. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
holds social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out chul-
ter week to go to local restau
ill begin doing community serining said.
o are not ready to go to a group
and gay peer counseling is avail-
ne. Students can reach a coun-
lormation or Headquarters.
ek!
ION
by SUA
coe Beach
DOTS
iation
ns Alumni Center
event is open
rial Stadium
DAY
participating
0pm
ing of "Naked Gun"
le Hill
k!
ION
ry
0m
10pm
11,8.00pm
August 18, 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • Food Guide
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansar
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutturb, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls. Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
- General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
For further questions about
AURH contact Jane Cutburn-
president, or Ken Martin, vice
president, at 864-4041.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents," Cutburth said.
HEMP
100% OF OUR
PAPER
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FOR U.S.
FARMERS
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holds social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local restau
ill begin doing community servi ng said.
d. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
organization
o are not ready to go to a group,
gay peer counseling is availne.
Students can reach a coun-
lormation or Headquarters
s event is open.
rial Stadium
S DAY
participating
k!
ION
y SUA
coe Beach
DOTS
0pm
iation ns Alumni Center
ving of "Naked Gun" little Hill
ery
pm
80pm
call,θ:00pm
August 18, 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • Food Guide
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester.
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamie Cutburh, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing. to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the resiyou can hear. The Bum Steer's atmosphere is that of the old West.
"When people think of barbecue they think of the West." Bair said.
HEMP
100% OF OUR
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Wanting change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Wanting change
High-quality barbecue available in Lawrence
By Erika Johnson Special to the Kansan
People do not have to go to Kansas City to get good barbecue because Lawrence has three restaurants that offer some of the best around.
The Bum Steer, 711 W. 23rd St., is known for its blue ribbon bibs, smoked flavored meat, and excellent barbecue sauce. It caters to students, businessmen, and even to construction workers.
Bum Steer is probably the best barbecue in Lawrence," said Daniel Davidson, lunchtime customer and roofer.
Travis Bair, employee of The Bum Steer, said he did not think the restaurant needed to worry about competition from the other two barbecue restaurants.
"I don't think we have any competition in town, to be honest with you," Bair said. "When people come in they think we are the best."
Patrons can choose from ribs, smoked chicken or sausage dinners, sandwiches and the desert of the day. The Bum Steer offers lunch specials throughout the week, a buffet lunch and dinner that includes all the ribs you can eat.
Blues Brew and Bar-B-Q Restaurant and Lounge, 1910 Haskell Ave., opened April 10, 1992
The owners of Blues Brew and Bar-B-Q decided on barbecue because of the limited number of barbecue places in Lawrence.
"We decided to get competitive and take some of the others' business," co-owner Jerome Williams said.
Blues Brew and Bar-B-Q makes its own barbecue sauce. It also has more than just barbecue. A customer may choose from a halfslab of ribs, catfish, sandwiches, fried or barbecue chicken, side orders and the pie of the day.
also provides the kitchen. Williams said that he thought the restaurant had the best barbecue and could compete with anyone in town. The barbecue店 in Lawrence featuring barbecue is
Blues Brew and Bar-B-Q is not just a barbecue restaurant, but is also a lounge and bar. After eating a meal, customers can go into the lounge, enjoy a beverage, watch the big-screen TV or listen to music. A dance floor also provides entertainment.
The third restaurant in Lawrence featuring barbecue is Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse, 719 Massachusetts St.
Becker said that Buffalo Bob's was probably one of the busiest restaurants in town because there were a limited number of barbecue places.
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse, 1435 N. 7th Street, New York, NY 10026
Buffalo Bob's offers two levels of dining for adequate seating. It is filled with antiques and stuffed buffalo heads.
"When we play K-State, that's when we are the busiest all year." Becker said.
"We get a lot of people in here from Topeka, and alumi" John Becker, an employee.
Becker said that he thought the customers liked to eat at Buffalo Bob's because of the large servings of food for a low price and good service. Choices include sandwiches, lunch specials, dinner specials, and ribs. Everything at Buffalo Bob's is made from scratch, including the sauce.
"I think they'll do all right," he said. "I think there are enough people in this town to enjoy all of the barbecue."
Becker said he is confident that Buffalo Bob's is far ahead of the competition.
Oread Cafe specializes in a spicy, Cajun style
By Jay Lisondra
Special to the Kansan
Besides being known for having more restaurants per person than most U.S. cities, Lawrence also offers a diverse range of delectable cuisine. Anything from American food to the food of the Far East.
Of all the restaurants in Lawrence, only one specializes in Cajun food — the Oread Cafe, 704 Massachusetts St. This little restaurant brings back all the nostalgia of the '50s "Beatnik" era.
Stairs lead down into a stone-walled room with a large American flag mural on the wall. On the left sits an upright piano and a drum set used for live jazz music played every night.
"Most people don't know about this place and are often surprised. I'd clear Eleanor Balson, a waitress at the restaurant."
For owner Doug Fay, the restaurant is a realization of a dream he had while learning to prepare Cajun food in New Orleans. He hopes that his business will expand along with people's interest in Cajun dining.
The sensibly priced menu offers a variety of meals priced from $1.95 for the fresh garden salad, to $7.95 for the pan-fried catfish. For the entrees, you have a choice of really spicy or mild.
Other restaurants in town serve a type of Cajun meal, usually a blackened chicken or fish, or they serve a gumbo or jambalaya special from time to time. These restaurants are:
American Bistro. 101 W 7th.
North Field Brewery and Pub, 636 Massachusetts St.
Free State Brewery and Pub, 636 Massachusetts St.
Fun Moon School, 600 Magnolia
Tellers, 746 Massachusetts St.
Fay said he hopes that his cooking, along with the live jazz and weekly poetry readings, will make the Oread Cafe a worthwhile experience.
"I just basically want a fun place." he said.
molly mcgee
Start The School Year Out Right!
2429 Iowa 841-9922
holds social gatherings to com- and there is a dining out club other week to go to local resta
d. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
organization
ill begin doing community sering said.
o are not ready to go to a group,
gay peer counseling is availne.
Students can reach a com-
Information or Headquarters.
k!
oe Beach
ation
us Alumni Center
OTS
event is open
al Stadium
DAY participating
pm
ing of "Naked Gun" e Hill
y
m
0pm
8:00pm
Food Guide • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburh, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground next to several projects including
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesday of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColum Hall.
**For further questions about**
**AURH contact Jamey Cutlumber,
president, or Ken Martin, vice-
president, at 864-4041.**
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Cutburth said.
1. A committee will
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Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Mr. Goodcents Subs & Pastas
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OPEN 10:30 AM
10:00 PM Daily
841-8444
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Lawrence, KS
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3) Penny Club 299 450 cents
(Roast Beef, Turkey Ham)
4) Italian Combo 299 450 cents
(Capicola, Pepperoni, Salami)
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6) Pepperoni & Cheese 299 435 cents
7) Salami 299 435 cents
8) Roast Beef 299 449 cents
9) Turkey 299 435 cents
10) Tunafish 299 449 cents
11) Capicola 299 449 cents
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Cheese 339 539 cents
13) Meatball 299 449 cents
14) Sausage 319 449 cents
(green peppers & onions)
15) Chicken Salad 299 449 cents
16) Cheese Mix 299 449 cents
15) Chicken Salad 299 449 cents
16) Cheese Mix 299 449 cents
17) Seafloor 339 539 cents
Cheese 15 25 cents
Double meat 100 150 cents
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Sub Sack (1/4 Sub. Drink & Cookie) 179 cents
Spaghetti (Pasta, Drink & Cookie) 159 cents
wMeatball 169 cents
wSausage 169 cents
(Served with white or red sauce & garlic bread)
(Under 12 only please))
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Pasta w/Meatball w/Sausage
Spaghetti 279 339 349 cents
Mostaccioli 279 339 349 cents
Rigatoni 279 339 349 cents
SIDES
Pasta 129 cents
Meatballs (2) 99 (4) 189 (6) 269 cents
Sausage (2) 149 (4) 289 (6) 399 cents
Garlic Bread (2) 69 (4) 129 (6) 189 cents
SIDES
Soup (seasonal) 150 cents
Pasta Salad 75 cents
Potato Salad 75 cents
Chips 75 cents
Cookie 75 cents
Seafood Salad 339 cents
ChefSalad 289 cents
Chicken Salad 259 cents
Tuna Salad 259 cents
Garden Salad 199 cents
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Coke, Diet Coke,
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Lemonade 79 99 cents
Iced Tea (fresh brewed) 79 99 cents
BEVERAGES Regular Large
Coffee 79 cents
Seltzer Water 79 cents
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841-8444 WE DELIVER!
Many places available for a meal on campus
By Kate Paton
Special to the Kansan
Students will not find a McDonald's or a Taco Bell on campus, but there are several places on campus that will stop a stomach from growing.
The Kansas Union houses three places to eat on the third floor. Union Square, the largest, has a 766-person capacity and serves breakfast and lunch.
Union Square offers a variety of dishes including salad, sandwich and potato bars, plus Mexican entrees, a grill area, and daily specials. A cheeseburger and a medium soda cost about $2.50. There is no smoking throughout the area and plenty of places to sit. Fall and spring semester hours are 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays. It is closed Sundays.
The Hawk's Nest, also in the Union, offers deli items, pizza, and bakery items. It also has soups, salads, gourmet coffee, ice cream, and beverages. A large cinnamon roll or a single-scooped ice cream cost about 60 cents. The Hawk's Nest offers plenty of seating in a beautiful atrium that is non-smoking throughout. Fall and spring semester hours are 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Fridays, and 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sundays. It is closed Saturdays.
The Union's Prairie Room is unique in that it offers table service. The menu offers a variety of entrees, and the restaurant has a salad bar. The atmosphere is quiet and comfortable. A cheeseburger and medium soda costs about $2.50. The Prairie Room seats 112 and there is no smoking throughout. Fall and spring semester hours are 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. It is closed Saturdays and Sundays. Reservations can be made by calling 864-4590.
The Burge Union, located at the corner of Irving Hill Road and Burdice Drive, houses the Hawk Stop. It has a wide variety of classic fast food items as well as salad and sandwich bars. A cheeseburger and a medium soda cost about $2.50.
The restaurant offers a large seating area with non-smoking throughout. Fall and spring semester hours are 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. It is closed Sundays.
The food services department for both unions provide a menu hot line number. To receive recorded list, call 864-4567. In addition, the catering department can cater groups of up to 800 for special events or occasions. For catering information, call Dottie Nordlund at 864-4590.
The catering department can also prepare cakes and cookies for special events such as graduations and birthdays.
KU Concessions operates the Wescoe Terrace Cafeteria and Deli, located on the lower level of Wescoke Hall. This snack bar offers breakfast items, such as cereal and fruit. Lunch items include sandwiches, chips, ice cream, and a variety of candy. A make-your own sandwich and a medium soda cost about $3.35.
There is a large seating area that is non-smoking throughout. Fall and spring semester hours are 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. It is closed Saturdays and Sundays.
Two smaller snack bars can be found in Murphy Hall at the corner of 15th Street and Naismith Drive and in the Visual Arts Building. These snacks bars offer candy, soft drinks, chips, and other munchables. A cheeseburger and a medium soda cost about $1.85.
Seating is limited to four small round tables, but it proves a place to grab a to-go lunch. Fall and spring semester hours are 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. Both snack bars are closed Saturdays and Sundays.
KU Concessions can organize parties or special events. Soda and snacks can be picked up or delivered and set up. KU Concessions also can supply equipment such as microwaves and ice chests, as well as cups, napkins, and ice. For more information, contact Terry Cavanage at 864-3515.
BAKERY
BAKERY
DEL BAKERY
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAM
Welcome Back
**Welcome Back**
Joe's Bakery and St. Reeves every fall after closing during the summer months.
A long tradition for KU students, will greet students with a new evening.
August 18, 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN * Food Guide
organization
shoals social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out chub
other week to go to local restau-
ill begin doing community serining said.
id "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
o are not ready to go to a group,
gay peer counseling is available.
Students can reach a counsel
Information or Headquarters.
eK!
ION
SUA
roe Beach
OTS
event is open
ation ns Alumni Center
rial Stadium
DAY participating
pm
ing of "Naked Gun' e Hill
pm
10pm
11, 8; 00pm
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Curburth, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven hall.
Students interming for the organization during the summer plan all the activities for the fall semester.
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jim Cautubr, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the resi-
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Wanting change
Professors stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Wanting change
Mass. St. serves American food
By Andrew Gilman
Special to the Kansan
If you're looking for some good American food, Massachusetts Street has a great selection.
Cornucopia Restaurant, 1801 Massachusetts St., is exactly what the name suggests. It has everything.
Cornucopia was established in the early 70s, serving only vegetarian food, but now it's known as a "family-oriented, slow-paced, just real good food kind of place," said Sean Washburn, an employee.
Cornucopia has its own bakery and a 72-tem item salad bar, which includes breads, soups and fruits. There are different specials every day for lunch and dinner.
"All different kinds of people come in here." Washburn said. "And it's quite affordable."
Many different sandwiches can be purchased for under $5, including the popular eggytac, a bacon, egg and cheese sandwich with tomato and lettuce.
Erick Bryant, a waiter at the restaurant, said that the best thing about the restaurant is the salad bar.
Laurie Kahrs, manager of Tin Pan Alley.
1105 Massachusetts St., said her establishment was a very unique place with a mellow atmosphere.
atmosphere.
"There are three different lunch and dinner specials each day, and we make all our own breads and desserts," Kahrs said. "Being this far off downtown kind of hinders us, but I think people are aware that we're here."
The menu has everything from the popular pork chops and chicken fried steak to chocolate chip cheesecake. The restaurant offers salads, and breakfast food is available all day.
The prices are reasonable with everything on the menu available for under $9.
Blue Bird Diner, 814 Massachusetts St., is the newest addition to American food on the street. Blue Bird gives customers a diner-type atmosphere, and it has a full bakery.
The diner, which has been open since April, has a Sunday brunch menu that changes every week. Everything from omeletes to biscuits and gravy to granola is available.
P. J. Karlin, owner of the Blue Bird, said that the hot roast beef sandwich and the turkey avocado sandwich on cottage dill bread were two of the more popular choices. Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St.,
probably has the most relaxed atmosphere on the street.
Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St.,
Jake Wilson, a cook at the cafe, said the spinach enchilada is the most popular choice on the menu.
tric Cleveland, a host at the cafe, said,
"The food can be expensive, but it's all fresh.
You really get what you pay for."
The cafe is open for breakfast at 6:30. Eggs Benedict is just one of the many choices.
"This place has good food, no, excellent food, and a relaxed atmosphere," Cleveland said.
The main attraction at the Free State Brewery, 636 Massachusetts St., is freshly brewed beer. Free State, which has been open for about four years, serves such things as black bean quesadillas and hamburgers. has a casual atmosphere and new specials every day.
Jane Patrick, manager, said the restaurant served "pub fare food."
"Everything here goes with beer," she said.
"The menu, centered around it."
Free tours are available 2 p.m. every Saturday
"For reasonable prices and fresh ingredients, and pleasant speedy service, this is the place to go." Patrick said.
Not going downtown? Try these places for great American food. They are not sandwich shops, burger joints, pizza places or chains.
- Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St. Molly's has everything from great appetizers to desserts. The Overlander, a turkey, ham and roast beef sandwich with barbecue sauce, is one of the most popular items to choose from. Plenty of televisions are available for viewing your favorite sporting events while you relax in either of the two seating level. Entrees range from $4.25 to $13.00.
The Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. This is a very affordable place to get healthy American food. The No Student Loan, a bowl of vegetarian chili, rice and a tortilla, is a popular item, and it's only $2.35. Entrees range from $2.35 to $6.
The Greenery, 2300 Iowa St. The Greenery offers a popular chicken fletch sandwich along with burgers, salads and other sandwiches. Entrees range from $2.50 to $5.
Herbivores, 9. E, 8th St. Herbivores serves the popular avocado sandwich and plenty of other vegetarian delights. Entrees range from $3.25 to $5.25.
Please Help Keep Our Planet Clean. Recycle Your University Daily Kansan.
Treat Yourself
Paradise
Cafe & Bakery
Good Real Food
Treat Yourself
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Open Thursday, Friday, & Saturday til Midnight
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Mon. - Thur. 11:30 AM - 10:00 PM
Fri. & Sat. 11:30 AM - 10:30 PM
Sun. 11:30 AM - 9:00 PM
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Food Guide • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
2907 W. 6th (Across from Dillons)
841-1688
organization
d. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
1 holds social gatherings to comps, and there is a dining out club other week to go to local restau-
all begin doing community ser-
ming said.
o are not ready to go to a group,
gay peer counseling is availine.
Students can reach a coun-
lorm Information or Headquarters.
ION
SUA
Poe Beach
DOTS
ation
us Alumni Center
event is open
ial Stadium
DAY participating
pm
6
ing of "Naked Gun" the Hill
y
m
0pm
ii,B:00pm
1. a.
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
group has been laying the ground
for annual projects including
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
FOR further questions about
AURH contact Jane Cuturbite,
president, or Ken Martin, vice
president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Cutburth said.
A congressional committee will
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KANSAN file photo
Wanting change
Wanting change Protectors stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Many places offer cool,sweet treats
By Jerry Hofman
Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kansan
Lawrence has six different places serving ice cream, yogurt or shaved ice to curb the craving for something cool and sweet.
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt has two locations, 2223 Louisiana St. and 3300 W. 15th St. and is open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon to 11 p.m. on Sunday. The stores offer low-fat, non-fat and sugar-free non-fat yogurt.
Low-calorie yogiac, which has the consis tency of sherbet, also is available.
For a change of pace. The Creamery, 1447 W. 29rd St., will mix your choice of topping into either ice cream or vortun.
The stores have eight flavors available each day, and the flavors change often. People can top off the yogurt with your choice of at least 32 toppings.
In addition to the ice cream, there are six yogurt flavors to choose from, and various flavors can be swirled together onto a cone. The Creamery is open from noon to midnight seven days a week while the University is in session.
Baskin-Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream Store also has two locations, 925 Iowa St. and 1524 W. 23rd St. The stores' hours are 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and they open an hour later on Sunday.
The store on 23rd Street offers both ice cream and yogurt products. It has a choice of iron-fat, light, and sugar-free yogurt. It also offers a choice of various candy toppings.
Baskin-Robbins offers the widest selection of dairy flavors.
Penny Annie's Sweet Shop, 845 Massachusetts St., caters to students who wander downstreet. The shop, which is designed like an old-fashioned soda fountain, is open from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday and is closed Sunday.
In addition to ice cream, Penny Annie's offers one flavor of sherbet and four flavors of frozen yogurt. The shop only offers one size cone, and it 'heaped with two scoops of your favorite flavors.
Dairy Queen Brazzer also can be found in two places, 2545 Iowa St. and 1835 Massachusetts St. The stores are open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.
Dairy Queen offers two flavors of softserve that can also be swirled together. Any of the blizzard or sunrise toppings can be added to the ice cream. The stores also have may novelty items such as Buster and Dilly Bars, star kisses and yogurt sandwiches.
M. P. G.
Sno Palace. 2108 W. 25th St., makes a different type of treat. Sno Palace will top shaved ice with your choice of 78 flavors.
The store also offers fruity bars, a popsicle type item. It is open from noon to 10:30 p.m. every day, but closes for the season September 31.
Prices for cones range from $1 to $1.50, and most stores give you a choice between sugar and waffle cones. The one exception, the Creamery's Baby Mix-In, costs $2.26, but it has more ice cream than a regular cone.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Tom Tootle, employee at The Creamery, mixes chocolate chocolate-chip cookie dough into chocolate ice cream at The Creamery,1447 W. 23rd St.
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organization
i holds social gatherings to com-
s, and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local restau-
10. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's cult to be openly homosexual or
will begin doing community sering said.
io are not ready to go to a group
and, gay peer counseling is availone. Students can reach a coun-
tion/Information or Headquarters
D
ek!
TION
by SUA
scoe Beach
OOTS
ociation ams Alumni Center
is event is open ts. orial Stadium
IS DAY participating
00pm
owing of "Naked Gun"
nile Hill
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6:30pm
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August 18. 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN * Food Guide
ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground work for several projects including
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
- General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColium Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jain Cutburt president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Curbarth said.
A programmed committee will
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100% OF OUR
PAPER
HEMP
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warning change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Cookies selling like hotcakes
Fat-free Nabisco product sells out quickly in stores
By Tim Dyhouse Special to the Kansan
Many people like them, but hardly anyone can find them. The mystery in Lawrence and across the country is: Where's the cookie cakes?
Devil's Food Cookie Cakes are the hit of the Nabisco Snackwell's line of fat - and cholesterol-free products.
Since being introduced last year, the cookies have been selling out rapidly, and the response from Lawrence consumers has been nothing short of phenomenal.
"We get one case a week, and they're gone by noon of the day they're delivered," said Jan Vorhies, an employee at Dillon's, 1740 Massachusetts St.
Vornies said her store had regular customers who bought the cookies every week. They call to make sure what day the store will have them and when they'll be delivered. Vornies also said that other grocery stores in Lawrence were unable to keep the cookies on the shelves. A recent tour of stores confirmed that fact.
Pierce also said that the entire fat- and cholesterol-free Snackwell's line had been a very good seller for his store. In fact, Alvin's was also sold out of Snackwell's Oatmeal Raisin Cookies.
"They're very hard to keep in stock," said Todd Pierce, assistant manager of Alvin's IGA.
Customers at Dillon's, 3000 W. Sixth Street,
were buying other Snackwell's products
also. The cookie cakes, however, were long
gone.
"We get an order every other week, and we're sold out in three hours," employee John Arbensberg said.
The Snackwell's line also includes Chocolate Chip Cookies, Creme Sandwich Cookies, Chocolate Sandwich Cookies, Cinnamon Graham Snacks, Crushed Pepper Crackers, Wheat Crackers and Cheese Crackers.
Nabisco bakes 750,000 cookies daily in a plant in North Sioux City, S.D. A fourth production line is being planned, but the demand is still far ahead of the supply.
"We recently began running a commercial apologizing for the shortage," said Ann Smith, a Nabisco public relations representative.
To make sure everyone has an equal chance to try the cookies, Nabisco is rationing stores to two cases per order.
Each cookie has 60 calories and contains no fat or cholesterol. There are 12 cookies to a box, and each box costs $1.99. So far no Lawrence store has limited the number of boxes a customer may buy. However, if the current trend holds up, that may change.
"This month our delivery man came from Wal-Mart and said a lady bought his whole shipment," said Bob Person, store manager of B&L Apple Market.
Many people have theories as to why the cookies are so popular, but most think it's because consumers are more health-conscious these days.
Fat can be important for health
By John Bailey
Special to the Kansan
Weight loss has become such an obsession in this country that many misconceptions have arisen as to the proper way to lose weight and which foods are good to eat.
For most people, the best way to lose weight is to decrease the amount of fat in the diet and increase the amount of fiber. However, everyone is different. Many people get carried away with the misconception that the less fat eaten, the better off you will be. While it may be true that people should decrease the fat in their diets, total elimination of fat can be damaging to the body.
Ann Chapman, dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center, stresses that fat is essential in nutrition.
"We want the fat in the diet to be between 20 and 30 percent of total calories each day" she said. "If it goes drastically below that percentage, then an individual could eventually end up with some health problems."
Deciding how many calories a day is the right amount can be confusing. One rule of thumb Chapman offered was taking the desired weight and adding a zero on the end. For example, if the desired weight is 120 pounds, then the total calories per day would be 1200.
The way to calculate percentage of fat to get the desired 20 to 30 percent is easy.
Check the product level for grams of fat per serving and number of and number of calories per serving.
Multiply the number of fat grams by nine to get the number of calories from fat.
Divide the number of calories from fat by the number of calories per serving.
*Multiply the answer by 100 to get the percent of calories from fat.
Thus, if one wanted to consume 1200 calories a day, fat intake should be around 360.
Once the desired weight is lost, keeping it off is not easy. Chapman suggested developing an exercise program.
"I encourage a program not only to aid them in loss," she said. "They're going to have to maintain that program after they've lost the weight.
"They may not have to engage in the exercise as many days a week as they did when they were trying to lose," she said. "You can often back down to two or three days a week, but you need to make it part of your lifestyle for the rest of your life."
Fat consumption is possible for those trying to lose weight. The important thing is knowing the right way to consume it.
"If you short yourself enough over a long period of time, it is going to impair your health," Chapman said.
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organization
ion holds social gatherings to com- lays, and there is a dining out club y other week to go to local restau
{ will begin doing community ser-
lanning said.
said. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's difficult to be openly homosexual or jealous."
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by SUA
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Association
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this event is open
nuts.
tourial Stadium
NS DAY participating
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00pm
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owing of "Naked Gun' smile Hill
8 . . . Food Guide . . . • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
ahery
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00pm
6:30pm
y Hall,B:00pm
ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Curtburh, president of the association.
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
"AUHR is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground work for several projects including
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jame Cutburth, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Cutburth said.
A programming committee will
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A MENU
High-class style, high-class food
Kristin Lange, former student body vice president, left, and Jon Gwarteney, Lawrence resident, drink coffee at the La Prima Tazza, 638 Massachusetts St. La Prima Tazza is a place people can enjoy fine gourmet coffees, other beverages, and pastries.
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Quality restaurants offer that special touch for dining
By Emily Gibson Special to the Kansan
There are a few places in Lawrence that offer a change of pace and that are nice places for a date or even parents.
Fast food is OK for a while. But there are some times when burgers at the drive-through just will not do.
FIFI's, 925 Iowa St. in the Hillcrest Restaurant Center, is probably the fanciest place in town. There, the atmosphere of a truly nice restaurant can be found. There are real table-cloths, it is quiet, and it is dark.
The menu offers seafood, chicken, pasta,
and many other traditional dishes. Entree
prices range from $8.95 for the lite fare
chicken or bow tie vegetable pasta, to $16.95
for the K.C. strip steak with shrimp scampi.
Items that are low in calories or cholesterol
are noted on the menu.
FIF's also has an extensive wine list. It was awarded the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence for 1991 and 1992. It is the only restaurant in Kansas to win the award.
Dinner is served from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays and Mondays, and from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Lunch is served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday.
American Bistro in the Eldridge Hotel, 701 Massachusetts St., is operated by the same owners as FIFF. The atmosphere is much the same, but the food is much different.
The American Bistro also has an extensive wine list. Keith Paden, manager of FIFFs, says that American Bistro is expected to be awarded the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence for 1993.
Chef Gary Glover describes the food at American Bistro as "regional American cuisine." Examples include cajun orange roughy, venison with wild mushrooms and east coast crabcakes. Entree prices range from $10.95 to $15.95.
American Bistro is open from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. and from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday through Thursday, and until 10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. Sunday brunch is offered from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Teller's, 746 Massachusetts St., occupies what used to be a bank. Some of the original teller windows are still in tact, and the restrooms are in what used to be the bank's vaults.
Teller's offers a broad range of creative, eclectic, American food. One of its specialties is the wood-fired brick oven pizza. Pizzas range from plain cheese pizza to smoked duck pizza. Pasta, seafood, and even pheasant as well as vegetarian items are offered.
until 2 a.m. Monday through Saturday, and until 1 a.m. Sundays.
Entree prices range from $9.95 to $16.95.
Food is served from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sunday through Thursday, and until 11 p.m.
Fridays and Saturday. The bar stays open
The bar has 38 domestic and bottled beers, and a variety of wines are available by the glass or by the bottle.
All three restaurants offer seasonal menu items. What may be on the summer menu, such as certain varieties of fish, may not be on the winter menu.
Don's Steak House has less to offer in the way of ambiance, but can be included with the others because of the food.
perfection.
At Don's Steak House a person can get just about any kind of steak there is, cooked to
Don's also serves seafood, chicken, and froglegs. Steak prices range from $7.95 for a petite ground steak, to $19.95 for a Porterhouse steak.
Don's is open for dinner from 5 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdays, and from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sundays. Lunch is served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. It is located at 2176 E. 23, off Highway 10.
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organization
said. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's fictitio to be openly homosexual or be."
on holds social gatherings to com-
lays, and there is a dining out club
y other week to go to local restawill begin doing community ser- lanning said.
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Association James Alumni Center
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owing of "Naked Gun"
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Alphery
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6:30pm
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August 18, 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN * Food Guide
9
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Curtburh, president of the association.
"AUH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground work for several projects including
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
■ General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McColum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamie Cutburth, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents," Cutburth said.
A programming committee will
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Wanting change Protesters stand outside of the Lawrence City Hall in favor of marijuana. Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Stores combine size with health
By Angela Cunningham
Special to the Kansan
Sure, there are lots of grocery stores in Lawrence. But let's say you’re picky: you want a wide selection of natural, organic foods, alternative healing methods, advice on nutrition and a line of cosmetics. Oh, and a salad bar would be nice.
If this sounds like your perfect grocery store, you're in the right place. Lawrence has two of them.
Wild Oats Community Market, 1040 Vermont, is the newest. The store, owned by a Boulder, Colo-based company, opened in January.
res, you will find tofu. But you will also
ice cream, pudding, pizza — even a deli.
If you're one of those people who expects to find a happy, granola health food store here, be prepared to change your mind. Mike Gillandi, owner of the Wild Oats chain, described his Lawrence store as "a full-scale supermarket."
According to Gilliland, the difference between Wild Oats and the mainstream grocery store is that Wild Oats carries only natural foods. That means there are no artificial ingredients in any of the products sold there. Gilliland says he also tries to buy food grown without pesticides whenever possible.
Wild Oats is a chain of stores that stretches across Colorado and New Mexico. So why put one in Lawrence?
"We saw Lawrence as a good market for us," Gilland said. "College towns tend to be good markets because of their raised consciousness."
Another alternative to mainstream grocery stores is Community Mercantile, at Ninth and Mississippi streets. Community Mercantile has provided Lawrence with natural foods since 1975. Although this is unusual, so is the way the store operates.
Community Mercantile is a co-op. Owners purchase shares in the store, much like stockholders purchase shares of stock in major corporations.
majors Although anyone can shop at Community Mercantile, owners receive special discounts, as well as a say in running the store.
Community Mercantile, like Wild Oats,
sells primarily natural — organic if possible
MARINA SMITH
— foods. In addition, the co-op provides a full range of other goods, including vitamins, cosmetics, a bakery and a salad bar.
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
With two such similar stores in a town this size one might wonder if there are intense feelings of competition between Wild Oats and Community Mercantile.
Surprisingly, this does not seem to be the case.
Gilliam admitted the two stores compete because their product lines are so similar. However, he said they are not going after the same customers.
"Our shoppers come from a different base," he said. "Most people shop at a co-op because they like the idea of shopping at a co-op."
Shaffia Laue, Lawrence resident, looks at products at Community Mercantile, corner of Mississippi and Ninth Streets, as her children, Annie,7 , Arielle, 4, tag along.
Cormie Hollander, Community Mercantile manager, welcomed the Wild Oats store, saying it is not affecting the co-op's business.
"They've raised awareness of natural foods in the community," she said.
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rganization
aid. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's fault to be openly homosexual or."
m holds social gatherings to com-
qs, and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local restauwill begin doing community ser- ning said.
ho are not ready to go to a group
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Students can reach a coun-
llege Information or Headquarters.
ek! TION
by SUA
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D
OOTS
ciation
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S DAY participating
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10
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0pm
3:30pm
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Food Guide • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES
Wednesday, August 18. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
"AUHR is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground work for several projects including the Midwest Affiliation of College and
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact James Cutlurb, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents," Cutfurbth said.
A programming committee will coordinate dances like last year's
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KANSAN file photo
anting change Some students protest to draw awareness or to change laws
Wanting change
LesBiGavOK welcomes diverse group to its organization
By Elaine Joseph
Special to the Kansan
Ordering a pizza isn't just about picking up a phone and calling the pizza place anymore
a phone call during the pizza place anyways.
These days, placing an order requires deep thought and careful analysis to battle the rising costs of eating out.
Students in Lawrence are no different, and because of the large variety of restaurants that offer pizza, the price seems the motivating factor for most. Many think of quantity more than quality.
keen Lynns, Tulsa, Okla, senior, lived at the residence halls for two years. He said because most of his pizza orders were late at night, brand loyalty was not an issue.
"When you're hungry, you really don't care what kind of pizza it is as long as it is edible," he said.
Christine Banks, Overland Park junior, said that even though she did not mind paying for quality, she did look out for specials.
"I don't mind splitting a pizza with a couple of guys for $2 or $3," he said. "That would get me three slices, which would be enough; but I never spend $10 for a pizza."
For the fall, Pizza Shuttle will be running its popular "Two-far" special. Customers will be able to get two 10-inch pizzas with two toppings and 12 ounce drinks for $8.55.
"I do admit I am a one-brand person most of the time — but when I don't have the money, specials and discounts usually decide what's for dinner."
Gumby's Pizza, which will run an identical offer, the "Gumby Madness" for $7.99, also has 14 other daily specials.
"The Late Night Special" from Domino's Pizza, which changed to the "Jayah Fren
zy" on July 1, offers a 15-inch pizza with one topping for $9.99.
For those with a smaller appetite, there is the "Junior Jayhawk Frenzy" which is a 12-inch pizza with one topping for $4.99.
Domino's Pizza also guarantees 30-minute delivery. If the order arrives later than that, $2 will be subtracted from the bill.
While all the above places do not have a delivery charge or a minimum, restaurants such as Pizza Hut, Papa Keno, Godfather's Pizza and Bob's Pizza Shoppe do.
Pizza Hut does not deliver its 9-inch pizzas. Similar to Domino's Pizza and Mazzo's Pizza, Pizza Hut is offering its "Pairs Special," which will give customers who order a medium or large pizza a second pizza of equal or lesser value free.
Papa Keno's, which sells pizza by the slice,
does not deliver unless the order is for an
omnibus delivery.
— "The Works" for $12 and "The Veget-
$11.90.
For Bob's Pizza Shoppe, delivery will not be made for an order below $5. The daily lunch-eon special is served from 11:30 a.m. till 1:30 p.m. It also be offers of pizza—a one pound of spaghetti, manicotti or lasagna, two pieces of garlic toast and a 32-ounce drink for $5.25.
Godfather's Pizza has a delivery charge of $1 and is offering a 14-inch pizza with two toppings every Monday from 4 p.m. till 7 p.m. for $7.99.
Rudy's Pizzeria and Mazzio's also offer specials that are different every day.
Coca-Cola
Andrew Arnone / KANSAN
Two restaurants that offer no specials, Valentino's and 2 for 1 Pizza, also deliver whole pizzas. Valentino's requires a minimum order of $5.
Lea Morris slices pizza at Pizza Shuttle, 1601 W. 23rd St. Students can choose from several pizza parlors in Lawrence's competitive fast food market.
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said. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's fictit to be openly homosexual or a"
m holds social gatherings to com-
mys, and there is a dining out club
other week to go to local restau-
will begin doing community ser ning said.
who are not ready to go to a group kind, gay peer counseling is available. Students can reach a coun*l Information or Headquarters
ek!
TION
RD
by SUA
Sescoe Beach
OOTS
Association
Ams Alumni Center
is event is open ts. orial Stadium
S DAY participating
00pm
L
lowing of "Naked Gun"
smile Hill
hhery
y.
re
00pm
6:30pm
Halt.B:00pm
August 18, 1993 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • Food Guide
11
ACTIVITIES NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansan
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburth, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
For further questions about AURH contact Jamie Cutburn, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
we will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents. "Cumberth said
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organization
ae said. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's difficult to be openly homosexual or blic."
ation holds social gatherings to com-
idays, and there is a dining out club
ery other week to go to local restau-
JK will begin doing community ser.
Manning said.
s who are not ready to go to a group
kind, gay peer counseling is avail-
phone. Students can reach a coming
KU Information or Headquarters.
ek!
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FOOD GUIDE • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
7E
AURH serves residence halls
Organization is government for residents
By Susan White Special to the Kansai
KU students who live in residence halls can become more than just another face by getting involved in the Association of University Residence Halls.
The governmental organization gives hall residents a voice in different areas of the University through five committees, said Jamie Cutburh, president of the association.
"AURH is the Student Senate of the residence halls," he said. "Basically everyone in the residence halls is involved."
The organization plans campuswide and inter-hall activities to make on-campus living an enjoyable experience for residents of the seven halls.
Students interning for the organization during the summer planned all the activities for the fall semester. The group has been laying the ground work for several projects including the Midwest Affiliation of College and University Residence Halls, a leadership conference at KU in November, he said.
If students join AURH they can work on several committees, including housing and environment, which focus on improving the residence halls through the department of student housing and on recycling for the environment. Students also can work on the marketing committee designing the publicity posters for the association or contribute to Hall Street Journal, the monthly newsletter.
Cuturth said a committee also
Association of University Residence Halls
The time and date of the first meeting will be announced during the first week of school.
■ General Assembly meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of every month.
Committee meetings will be at 6 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.
All meetings will be in Suite 101 of McCollum Hall.
for further questions about AURH contact James Cutburth, president, or Ken Martin, vice president, at 864-4041.
would work with Peggy Smith, director of food service for student housing, to make the food service better.
"We will try to route all the complaints through the food service and develop new menu items for the residents." Cutburn said.
A programming committee will coordinate dances like last year's semi-formal spring dance, parties like last year's presidential-election party and educational programs like Alcohol Awareness Week.
Jennifer Hunt, the National Communications Coordinator, will organize and lead the fifth committee, which will be composed of delegates for regional and national conferences.
The first week of school, resident assistants will select students from their hall floors to be representatives for the association. All hall residents are invited to attend the meetings.
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LesBiGayOK welcomes diverse group to its organization
By Lisa Cosmillo
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas has changed its name to Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Services of Kansas in order to welcome a more diverse population.
ing at which anyone is welcome. Manning said. The meetings are held at 7:30 p.m. in the Frontier room of the Burge Union.
LesBiGaySOK offers services to lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and heterosexual allies, said Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student and co-president of LesBiGaySOK.
died in Resignation.
The organization is one of the oldest of its kind in
the country. Manning said. It is registered with the
University, Manning has offices in the Kansas Union.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IN STATE UNION THURSDAY NIGHT meet-
university and has offices in the Kansas City
LesBiGaySOK has a regular Thursday night meet-
The organization also offers a confidential support group, which is led by trained therapists. Interested students should call KU Information at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 814-2345 for information.
Some students who are not comfortable with our organization start off at the support group and then join us when they're more comfortable." said Jennifer Papanek, Lawrence senior and co-president of LesBiGaySOK.
The organization also holds visibility events, Propoek said.
"We simply go bowling, to a movie or a restaurant
as a group," she said. "For many of LesBiGaySOK's members it is difficult to be openly homosexual or bisexual in public."
LesBiGaySOK will begin doing community service this year. Manning said.
The organization holds social gatherings to commemorate holidays, and there is a dining out club that meets every other week to go to local restaurants.
For students who are not ready to go to a group meeting of any kind, gay peer counseling is available over the phone. Students can reach a counselor by calling KU Information or Headquarters
Celebrate Hawk Week! SPONSORED BY THE OFFICE OF NEW STUDENT ORIENTATION
心形图案
HawkDays
ATTEND A WORKSHOP
• Time Management • Listening and Notetaking
• Succeeding in Math 101 or English 101.
TAKE A TOUR
• Watson and Anschutz Libraries • Computer Center
• Robinson Athletic Center
PERSONAL CLASS SCHEDULE TOURS
Meet at Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall
Wednesday, August 18 - Friday August 20, 10:30 am and 2:30 pm
HawkNights
- Dr. Sally Frost-Mason: Succeeding in a Large Class and How to Choose an Advisor Thursday, August 19, 11:30am-12:20pm, 3139 Wescoe • Dr. Dennis Dailey: Sexuality and the College Student Friday, August 20, 11:30am-12:20pm, 4020 Wescoe
FACULTY FOCUS
- A special Thank you to the Kansas and Burge Unions Department of Student Housing, Student Union Activities, and the Student Alumni Association for sponsoring Hawk Week prizes and programs.
For more information, or to pick up a schedule stop by the Office of New Student Orientation, 45 Strong Hall or call 864-4270
NIGHT
BEACH-N-BOULEVARD
Enjoy this Carnival of Activities!
Featuring Comedy Sportz! Sponsored by SUA
Wednesday, August 18, 7:00-9:00pm, Wescoe Beach
GET THE SCOOP FROM BOOTS
Enjoy a free ice cream social sponsored by the Student Alumni Association
Thursday, August 19, 5:30-6:15pm, "Boots" Adams Alumni Center
TRADITIONS NIGHT
Experience some of KU's great traditions. This event is open to all, but honors our new students.
Thursday, August 19, 7:00-8:30 pm, Memorial Stadium
DOWNTOWN PROMOTIONS DAY Activities and discounts for KU students at participating downtown stores and restaurants. Saturday, August 21, 10:00am-5:00pm
MOVIE ON THE HILL Bring a blanket and enjoy the SUA free outdoor showing of "Naked Gun" Sunday, August 22, 9:00pm, Campanile Hill
"The Inner Circle" by Patricia Loughery
"The Inner Circle by Patricia Loughery
Attend A Free AIDS Education Play.
Sponsored by the University Theatre
•Thursday, August 19 at Oliver Hall, 3:00pm
•Saturday, August 21 at Hashinger Hall, 6:30pm
tuesday, August 28 Inge Theatre at Murphy Hall, 8:00pm
*Saturday, August 28 IngeTheatre at Murphy Hall, 8:00pm
8E
Wednesday, August 18, 1993
ACTIVITIES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Religious groups offer spiritual, social support
By Tracy Ritchie
Special to the Kansar
If college is a place full of questions, campus ministry wants to help answer them.
"Campus ministry is a place for real affirmation of questions. A vocational question is a religious question. Campus ministries hopefully offer a way to answer that question," said Thad Holcombe, campus pastor at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
ECM is one of about 25 religious organizations registered with KU Organizations and Activities Center.
1the ministry is composed of three denominations, Church of the Brethren, Presbyterian Church USA and United Church of Christ.
However, denominations are not a consideration as ECM sees its role in the university structure.
rengious tradition is part of the intellectual life. It can give passion to that, an understanding of one's own religious tradition, whatever that may be." Holocome said.
In addition to filling the spiritual needs, ECM offers many activities to fill the social needs. Alternative spring breaks are offered where students can go to a place where there is a need to be met. For example, last year ECM co-sponsored a trip to a Kansas City neighborhood center where students helped out.
ECM also co-sponsors Taze, an alternative worship experience once a month at Danforth Chapel. New this fall ECM will co-sponsor with American Baptist Campus Center, Canterbury House, Baptist Student Union and United Methodist Campus Ministry a graduate student fellowship, with targets of 'fun, fellowship and growth.'
These goals could also be said to be important to another campus religious organization, but Joe Bernstein, St. Louis senator, said that Hillel also had another target.
"Culture is a big part of what we do." Bernstein said of the Jewish student organization.
Hill has a house at 940 Mississippi St. where members can live.
Another building important to the group is the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. The group holds services here for high holidays. Services for Shabbat, the beginning of the Sabbath, are held at the house twice a month.
By the numbers
- Canterbury House (Episcopalian) 843-8202
Ecumenical Christian Ministries 843-4933
Hilfel H64-3948
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center 843-0357
■ United Methodist Campus Ministry 841-8661
Hillel director Steve Jacobsen said the group would be holding a welcome back barbecue at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 29 at the house.
8661 University Lutheran Fellowship 843-0620
The group also has several community outreach activities, such as involvement in Little Brother/Little Sisters of Lawrence and United Jewish Appeal, a fund raiser for needy Jews around the world.
Bernstein said he began going to Hillet because he grew up in a religious atmosphere, and appreciated the same services away from home.
"It's something for students to use at their convenience." Bernstein said.
He echoed a thought shared by Holcombe on the role of religion in the university setting.
"The church is often seen as constraining, and in fact I think it can liberate," Holcombe said.
The St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent, offers a variety of services ranging from masses to a quiet place to study, said Joe Zielinski, events coordinator at the center.
"We're here for general support," he said.
We reserve for general supplies.
Services are offered at 4:30 every weekday, at
4 p.m. Saturday, and at 9 a.m., 11 a.m., 5 p.m. and
10 p.m. Sunday. Mass is also celebrated at 12:30
p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday at Danforn
Chapel.
for a paper.
Once a month a Spanish mass is held, Zielinski said. Students can also come to the center for Reconciliation.
students looking for an alternative to the library can come to St. Lawrence to study. It is open 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. weekdays and until midnight during finals.
Other activities at the center include twice monthly Sunday suppers that are followed by lectures from faculty members and a student council that plans social activities.
AN OF
JUDGE
U.S.
out of MY
UTERUS!
IS THIS ANY
PLACE
FOR A
BABY?
STOP ALERTING
KANSAN file photos
AbortionIssue
Both sides of the abortion issue are represented on campus. KU Pro-Choice Coalition and Students for Life are both active in campus and area debates.
A girl raises her hand in the middle of a class. Other children look on, some with puzzled expressions.
KANSAN file photo
Would you. could you...?
Would you, could you... Christi Kessler, Lawrence senior, reads to an elementary school class for the KU Dr. Seuss Club. The club promotes literacy by reading
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
VOL.101.NO.145
MONDAY.AUGUST 23,1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING:864-4358
Hang tags replace sticker parking permits
Passes can be shared used on different cars
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Students peeling and scraping off old parking permits may be happy when they get their new ones. The annual razor blade ritual has been pre-empted.
NEWS:864-4810
This year, the Parking Department has replaced the adhesive parking stickers with small, plastic, movable hang tags that hook onto a rear view mirror.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of the
parking Department, said that hang tags had been considered for a few years.
had been considered for him. "People wanted to bring a different car, or they had trouble with their normal vehicle at seven in the morning," she said. "Some mornings, we'd have a big line of people waiting to get courtesy passes."
A parking permit is registered to the person who purchased it. The permit owner could use it on any vehicle or even loan it to a friend. However, the permit owner still is responsible for any tickets issued to the permit.
The Parking Department is issuing three grace passes that will excuse a permit owner when ticketed for not displaying a tag. Huline said the passes could be used
only if the car was otherwise legally parked.
Huline said that if a permit was stolen or lost, the owner should notify the Parking Department immediately.
Parking officers periodically will scan the lots on campus to locate stolen permits. A vehicle displaying a stolen or lost permit will be towed and a $25 fine will be assessed in addition to the cost of the tow.
How you can buy a parking permit
Chi Duong, Tulsa, Okla, sophomore, said she was concerned about forgetting to put her permit back up if she removed it when she parked off campus.
she parked onChapter 1
"Before, I could slap it on at the beginning of the year and forget about it," she said.
Annual fees are $53 for yellow permits
for students, $35 for university housing
permits, $70 for red permits and $85 for
blue permits.
Permits can be bought from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays at the Parking Department office in the Parking Facility.
- Permits will be required in yellow zones and all University housing zones beginning Sept. 7.
Source: Parking Department KANSAN
100
Deanne Fischer, Lawrence graduate student, waits in a fee payment line with her sons, Adam, sitting, and Alan. It was her a second trip to the Kansas Union on Thursday afternoon because the lines were too long in the morning.
Crowded lines swamp fee payment
Loan-check rush creates gridlock
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
It all came down to time and money
It anecdote.
Depending on what time they arrived to pay, either they had to pick up a bank check, many students encountered long-hours in several long lines Thursday and Friday at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Those students able to pay off their remaining fee balance by personal check or credit, encountered few, if any, crowds. Those who waited until late afternoon of either day also saw shorter lines.
but students saw gridlock during Thursday morning initial distribution of loan checks and the subsequent line for refunds. The refound line snaked back and forth across the south half of the ballroom while the north half swarmed with students jostling to pick up their financial-loan checks from the seven alphabetically arranged stations.
"Every year they say it's going to get better, but it never does." Dunn said. "I have nothing nice to say about financial aid at this point. This is the worst it's ever been."
Among them was Ed Dum, Kansas City, Kan., who had been waiting in line for more than an hour to pick up his Stafford loan check.
wife, Michelle, inched their son Ryan's stroller along as they waited for Gibbs' financial-aid check late Thursday morning.
some students anticipated the wait and took the long lines in stride, including Jeff Gibbs, Overland Park junior. He and his
Pat Lashier, assistant compterler, said that though the lines were long on Thursday morning, the size of the crowds had decreased greatly from past years by allowing students to pay their fees by mail, an option initiated last year.
"Considering the amount of people who are here, it's not too bad," Gibbs said. "It was about 20 to 25 minutes before I got here to the front of the line."
Contributing to the sea of students Thursday morning and early afternoon was the decision by many of them to pick up their loan checks at the same time,
"Three years ago, the crowds were much heavier." LaShir said. "The whole ballroom would be filled."
"Everybody's trying to get here early to receive their loans, and this is the result." Shunhua said, indicating the long lines around the ballroom. "We're trying to get students in and out of here as quickly as possible."
sad Kathe Munz Shinham, University comprotiler.
"For some lines, people were facing one way and then facing the other way," said Rita Byrd, Shawnee senior. "There seemed to be a lot of confusion."
Adding to the burden of the increased rush of students were the problems caused by setup of the loan disbural stations. Some students said they were not sure which line they were in.
Fee payment officials continually are trying to improve the payment process, Shinham said.
Law dean resigns from post
Jerry will leave position next June to write, teach
By Christoph Fuhrmans
By Christopher
Kansan staff writer
Robert Jerry, KU dean of law, announced Friday his plans to resign next year.
After Jerry's resignation takes place will take a year off and return to teach full-time in Fall 1995.
Jerry said that he wanted time to finish the second edition of his book, "Understanding Insurance Law," originally published in 1987.
He said he resigned because he wanted to spend more time with his wife, Lisa, and their three children, John, 4, Jim, 2, and Beth, 6 months.
"My kids will never be this age again," said Jerry, who joined the law school in 1981. "This is the time in my life to spend time with my children."
Robert Jerry
Jerry said he decided to announce his resignation Friday to get the university enough time to find his replacement.
Jerry said he needed to give the University enough time to find his replacement. David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said he would meet with law school faculty members and solicit nominations for a committee to find a new dean in a few weeks.
Jerry's resignation follows a difficult year for the law school. In February, Jerry drew criticism after his private memo to del Brinkman, then vice chancellor for academic affairs, was leaked to the media. In the memo, Jerry called Washburn University a "low-quality school."
In July, a university committee voted to uphold Chancellor Gene Budig's recommendation that law professor Emil Tappichkova has dismissed on charges of moral tupile.
The investigation and hearing, which lasted about two years, put a continued negative spotlight on the law school.
so she said. Jerry said he would have resigned regardless of the attention drawn by the Tonkovich trial and the leaked memo,
The follow-matter is relevant only to my decision in that it is one of the reasons why I didn't have enough time to finish my book and spend time with my kids," he said.
to finish my book and spend it. "I made a mistake in a couple sentences that I put in that private advocacy document. I took responsibility for that mistake. I apologized to the people that I offended. Most of those people accepted that apology graciously. For most people now, the memo is old history."
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said Jerry's announcement after last year's problems would not affect the law school.
"I don't believe for a moment that it will reflect negatively on the law school for the University of Kansas," he said. "Across the country, the tenure of deans is becoming shorter."
Shuleburger said that dears spent an average of three years at their posts. Jerry has been dean since 1980.
Despite the negative public attention the law school received, Jerry is positive about the state of the school. Since he has been dean, the law school's private funding has increased, he said.
has increased
Law School Admissions Test scale, KU's median score is in the 80th percentile nationally.
This year's incoming class is one of the most diverse ever, with 44 percent women, and for the first time, three consecutive incoming classes have been more than 10 percent minority students.
cent minority students.
"I've accomplished the important things I've set out to do," Jerry said. "I'm young enough to be a dean again, and I probably will be."
Even though Jerry's resignation does not take effect until next year, he said that he was looking forward to his last year as dean.
year as dean. He said wants to maintain and expand the funding programs, improve the curriculum and improve job placement for graduating students.
ment for graduating students,
"Positive items are premature," he said. "We've got a lot of work to do."
INSIDE
Convocation Chorus
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
uncancellor Gene Budig peppered his praise for the University with a few criticisms yesterday at the official opening of the school year at Lied Center.
Page 3.
Bv Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
The most memorable was the guy dressed in a tuxedo sitting in a recliner in the back of a pick-up truck, smoking a pipe and reading a book.
After 14 years, Bob Flowers can pick out students when they pull up to the tollbooth.
it was pouring now I ran.
As the first people to see KU students arrive and the last to see them go each year, Kansas Turnpike toll collectors at the West Lawrence exit have seen a lot of strange things.
things John Britt, who has been a toll collector for more than two years, said students keen the job lively.
It was pouring down rain.
"When they are with a group they get a lot braver." Britt said. "They get kinda ornery."
Flowers said students also will try to come up with creative ways to pay the toll. One group tried to give him a ripped-up dollar bill. Flowers told them they'd have to either pay with undamaged money or wait for the state trooper to deal with it.
for the sake troops
"All of the sudden these dollar bills came
flying out of there," Flowers said. "So they ruined a dollar bill for nothing."
rumbles oasis but for a few years ago, some students took mannequins out on the pavement and pretended to beat them up on the side of the road. Flowers said. People arriving at the tollbooths would report it but the students usually would be gone by the time the state trooper arrived.
trooper arrives.
First and Sunday nights, holiday weekends and the beginning and end of semesters are the busiest times for toll collectors. Flowers said.
Britt said he could spot returning students by the way they packed their cars.
"Lots of times they don't have any room except to steer," Brit said.
except to steer," Brit said. And the news students are easy to spot.
A man shaking hands with a police officer.
"A lot of the new students, especially the girls, have teddy bears with them," he said.
Kansas Turnpike Authority employee John Britt hands a ticket to a customer. Britt said traffic through the turnpike increased at the beginning of each semester.
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The University Daily Kansan corrects all significant errors. If you know of an item that needs correcting, call 864-4810.
CORRECTIONS
A story on Page 1A of Wednesday's Kansan contained an incorrect floodwater depth. The correct depth of the water at the North Second Street underpass during the summer's flooding was 13 feet.
James Modig was misidentified on Page 14A and 8D of Wednesday's Kansan. He is director of design and construction management.
Travis Harrod was misedident on Page 6E of Wednesday's Kansan. He is head of Student Senate Executive Committee.
The intramural sports information on Page 2B of Wednesday's Kansan was incomplete. The last sentence of the "Rules" section should have read, "Complete information regarding intramural sports can be obtained from Recreation Services, 208 Robinson, or by calling the 'Rec-Info Line' at 864-3456."
Julia Saul was misidentified on Page 9B of Wednesday's *Kansan*. She is a Lawrence senior.
"The town hasn't had a flood like this in 50 years," said Gary Behrun, assistant volunteer fire chief. "Some old-timers talk about running canoes down Main Street. But I've been here since 1978, and it's never been like this."
On the northern Plains, thunderstorms dumped as much as 7 inches of rain on northeastern Montana, flooding some roads.
Weekend showers cause more flooding
ANSELMO, Neb. Heavy run on the already saturated Sandhills region caused street and basement flooding Sunday in the center of Nebraska.
Around Wolf Point, Mont., powerful thunderstorms dropped as much as 7 inches of rain Sunday.
The Associated Press
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The department of communication studies has scheduled the Oral Communication Exemption Examination for Sept. 15. Registration, with a $10 fee, is due by Sept. 10 in 3090 Wescoe. For more information, call 864-3633.
ON CAMPUS
The University Daily Kansan prints free announcements of meetings of campus groups. To submit an entry, fill out a form at the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. No submissions will be taken by telephone.
Robert Minor, professor and head of religious studies, will present a program, "The Men's Movement; Can Real Men Really Identify Themselves?" at noon Wednesday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. Lunch can be provided if reservations are made by noon
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.
The KU Gamers and Role Players will hold its weekly meeting at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow on the third
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23, 1993
3
Budig asks for tolerance
Bias discussed at Convocation By Carlos Tejada
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Those who expected nothing but praise for the University of Kansas from its administrators during yesterday afternoon's Opening Convocation may have been surprised.
At the 128th Convocation, held at Lied Center, Chancellor Gene Budig told the audience of about 1,000 students, faculty and alumni that KU was an integrated, renowned institution of higher learning.
But he also said he recently had received reports from the Task Force on African-American Student Concerns, the Committee on Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Concerns and the Task Force on Sexual Harassment that said KU did not treat all students equally.
"Each of these groups reported that this campus is not always perceived as a welcoming, respectful, hospitable environment," Budig said. "I must reiterate, therefore, that there can be no place in this community for intolerance or bias."
Budig said that the responsibility for changing that perception belonged to KU's students and faculty.
"Each of us shares in the responsibility for creating a university in which all students, faculty and staff have an opportunity to learn and an opportunity to grow without intimidation or fear," he said.
Reactions after the speech were mixed.
"We've got a long way to go, but we've made a lot of headway," said John Shoemaker, student body president.
He said such complaints against KU were legitimate.
state Rep. Barbara Ballard, D Lawrence and associate dean of student life, agreed with Budig and Shoemaker.
"People in the University and in the community aren't always as sensitive as they could be," she said.
But Hadi Alhassani, Lawrence junior, said KU was more tolerant than other universities he had attended. He said he had expected discrimination when he first came to KU from Yemen, but nobody bothered him because of his ethnic background. Places such as Britain, where he once lived, had to go much further to end discrimination.
"KU is more tolerant compared to other schools I've been to," he said. "I wouldn't say there's a long way to go. Steps have already been made."
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
I will be here for the next 40 minutes. I'll try to make it as enjoyable as possible.
Plat Latnam-Winter-Green, Virgin Islands senior, left, and Sean Holland, Kismet senior, act in "The Inner Circle." The play, which depicts the effects of AIDS on a group of friends, was performed Saturday in Hashinger Hall. An additional performance will be at 8 p.m. Saturday at Inge Theater in Murphy Hall. See story. Page 1B.
The Inner Circle
Melissa Lacev./ KANSAN
More students receive Stafford loans
James Ralston, professor of choral music, leads a crowd of about 1,000 in the alma mater. Ralston was a part of yesterday's Opening Convocation at Lied Center. Next to Ralston, left to right, are Stephen Grabow, university marshal, Chancellor Gene Budig and John Shoemaker, student body president
Kansan staff writer
By David Stewart
Students receiving Stafford loans this year probably saw many new faces in line as they waited to pick up their checks at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Last year's 4,100 students receiving Stafford loans swelled to more than 5,600 recipients under newly revised requirements for getting federal student aid.
federal Higher Education Act allowed more students from families with higher incomes to qualify for federal financial aid, she said. Part of the Higher Education Act establishes the rules by which financial aid is administered. Every five years Congress must reapprove the act and any revisions necessary.
About 5,100 students received subsidized Stafford loans this year, said Diane Del Buono, director of student financial aid. In addition, 500 students received unsubsidized Stafford loans, a newly available type of financial aid. The total financial aid KU received from the Stafford loan program also increased, from $14 million last year to $21 million this year, Del Buono said.
Changes made during the reauthorization of the
Unsubsidized Stafford loans, unlike subsidized Stafford loans, require students to pay interest on the loan amount while in school or deferring the interest until graduation.
"Both the amount of aid and number of students receiving subsidized Stafford loans increased for this fall." Del Buono said.
"Our staff worked literally around the clock because a lot more students had loans coming to them." Del Buono said.
"The Stafford loans will be wired electronically to a KU account," Del Buono said. "Once in the system, the balance of the funds go from our account to the student's account."
Many of the students who waited in line last week would not have to show up in person to get their
Stafford loans in Spring 1994, Del Bouno said. At that time, KU will begin transmitting Stafford loans by computer.
Kathe Munz Shimham, the University comproller, said about 60 percent of the banks that finance Stafford loans for KU students are capable of making electronic fund transfers and that loan recipients using those banks would not have to wait in line to pick up their checks.
Iowa State University and University of Missouri currently accept Stafford funds electronically, she said.
This process will eliminate the need to go through three lines to receive Stafford loan checks, pay University fees and receive refunds, Del Buono said.
OBITUARIES
Leukemia claims life of H.O.P.E. nominee
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
When Timothy F. Mitchell died Tuesday, the KU department of art history lost a valuable instructor, said Ed Fatkinsky head of the department.
“His mastery of both the material and the audience was right on the button,” Eglisky said. “He was an unusually gifted teacher.”
Mitchell, 49, professor of art history,
died of leukemia.
Eglinsky said Mitchell lectured to school teachers and was able to communicate his topic on many levels.
"It's one thing to talk to graduate students on abstract art," Englsink said. It's another to talk to a kindergarten teacher about abstract art."
Randy Griffey, Norton graduate student, took two of Mitchell's classes.
"He had an amazing command of the material." Griffey said. "He was an incredibly interesting, entertaining lecturer."
his popularity with students.
Linda Stone-Ferrier, associate professor of art history, said the fact that Mitchell was nominated for the H.O.P.E. Award was an example of
P. R. Srinivasan
"We don't have as many seniors in our classes, being a small department," Stone-Ferrier said. Senior students nominate professors for the H.O.P.E.
Timothy Mitchell
Stone-Ferrier said Mitchell, who worked during the summer on research, maintained a sense of humor throughout his illness.
"It's a tremendous loss for me both personally and professionally." Stone-Ferrier said. "There was tremendous potential there."
Mitchell, who came to KU in 1979, served as head of the Kress Foundation Department of Art History at KU from 1987 to 1992.
Survivors include his wife Nancy, assistant director of Study Abroad, and two daughters, Sarah, a KU junior, and Kristina, a KU graduate student.
Kansan staff write
By Traci Carl
Professor of psychology HDFL dies of cancer
Throne had a simple way of explaining where he was in the photo.
In John M. Throne's office, there is a photo of former President John F. Kennedy signing the Mental Retardation Act.
"He said, 'I'm the Throne behind the power,'" sad Jeanne Tramill, associate scientist at KU's University Affiliated Program. "That's my favorite memory of John."
Throne, 66, worked throughout his career for disability reform.
He was a courtesy professor of psychology and Human Development and Family Life at KU and a senior scientist for the Life Spans Institute.
He died Aug. 15 from multiple myeloma, a form of cancer.
In 1991, throne opened Allegria School, a small, private school in Assunción, Paraguay, that integrated mentally and physically disabled children into a traditional classroom setting. The school, which now has 65
students, was used as a model for other disability programs all across South America, said Steve Schroeder, director of the Life Span Institute
PETER WILSON
Today, the Alegria Foundaregion is building another school, which will have 175 students, Schroeder said.
John M. Throne
Throne also was a clinical psychologist at Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center in Lawrence, at the Academy for Counseling and Change in Kansas City, Mo., and at Associates for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy in Overland Park.
Survivors include his daughter, Julie Throne, Lawrence, who graduated from KU in May; and his stepson, Anthony Lathrop, Nashville. Tenn.
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Monday, August 23,1993
---
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
The University has enacted a policy prohibiting romantic or sexual relationships between faculty and the students over whom the faculty member has direct power.
THE BACKGROUND
After a thorny year-long grievance hearing against law professor Emil Tonkovich for sexual harassment allegations, the University has taken a strong stand against faculty-student relationships. University administrators hope it will help prevent the possibility for harassment and manipulation.
A task force formed by the administration last year proposed making an explicit policy on such relationships.In its recommendations, it proposed a policy with a strong warning, not an outright prohibition.
THE OPINION
Relationships policy OK but student input needed
The University's consensual relationships policy, which took effect Friday, takes a stand that the University needs to make -- that romance between students and instructors is ripe for abuse, be it harassment or favoritism, and should not happen.
However, the way the policy was crafted and implemented, with nominal student and faculty input, is unacceptable.
It is the general assumption of the policy that it is a conflict of interest for faculty members to be grading, advising and evaluating those students with whom they are in romantic relationships. Furthermore, controlling the keys to reward and success in a class gives faculty members more power to manipulate a relationship, an environment that could easily lead to sexual harassment.
This viewpoint is valid. That power structure exists regardless of a faculty member or student's age or "maturity."
Unfortunately, ambiguities lurking in the written policy and the memorandum distributed throughout the University make parts of this policy confusing. For example:
The policy is not a prohibition in its fullest sense. If a relationship does develop, it must be reported so alternate accommodations can be made for evaluation of the student's work.
When a relationship develops, it is not automatically a violation of the Faculty Code of Conduct, which details faculty ethics. When a relationship is not reported and becomes disruptive of the learning environment, it may become a violation.
One problem with the policy was that it came as such a surprise. During the summer, the administration took a recommendation that the policy be a strong warning and changed it to a prohibition. The administration asked for input from a few faculty members on University Governance. Those members' sole input was on the policy's wording.
The University says it made its change based on recommendations for a stronger policy made by "many campus groups and individuals" when the original recommendation was open for public comment. "Many" probably refers to the 10-20 responses received by the task force, and may be fewer since not all those responses concerned the consensual relationships policy.
Furthermore, this new policy has a greater impact on faculty and students than what was proposed by the task force last year. It needs to have a public airing specifically in University Governance.
If an overwhelming and logical argument against the policy or for revising it emerges from the University community, the administration needs to be open to rethinking its policy.
KC TRAUER, EDITOR
ANNOYED WITH CLINTON (RETROACTIVE TO JAN 1)
Denying problems today won't help in the future
One problem facing this country is that Americans want to deny their problems. Racism, teenage sex, the subjugation of women — many doubt that these are very real problems. A friend of mine calls it institutional denial, for short. And in keeping with the academic spirit of my audience — I'll call it denialism.
Denialism works like this: Someone will unearth some statistics or develop a theory suggesting that what we thought was simple in fact isn't. But someone else — the denialist — will reply that the statistics are false.
reminism provides a good example for denialism in action. In the 1960s and '70s, women became more and more vocal about their second-class citizenship. Few of them were able to get jobs without prejudice, and even those who did often got paid much less than their male counterparts. So women began to demand that they have the same opportunities as men.
STAFF COLUMNIST
For awhile things seemed to get better. (Not, of course, without occasional howls from men.) But recent statistics now say that even though a woman makes 70 cents to every dollar a man makes, that figure is better than it used to be. Also, some researchers are beginning to question the figure in the first place, arguing that it was arrived at through faulty (meaning politically motivated) research. Women are doing fine, the denialists seem to be saying.
NATHAN OLSON
More insidious are concerns by denialists about incest and date rape. Denialists heap blame on psychologists for implanting incest in the
minds of women who weren't incess victims. Such a tactic even has a pop psychology-sounding name: "false memory syndrome." Denialists also attack date rape by saying that, because our views on sex have changed so much, "no" doesn't always mean "no." The overall consequence is fear: Victims of incest and rape are scared to go public because of the backlash. For every assertion that something is wrong, it seems, there is almost always a counterassertion that things are, in fact, perfectly OK.
perfect or not. But denialism isn't confined to women. Denialism allows us to block out those things that are painful. If we don't distribute condoms in school, we don't have to think about the possibility of teenagers being sexually active. If we blame last year's Los Angeles riots on a few thugs, we don't have to think about any underlying causes for the riots. If we don't ask military recruits their sexual orientation, we don't have to think that homosexuals might actually be in the military.
Denialism allows us to take actual cases of unreliable or incomplete
memory and apply them to incest in general because incest is such a difficult subject to deal with. Denialism lets us conveniently put the blinders on.
the pervasiveness of denialism has two roots. I think. First, we desire simple answers for everything and simultaneously shy away from complex answers. Pinning the Los Angeles riots on thugs means that we can dismiss the issue instead of wondering about other, deeper causes (the continued existence of racism, for example).
example.
Second, we want to believe in the greatness of the United States at all costs. Citizens of this country don't want to think that in becoming the greatest superpower on earth it enslaved blacks, displaced Native Americans and oppressed women. There are men in white hats and men in black hats — never men in gray hats. Unfortunately, in this increasingly complex world most people wear gray.
I'm not saying the United States is a horrible, evil country. But I do think we shy away from the complexities of the issues that affect us. We need to hear the voices that don't have money, and therefore have no power. We need to listen to what they say and not simply attack them because their words may be difficult to hear. In the end, only when we listen do we understand, and only when we understand do we truly become great.
Nathan Olson is a Chicago graduate student majoring in English.
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
United Nations and NATO helped in Bosnian division
Bosnia's president Aliza Ijtebegovic's acceptance of the plan to divide Bosnia-Herzegovina comes as a result of strong international pressure.
matic.
The project to divide Bosnia was well engineered with the participation of the United Nations and NATO and was implemented in two phases, one military and one diplowhat has happened in Bosnia is a crime in which several parties were involved through silence, ignorance or maneuvers.
With their barbaric nature and military machines, the Serbs implemented the military phase of the plan when they committed all kinds of crimes against the Bosnian villages and cities and the Muslim people there.
And the entire international community participated in the implementation of the diplomatic phase when it silently watched the crimes of the Serbs, including occupation of big areas of Bosnian land.
NATO played its full role in this respect when it issued its vague warning to the Serbs, thus giving their forces time to achieve more gains at the expense of Bosnia and its people.
AL-ITTIHAD, MANAMA
ABU DHABI
Violence can result from group-frenzy mentality
STAFF COLUMNIST
PATRICK
DILLEY
M. R. S. M. A.
Over the summer I went to see "What's Love Got To Do With It," the autobiographical film of Tina Turner's life. It was very cold in the theater, on a Saturday morning. Some kids sneaked in after another movie was over; the girls sat on the left, the boys on the right, behind me.
Sociologists were quick to point out that group mentalities fuel gangs and gang violence. In Germany this summer, conservative nationalists harassed and murdered non-Germans. The nationalists fear for their economy, their jobs, their sense of identity and culture, the very things gangs seem to give to, or reinforce for, their members. This, in turn, creates similar fears and reactions in those not in the group.
I pondered the movie audience and group/gang mentalities. It is a factor of life, existing in the ancient Greek Dionysian rituals of frenzy, the Nazi and Brownshirt movements, even in the cliques and kinships we live by today. But at what point does the bond begin to become bloodshed, the sense of belonging give in to a sense of fear of those who do not belong*
I think about these as, I walk around campus. One night last week, as I was walking, I heard distant voices, a lot of them. I followed the sound, which was coming from under the seats at Memorial Stadium. At my distance they sounded harsh, guttural, menacing. I could not tell for sure, but I thought they were traveling toward me. I told myself that it was probably just a group of my fellow students, excited about being back together at school. That's what I told myself, as I turned and briskly walked away.
Patrick Dilley is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in higher education.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Later that week the media were all over a story of four male gang members in Texas who raped and murdered two girls who happened to stumble upon the guys after an initiation rite. The men are accused of standing on the girls' throats, to ensure their silence. These four men seemed to relish the attention; one of them even declared they were famous.
During one scene, Ike assaulted Tina, taking off his boot to pummel her. The girls started shouting at the screen for Tinto to fight back. The guys screamed for Ike to "hit that bitch with the boot." It was as if the young men and women were screaming at each other.
Editors
J. R. Claiborne
Assistant to the editor
Stacy Frydman
News
Terriyah McComma
Ben Grove
Campus
Kristi Fugler
Sports
Kip Chin, Ramesh Kumar
Photo
Kip Chin, Ramesh Kumar
Boris Berkow
Era Wolfe
Graphics
John Feldt
Vickie Volde
Copy Chiefs
I felt awash with conflicting responses. How could these men possibly want someone beaten with a boot? How could anyone, after seeing the terrible behavior Ike directed at Tina, think she should be beaten further? What could make them so cavalier about pain and injury, so hateful and compassionless? And the more the men yelled, the more I wanted to turn around and confront them, to shake them out of their anger, to show them they were advocating base brutality. Ultimately I responded emotionally to their actions: I wanted to strike them, so they would understand just what it was they wanted done to others.
But the fight on screen ended, and so did the yelling, if not the emotion.
Associate editorial Colleen McCain
Associate campus Dan England
Associate campus/planning Jess Delnavell
Associate sports Todd Seltner
Allison Lippert Tracy Ritchie
Corey Shoup
Reporters Scott Anderson Sara Bennett Mark Button Traint Carl Matt Doyle Anna Beilert Gerry Fey Christopher Fultmans Dennis Maureen Kestah Holdel Brian James David Stewart Shane Schwartz David Stewart Kathleen Stoele Carlos Tolada
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Kevin Butter **Lisa Coomillo
Jess Delkaven **Dan England
Jack Fischer **Kevin Grace
Matt Lemmon **Michael Klimanon
Will Lewis **Stephen Martino
Sarah Nagl **Munsee Nakasu
Sarah Schultz **Todell Belfert
Photographers
Valerie Bontrager Dan Carver
Julia Clarke John Gumble
Doug Hesse Paul Kelz
Mallissa Lacey Tom Lehninger
Jill McMahan Susan MSpadden
Designers Stacy Friedman
John Paul Fogel Will Lewis
Dave Campbell James Frederick
Micah Laker Dan Schauer
Editorial Board
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Tom Gretlinger, Mammy Lacy Moore, Nassau M. O'Connor
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Tita Heyka, Val Huber, Tiffany Hurt, Jim Kimmel,
Ryan McLean, Nathan Cloe, Chris Ronan
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Interns
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Paulus Prabono
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23,1993
5
Technology aids security monitors in night check-in at residence halls
97
SAN FRANCISCO
Photo illustration by John Gamble / KANSAN
Photo illustration by John Gamble. KANSAN Security monitors in residence halls must now run student's KUID through a machine in order for students to be admitted into their hall. The machines are new to most residence halls this semester.
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Templin Hall security desk monitors Ashley Ressler and Cenamon Newton deal with hundreds of residents during a weekend night.
But a little brown box with an attached phone cord assures that they will not have many hassles.
A new security device installed earlier this month in all KU residence halls allows desk monitors to run a student's KUID through a magnetic reader. This device instantly verifies the student's status as a hall resident. The device replaces the former system used by monitors during security hours check-in that included thumbing through a list of hall residents for verification.
The change is welcome, said
Ressler, Newport Beach. Calif.
senior, and Newton, Tulsa, Okla.
junior. They are responsible for
checking in residents who return to
Templein during security hours, 11
p.m. to 7 a.m.
"It was more time-consuming looking them up, and sometimes nobody." Pressler said.
did it?, Ressler said.
b The new magnetic device is the
basis type of reader used in the KU
dining halls, said Fred McElhenee,
c associate director of student housing.
d The device instantly reads the in-
formation and sends it to a central pro-
cessing unit at the student housing
missing unit at the student housing office that returns verification back
to the device.
A red bulb then lights up next to the words "permitted," "denied" or "not valid" after a card has been swiped through the reader.
Nonresidents can enter a residence hall during security hours only with permission of a resident and by leaving an ID at the security desk.
McEllenie said he did not know the exact cost of the security devices or the cost of installation. He said it was
McElhenie said the security box had been used at McColm Hall for three years. The student housing office this summer decided to expand the service for several reasons.
inexpensive because the system already was linked to the dining hall system.
"It is a simpler and quicker process for residents and staff," he said. "But it is also more precise since the rosters always will be up to date."
Registration helps trace stolen bikes
By Scott J. Anderson
A city ordinance requires bicycle owners to register the model and serial number. Registration is 25 cents.
KU police began offering bicycle registration Thursday at Unionfest in front of the Kansas Union.
bicycles this week during the organizations and activities fair in the main lobby of the Union.
Many students use bicycles as their primary mode of transportation on campus, and the KU police department is helping students prevent losing their bicycles to theft.
"Having the serial number available makes a bicycle easier to trace in the event it is stolen," said officer Burdel Welsh, who was registering bicycles Thursday.
In addition to registering bikes.
Welsh also was distributing copies of the laws regarding bicycles.
Jada Drach, Manhattan freshman,
took the opportunity to register her
bicycle, which she said was her only
transportation at KU.
925 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
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"I knew I should register my bike, but I didn't know I had to," she said. "I'm glad it is required though, because with so many bicycles on campus I'd like the best chance for it to be recovered if it's ever stolen."
As an added convenience, Student Union Activities also is registering bicycles this year, Welsh said.
"SUA was looking for more ways to serve the students," he said. "And this gave us another location that was open six days a week. A lot of students are in the Union anyway, and we were looking for ways to get where the students are to make it easier to get a license."
Bicycle licenses may be purchased this week at the Kansas Union and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at the KU Police Department, 302 Carruth-O'Leary.
I
Bring the following:
Bicycle serial number — usually located on the bottom of the frame near the pedal and the sprocket, between the handlebars and the front fork, or on the side of the frame near the rear wheel axle.
Brand name of the bicycle. Registration fee of 25 cents. Licenses are valid until December 1994.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Muslims reject Bosnian division
Plan gives Serbs 52 percent of land
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnia's Muslim president predicted yesterday that the republic's assembly would reject the latest peace plan to divide Bosnia with its enemies — a snub that would likely bring a surge in fighting.
Just hours after he returned from Geneva — where the proposal was offered last week — President Alja Izetbegovic called the plan unacceptable and indicated that his beleaguered government would continue trying to wrest more concessions from Bosnian Serbs and Croats.
Under the compromise package,
Serbbs would get about 25 percent of
Bosnia, Muslims 31 percent and Croats 17 percent under a weak central government.
Muslims, who control only about 10 percent of Bosnia, want at least 40 percent and demand that Serbs aren't given land where they committed genocide and "ethnic cleansing" of Muslims.
On Friday, Serb and Croat leaders accepted the draft plan laid down by international peace negotiators.
Izetebgicov said yesterday that the plan had some good aspects, including preserving Bosnia-Herzegovina as an internationally recognized state. He also pointed to a reduction in fighting in the last three weeks and an improvement in the supply of aid.
But, he said, on first glance, the bad aspects prevailed.
Muslim republic would be landlocked, and the Croat- and Serb-held lands would border Croatia and Serbia.
"I will not propose that they vote for such a proposal," Izetbegovic said, adding that he wanted to continue the negotiating process. But, he predicted, the assembly would assess the plan as unacceptable.
Meanwhile, Bosnian Croats showed no willingness yesterday to allow U.N. aid convoyes into the east side of Mostar, where 55,000 Muslims are on the brink of starvation.
Sarajevo radio said Bosnian Croats, aided by the Croatian army, attacked the Mostar area yesterday with artillery, wounding 15 civilians, two of them fatally. The report could not be independently confirmed.
United Nations High Commission for Refugees officials were hoping to get a food and medicine convoy into
Most earl in the week but said that was conditional on a cease-fire.
Local authorities said if no food convoy arrived within five days in Mostar's Muslim sector, there would be "death by starvation." The refugee commission agreed with that assessment, said Lyndall Sachs, spokesperson for the commission.
The stranded people urgently need baby food, wheat flour and oil. A refuge commission official who visited Mostar on Saturday, said there were "many tragic cases of children with severe wounds."
Doctors are performing up to 20 operations a day under "very, very primitive conditions," Sachs said.
Croats have stopped the refugee commission for a fourth day from sending trucks into central Bosnia.
Sachs said, "Essentially we're being held to ransom."
Nicaraguan rebels hold journalists hostage
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Leftist gunmen holding the vice president and other officials also took nine Nicaraguan journalists captive yesterday, deepening the hostage-taking stalemate with a rival political group.
41 Sandinista lawmakers and other officials.
Militiamen loyal to the former Sandinista government hold the journalists and 20 officials, including Vice President Virgilio Godyo. In Qualifi, the formerly U.S.-backed contra guerrillas have detained
In northern Nicaragua, meanwhile, Contra rebels rejected a proposal for simultaneous release of all captives. In all, about 70 people are held in Managua and the northern town of Qualifi.
The two factions, which were on opposite sides of a guerrilla war in the 1980s, have become more militant over demands for land, money and other concessions promised after a peace accord was reached. The Contra forces also demand the removal of Sandinista officials from top government posts.
The hostage-taking, which began Thursday, has raised fears of a new civil war.
In Managua, a gunman who did not identify himself told pro-Sandinista Radio Ya that the journalists were seized for identifying the name of the militiamen the commander in published and broadcast reports.
"The journalists are now hostages," declared the gunman, one of about 20 heavily armed men who raided the headquarters of the center-right Nation-1 Organization Union on Friday, carrying 24 hostages.
The journalists — all from Nicaragua news outlets — had been inside the house for hours and a group of other reporters were suddenly expelled from the front porch Sunday morning.
On Saturday, the pro-Sandimista rebels freed 14 of their hostages, including two ally politicians.
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PASADENA, Calif.
Engineers lost contact with the Mars Observer spacecraft as it was about to reach the Red Planet on a $800 million mission, but it is expected to orbit Mars despite the problem, NASA said yesterday.
Spacecraft to orbit Mars despite loss of NASA contact
Engineers were radioing computerized commands every 20 minutes in an attempt to get the unmanned spacecraft to send back a signal to tell controllers its condition, said a statement by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
The spacecraft failed to enter immediately a "safe" mode that would have aimed one of its antennas at Earth and re-established contact, said Bob MacMillin, a spokesperson for the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Engineers have said they thought they fixed the computer programming glitches.
Contact was lost Saturday night while the spacecraft was automatically carrying out orders to pressurize its propulsion system so it could fire its braking rockets and enter orbit around Mars tomorrow afternoon, MacMillin said.
BELGIUM FRANCE UK GERMANY ITALY AND JAPAN
"As of 8 a.m. PDT on Sunday, Aug. 22, no signal from the spacecraft had been received by tracking stations around the world," NASA said in a statement issued in Washington and Pasadena.
Security guards allegedly beat a man and yelled racist remarks at him in a parking lot at Dodger Stadium because they thought he was a ticket scalper, a newspaper said yesterday.
The unidentified man was visiting Los Angeles in late July and had tickets to a baseball game, The Los Angeles Times reported. He needed hospital treatment after the beating, the Times said.
THE NEWS in brief
Guards beat man at stadium
Jim Italiano, the team's security chief, was reported to have been at the scene of the alleged beating, the newspaper said. He resigned effective Aug. 16, although Dodge officials said the resignation was not related to the incident.
Los Angeles
Sam Fernandez, Dodger staff counsel, said Saturday that the team had been contacted by the man's attorney, William Powers.
He said the team abhorred the type of violence that Powers alleged.
"At this time, however, there is no basis for concluding that what Mr. Powers is alleging is in fact what happened," Fernandez said.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
Fishermen end oil blockade
Fishmen agreed yesterday to lift a blockade keeping oil tankers from the trans-Alaska pipeline terminal after Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt promised more help for the area's oil-spill recovery effort.
Babbitt, on a two-week tour of Alaska, met with the protesters early yesterday and said later that he would urge Exxon Corp. to meet with them on its pending civil lawsuits over the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill.
He also promised to urge federal and state trustees, who oversee the $900 million criminal spill settlement fund from Exxon, to buy more land to protect salmon-spawning streams in Prince William Sound and to assist local hatcheries.
About 60 fishing boats clogged the Valdez Narrows on Saturday. By yesterday, about 100 boats had joined the protest, moving to a small bay just beyond the narrows, but they were poised to move quickly back into the tankers' shipping lanes.
The blockade was organized to call attention to weak returns of pink salmon to Prince William
Sound, Fishermen blame the diminished returns on the effects of the spill, the worst in U.S. history.
Exxon officials, who had refused to meet with the protesters, issued a statement saying no link had been established between this year's low return of pink salmon and the spill, which dumped nearly 11 million gallons of North Slope crude oil into prime fishing waters.
NEW DELHI, India
NEW DELHI, India Mother Teresa seriously ill
The health of Nobel laureate Mother Teresa deteriorated yesterday, and doctors moved her to a coronary unit after she developed trouble breathing.
The problem was caused by lung congestion and "because of an unstable heart condition," said a statement from the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences.
1ne Roman Catholic nun was admitted to the hospital on Friday with malaria, a tropical disease transmitted by mosquitoes. It is characterized by high fever, severe chills and enlargement of the spleen.
Despite her fruit health, Mother Teresa has traveled frequently in her campaign to help the poor.
The Missionaries of Charity has grown into a global network for the poor since she founded the order more than 40 years ago.
"She was shifted to the Coronary Care Unit because her heart condition needs continuous monitoring," said the hospital spokesman, B.K. Dash. Her condition was described as stable.
Mother Teresa was fitted with a pacemaker after suffering a second heart attack in 1989.
Mother Teresa was in New Delhi to receive an award.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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Monday, August 23, 1993
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Shots kill 10 in South Africa
Burial workers slayed east of Johannesburg
The Associated Press
- GERMISTON, South Africa — A
Black man with an AK-47 assault rifle
fired fire yesterday on a group of
Blacks planning the burial of a man
killed last month, killing 10 people
and wounding 21.
The shooting occurred near the site of last month's gruesome political massacre, but police and witnesses said the motive was unclear.
Most violence between Blacks has been linked to the rivalry between Nelson Mandela's African National Congress and the Zulu-dominated Inkatha. The fighting is blamed for the deaths of 10,000 Blacks in the past three years.
Hours after the killings, bloody bodies lay beside toppled plastic chairs outside the workers hostel at the huge Scaw Metals factory complex in Germiston, a mostly white suburb 10 miles east of Johannesburg.
The victims were from the Tsomo Burial Society, which represents people from the Tsomo district of the
Transkei Black homeland. The society arranges for bringing back and burying the bodies of people who have died in other areas.
Welcome Mtiwaz, a member of the society, said the society was making arrangements for a Tsomo man killed July 31 in a nearby township. While the gathering was taking place, three men in long coats walked up the street.
One of the men pulled out an AK-47 assault rifle and started firing, said Mtwazi, who was sitting a few yards from where most of the victims were found.
Nine bodies were at the meeting site and a 10th was inside the hostel, sad Police Capt. Wikus Weber. A trail of blood suggested the victim went into the hostel after being shot.
"We just heard a gun — bang, bang, bang," said Ephrain Masuku, who was visiting his father in an adjacent reception hall. "We all tried to get underneath the table."
Weber said nine men and one woman died, and 21 people were wounded. All the victims were Black.
when shooting broke out as an Inkatha funeral procession passed an ANC-controlled squatter area in the Tokoza township near Germiston, Weber said.
Also yesterday, three people died
The burial society, which often held meetings at the factory, comprises members of the Xhosa tribe from Transkei, one of 10 tribal homelands set up under apartheid and the birthplace of Mandela.
Xhosas often are associated with the ANC, but Mtwazi said the burial society was nonpolitical.
The shooting was the latest in a string of mass killings in the Johannesburg area. Most have occurred in Black townships. The factory is in an industrial area of Germiston, a white suburb. But like most large factories in South Africa, its labor force is mainly Black.
On July 19, a field near the factory was the scene of a shooting linked to political rivalries. Gummen with AK-47s pulled over a van and accused seven of the 13 occupants of being inkatha supporters.
The seven were marched into the field and shot in the head.
Blast in Somalia injures U.S. soldiers
MOGADISHIU. Somalia — Six American soldiers preparing to leave Somalia were slightly wounded yesterday when their reinforced truck was destroyed by an explosion triggered by militamen.
The Associated Press
Five small explosions from grenades or small mortars burst in front of the lead truck in the 22-vehicle convoy, and some of the trucks came under small-arms fire, said Cant. Tim McDavitt, a U.N. military spokesperson.
Military officials blamed fugitive warlord Mohamed Farah Aidid for the attack - the third explosion targeting U.S. forces this month.
"We hold Aidid responsible for all these attacks," said Maj. David Stockwell, the chief U.N. military spokesperson. "We have no reason to believe it was anyone else."
McDavitt said that the wounded Americans were picked up by soldiers in trucks behind them and that the convoy sped to the port, with Gls returning fire as they left the scene of the explosion.
There were no reports of Somali casualties.
It was the third mine explosion aimed at U.S. forces since a blast ripped apart a Hunvee utility vehicle Aug. 8, killing four American peacekeepers.
More than 1,000 supporters of fugitive warlord Mohamed Farah Aidil staged a peaceful anti-U.S. demonstration yesterday a few miles away. The demonstrations occur almost weekly.
The convoy was approaching the port on one of
Mogadishu's most heavily traveled streets when the explosion ripped the undercarriage of a 2.5-ton truck. Like most U.S. trucks in Mogadishu it had been reinforced with steel plating and was carrying sandbags in its bed as protection against mines.
against the traps.
The explosion, thought to have been triggered by remote, left a 3-foot-deep crater in the asphalt. The truck burned.
The six Americans in the vehicle suffered minor cuts and bruises, McDavitt said. They were treated at a U.S. Army field hospital and released. Identities were not disclosed.
Stockwell said all six were members of the U.S. Logistical Support Command, which provides services for most of the other 27 nations in the U.N. military force in Somalia.
They were due to be rotated back to the United States in a few days and were taking their trucks and other vehicles to the port for shipment home, he said.
four American soldiers, including three women, survived a mine explosion and fought their way to safety under small-arms fire from Somali militiamen Thursday.
Aidid is wanted by the United Nations in a series of ambushes June 5 that killed 24 Pakistani peacekeepers and for other attacks on U.N. forces. A $25,000 reward has been posted for information leading to his arrest.
Military and other sources say U.N. peacekeepers have come close to capturing Aidid on at least three occasions and have been deterred on others by fear of causing civilian casualties.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday. August 23,1993
9
I'll just use the standard black and white for this image.
The person on the left is a police officer, wearing a uniform with visible badge and emblem. The person on the right is a medical professional, likely a paramedic or emergency responder, wearing a white shirt with a logo and dark pants. Both individuals are kneeling on a grassy field, with a parked vehicle visible in the background.
Accident on Iowa Street
Paul Taylor, supervisor for the Douglas County Ambulance Service (right), checks the heart rate of Jared Rosebaugh, McLouth resident, while Larry Kasson, Lawrence police officer, assists. Rosebaugh was involved in a five-car accident at Iowa Street and Oxford Road on Friday. Seven people were transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital to be treated for minor injuries.
KU students help kids make the grade
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
A program designed to give Lawrence kindergarten through 12th grade students a little extra help is giving KU students a taste of teaching
Youth Educational Services, or Y.E.S., matches KU students with Lawrence and Topeka public school students who are academically challenged.
Y. E.S. also provides college students with an opportunity to make some extra money while tutoring children who otherwise may not receive the special attention.
Donna Ossess, principal at Riverside Elementary School in Lawrence, said the children at her school benefited greatly from the extra help.
"I know that the students also enjoy working with the tutors," she said. "They really look forward to when the tutors come."
0spress said students enjoyed work
ing one-on-one with tutors who were closer to them in age.
The program originated when Associated Students of Kansas petitioned for government funding for a tutoring program. Three Kansas universities now receive Board of Regents grants for the program. Wichita State University and Emporia State University also have successful programs. The service has been provided at KU for six years and receives additional funding through Student Senate.
"Last year there were about 75 student tutors," said Melissa Stucky, Wichita senior, who is in charge of Y.E.S. at KU. "Because funding was cut in half for this year, we will only have 50 tutors."
Brebek Tso, Lenexa sophomore, was one of last year's tutors and has applied for the job again this year. She said that helping students learn math and algebra was fun and rewarding.
"I'd never tutored before." So said. "It was neat to find out that I could
teach something to other people.
Tso found that the students were grateful for her help.
"It was actually fun for them sometimes," she said.
Stucky said Y.E.S. was accepting applications from students who were interested in tutoring. Students can apply at the Student Employment Center at the University Placement Center in the Burge Union. Applications will be accepted until Sept. 1.
Each school hires tutors individually, so requirements for employment can vary. In order to apply at Y.E.S., students must be enrolled in a minimum of 12 hours and have a cumulative grade point average of 2.0 or better.
Osness said her school looks for tutors who are compatible with students.
"We're looking for someone with charisma, who enjoys children and has a way with children," she said.
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Monday. August 23,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT RIGHTS UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS
Be a Part of KU Tradition ROCK·CHALK·REVUE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
1994 The University Musical Revue Benefitting the United Way
*INFORMATIONAL MEETING*
Wednesday, Aug. 25, 6 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium
in the Kansas Union
No song and dance required!
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Applications Due:
Monday, Aug. 30,5 p.m.
Everyone Welcome to Apply
Questions? Call Tad Gomez 841-1858
Tony Hain
ARTS & EVENTS FINANCE
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
Opportunities For Involvement In The
K. U. Student Senate.
Please Take The Time This Week To Pick Up An Application For The Committees And Boards Of The Student Senate.
Pick Up And Return Applications At The Student Senate Office At 410 Kansas Union By Friday, Aug.27
MULTI-CULTURALAFFAIRS
Call 864-3710 For Questions
STREETS AND BEACHES
Renee Knoeber/KANSAN
Moon walking
residents from Stephenson Scholarship Hall jump around in the Moon Walk during Rock-a-Hawk activities at Temple Hall on Friday. Activities included carnival games, a picnic, volleyball, basketball and soccer.
University Governance to examine tuition, new relationships policy
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The effects of the new University consensual relationship policy, which went into effect Friday, will be a hot topic for University Governance
Governance, which consists of University Senate, University Council and the Senate Executive Committee, begins a new semester when University Council meets for the first time Thursday.
The relationship policy does not prohibit relationships between faculty and students but tries to eliminate the conflict of interest within the relationship.
"That's really the intent of the policy," said Robert Friauf, who is the head of University Council.
Discussions on the policy will continue at the next meeting Thursday.
University Governance also will focus on tuition increases, the program discontinuance hearings, the revision of the faculty handbook and the recommendations of the Tenure and Related Problems committee for dismissal hearings.
The tuition increase for the 1994 school year would be 9 percent for resident undergraduates and 13 percent for nonresident undergraduates Part of the increase would pay for faculty salary increases.
Friauf said that the tuition increase would benefit students in the long run.
"This is a plan which will allow the increase in tuition to go directly to the University." he said.
The program discontinuance hearings will resume this semester with four programs to be examined. The academic degrees that may be discontinued are a master's degree in atmospheric science and bachelor of arts degrees in Italian, comparative literature and humanities.
The open discontinuance hearings will be conducted at the end of September by the Committee on Academic Procedures and Policies of University Council.
"The purpose is to allow faculty and students to provide information and express their opinions," Friauf said.
After the committee finishes the hearings it will submit a report to University Council. The council then will present its recommendations to David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"The discontinuance hearings will occupy a good part of the fall semester," said T.P. Srinivasan, who
beads the University Senate Executive Committee.
Srinivasan also is concerned with other issues for Governance.
"The faculty handbook revision needs to be followed up aggressively early in the fall," he said.
The last revision of the handbook was about four years ago.
Srinivasan said that the handbook must provide explicit explanations of some of the provisions of the faculty codes and provide an explanation for both faculty and students so there would not be any misinterpretations.
"That is the bible for the faculty." he said.
The other main issue affecting faculty this semester will be Governance's examination of the recommendations of the Tenure and Related Problems committee for future faculty dismissal cases.
the tenure committee oversaw the hearings for former law school professor Emil Tonkovich.
Srinivasan said that University Governance needed to sharpen the hearing procedures, eliminate the negative fallout for both the victim and accused and make the reasons for dismissal clearer.
Examination of committee recommendations will begin early this fall.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23, 1993
11
Pac-10 places Washington on probation
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Washington's Don James, one of the nation's most successful college football coaches, resigned yesterday after his team was severely penalized by the Pacific-10 Conference for violating NCAA rules.
He quit hours after the football program was placed on probation, banned from postseason play for two years, forced to give up scholarships and $1.4 million in television revenue.
James' letter of resignation was read by athletic director Barbara Hedges at a news conference.
"I have decided I can no longer
coach in a conference that treats its players and coaches so unfairly," the letter said.
James, who did not attend the news conference, said he was displeased there was no chance to cross-examine those players and recruits whose allegations contributed to the sanctions.
James, 60, has won more Pac-10 games than any coach in league history. He led the Huskers to a 12-0 record and a share of the 1991 National Championship. He is the winningest coach in Washington history with a 153-57-2 record in 18 seasons, leading the school to 13 bowls in the last 14
The Huskies, who have appeared in three straight Rose Bowls, will have the chance to go to Pasadena this season because of the Pac-10 penalties announced yesterday outside of San Francisco. Washington will not be eligible for the conference title following the 1993 and 1994 seasons.
years.
The Huskies remain eligible for national championship consideration in The Associated Press media poll but not in the CNN-USA Today coaches' poll. Washington is ranked 12th in preseason by the AP.
Washington is the second major football program to be placed on probation in the last week. Auburn was hit with a two-year probation and one-year television ban by the NCAA Wednesday.
The Pac-10 also limited Washington's football scholarships and
Four Washington boosters will be ordered to disassociate themselves from the Husky program, and three players, including senior tailback Beno Bryant, will lose their eligibility.
recruiting visits, and prohibited the university from sharing in 1983 television rights fees.
Among the violations found by the Pac-10 were improper loans to athletes, free meals provided to recruits
and improper employment of athletes by boosters. The conference also cited a lack of institutional control of funds provided to students hosting recruits.
Despite the severe penalties, Pac-10 representatives refused to characterize Washington as an "outlaw" program.
"There is no evidence the University of Washington set out to accomplish the achievement of a competitive advantage," said James O'Fallon, faculty representative at Oregon and head of the conference's compliance committee. "We have not found the University of Washington guilty in
that sense."
Gregory
The Pac-10, the only major athletic conference that conducts its own compliance investigations, will report the penalties to the NCAA, which can decide to levy more severe sanctions. The NCAA can not reverse or lessen the Pac-10's imposed penalties.
Hedges criticized the conference for what she said was disregard for the university's thorough in-house investigation and its cooperation.
WAY
WKKS
VOLLEYBALL
"The university left no stone unturned in conducting the investigation into our football program," she said.
Player focused for season
Nebraska native ready to step up
Sophomore Jenny Larson spikes a ball during a team practice at Robinson Gymnasium.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswrite
Another hot morning without air conditioning begins in Robinson Center for the Kansas volleyball team. As volleyballs sail over the net, players slide to make saves
Kip Chin/KANSAN
One player seen sliding most to get a tough dig is so home.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
Jenny Larson. It is only a practice, but she isn't letting up.
"The practices are really important," Larson said. "Any athlete will say some days, 'I don't feel like practicing today.' This year I want to work on my focus for practices."
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said Larson always worked hard in practice. "She is a tremendous athlete," Albitz said. "Practice is important. If someone looks good in practice, then she may start the next game."
Because of that policy, Larson might see a lot of playing time. Albitz said. Last year, as a freshman, Larson was placed right in the action.
"She is really versatile," Albizt said. "She played different positions for us last year. She has done everything except play setter."
Larson said she had enjoyed playing different positions. But this year she would prefer to focus on playing only a few positions.
"It was fun to know what each position is like so you can jump in easily," Larson said. "I got a lot of playing time last year. There are a lot of skills involved in volleyball. To be a great player you have to know them all."
For the volleyball team to have a good season, Albitz said Larson needed to play a larger role.
"Everyone is going to do well for us to be successful. "Albitz said. "If she can step up it will help because she is one of our powerful players."
Larson, a 5-foot-9 middle and right side player, said she is ready to step up and take control.
"I would like to be a leader," Larson said. "Any athlete would like to be a leader on the team."
Larson is an Omaha, Neb. native, but Kansas was able to recruit her away from Nebraska, perennial Big Eight volleyball champions, Albizt said Larson's quiet personality may have kept her from being notice by Cormushaker coach Terry Petit.
said. "She needed a little time, so they may have overlooked her. I don't know how though."
Larson said Nebraska asked her to walk on, but Kansas offered a scholarship, although that was not the only reason she came to Lawrence.
"Everyone from Omaha goes down to
Larson said. I wanted a change,
something."
"She might have been a sleeper," Albita
saturday, the team finished its two-a-day practices. They focused on the players physical training. Larson said. Now she is
ready to mentally prepare for the season.
"This week we need to work on the mental part of the game," Larson said. "We'll work on the determination and other things you need when you meet an opponent."
ready to mentally prepare for the season.
Larson said she was looking forward to this season. The team's first game is Sept. 1 against Wichita State, and that will begin a schedule with few slouched opponents.
"I am really excited about our schedule," Larson said. "Now, I know what to expect with one year of experience."
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
With last season's 7-0 Big Eight Conference record and a second consecutive Big Eight Championship behind them, women's tennis looks toward a productive fall season.
During head coach Chuck Merzbacher's tenure the
WOMEN'S TENNIS
Brebcca Jensen, Ludington, Mich., junior, is the first tennis player in Kansas history to receive All-America honors in singles and doubles play in the same season.
team was ranked 17th in the nation, and two players were named to the Intercollegiate Tennis Association All-America team.
Last year in singles, Jensen was ranked No. 17 in the nation. With doubles partner Nora Kovez, Budapest, Hungary, junior, she was ranked No. 5 in the nation
All three Kansas doubles spots won All-Big Eight honors.
Kansas retained six players from last season's team, all of whom went to the NCAA Championships, and three new players have signed on.
"The three new players coming in have a chance to make the line-up." Mindy Weiner, Morton Grove, ill, senior, said. "That can only help us; it definitely won't hurt us."
Merzbacher said the team's strengths were its depth and its experience. Three seniors will lead the team, and Merzbacher said he would have to do some serious recruiting next year to replace them.
For now, the fall season will provide time for the team to regroup.
Weiner said the fall season was an adaptation time so the freshman could mesh with the team and the rest of the team could find unity.
Weiner said the team lost some of its togetherness over the summer.
Merbach said the fall season gave the top players an opportunity to position themselves nationally, and the new players had time to gain experience.
"I really looking forward to playing." Amy Trytek, Bradenton, Fla., freshman said. "I came to KU because I really liked the coach. I thought he would be the best coach to play for."
This will be Merzbacher's second season as head coach for the Jayhawks. He came from the Northern Illinois men's tennis program where he led the team to a 50-34 record. In his first season with the Jayhawks, Merzbacher was named 1989 Big Eight Coach of the Year.
For the last two seasons, the Jayhawks have made it to the NCAA Championships. All returning players have experience playing in NCAA Championship tournament.
Weiner said it was helpful to have experience in that tournament, because the first time, it was overwhelming.
He said the fall season was individualized and helped with rankings for the spring.
During the fall season, the team has scheduled six tournaments. Weiner and Merzbacher said that these tournaments were mostly for individuals and that team play would come in the spring.
"It's like being a rookie in football, or walking into the stadium and seeing that you have to play Michael Jordan." Weiner said.
All fall tournaments will be played on the road, the closest one being played at Kansas State.
Despite turnovers,Chiefs claim victory
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Joe Montana aside, the Kansas City Chiefs are going to have to do something about turnovers.
Montana played the first half against Minnesota on Saturday and directed two long drives, which left the Chiefs with a 10-0 lead. Kansas City led 20-6 early in the third quarter after the Vikings' Roger Craig fumbled away two balls early in the period.
"There is no excuse. None."
But then the Chiefs started turning over the ball. Krieg was intercepted twice on badly overthrown passes, and Mike Dual dugelfilled giving Kansas City four turnovers in the game. Minnesota pulled to a 20-20 tie.
The Chiefs, who eventually pulled out a 27-20 victory, have turned the ball over 11 times in two games.
"It's awful," Chiefs coach Marty Schotten-heiser said. "You can not turn over the football if you want to win in this league. It makes it a little bit easier for the other guy."
It was the second straight week that Montana had executed flawlessly, and the Chiefs had somehow forgotten how to hold onto the ball once his scheduled duty was up.
Montana played one quarter last week and took the Chiefs on a long drive to the one-vard line, but the Chiefs failed to score. The Chiefs turned the ball over seven times in a loss to Bufalo.
Montana then took the Chiefs on a nine-play drive that ended in a 38-yard field goal by Nick Lowery, which gave the Chiefs a 10-0 lead.
This time. Montana worked the short passing game to perfection and ate up more than nine minutes of the first quarter before throwing a four-yard touchdown pass to Dyal.
He finished that drive having completed 11 of 14 passes for 93 yards.
Associated Press top 25
Three Big Eight teams are ranked in the Big Ten basketball poll. Kansas was 26th in the yotink
Rank School '92 Record Votes '92 Poll
1. Florida St. (42) 11-1-1 1,522 2
2. Alabama (14) 13-0-0 1,472 1
3. Michigan (3) 9-0-3 1,413 5
4. Texas A&M 12-1-0 1,261 7
5. Miami 11-1-0 1,245 3
6. Syracuse (2) 10-2-0 1,180 6
7. Notre Dame 10-1-1 1,137 4
**8. Nebraska** 9-3-0 1,050 14
9. Florida 9-4-0 998 10
10. Tennessee 9-3-0 976 12
**11. Colorado** 9-2-1 961 13
12. Washington 9-3-0 890 11
13. Georgia 10-2-0 725 8
14. Arizona 6-5-1 695 -
15. Stanford 10-3-0 660 9
16. Penn State 7-5-0 598 -
17. Ohio State 8-3-1 470 18
18. Southern Cal 6-5-1 436 -
19. Brigham Young 8-5-0 323 -
20. North Carolina 9-3-0 322 19
21. Boston College 8-3-1 299 21
**22. Oklahoma** 5-4-2 269 -
23. Clemson 5-6-0 262 -
24. Mississippi State 7-5-0 165 23
25. North Carolina St. 9-3-1 162 17
Cross country runner expects fruitful season
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Four years ago, senior cross country runner Julia Saul was a determined but lightly recruited high school runner from Lawrence. She took that determination to the University of Oregon where she placed third in the 10,000-meter race at the Pacific 10 Outdoor Conference Championships in 1990 and 1991.
Her decision two years ago to leave Oregon for Kansas was prompted by Oregon's cutbacks in the program that she was studying.
"They cut my program back and I was ready for a change." Saul said.
Saul, a solid runner at Oregon, blossomed into one of the nation's elite runners once she came to Kansas.
"When I got here it kind of freed me up," Saul said. "I was used to running behind the runners at Oregon, and when I got here I didn't have anyone that I expected to run behind."
BALA
That freedom resulted in Saul becoming the top Jayhawk women's cross country runner and the first All-American in team history.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Julia Saul, Lawrence senior, stretches and gets ready for an early morning practice with the cross country team.
"She has gone from a little above average runner to one of the elite runners in the country," said Steve Guymon, assistant cross country coach.
"She is an extremely dedicated and capable runner who knows what it takes to succeed." Guymon said.
Steve Sublett, Saul's Lawrence High School coach, recognized Saul's dedication early in her career and said she was a quietly determined student and athlete.
Her coaches said they were hoping to see more of the same from Saul this year and she would be a major component in what could be a Big Eight title-contending team.
She said that she thought the depth the team had acquired with its fresh recruiting class and the talents of the staff.
"We'll definitely contend for the Big Eight title," Saul said.
12
Monday, August 23.1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mason pleased with two-a-day practices
Injuries in practice hurt 'Hawks and Seminoles
By Matt Doyle
Before taking some bites of watermelon during the team's annual watermelon feast, Kansas coach Glen Mason said he was pleased about how the two weeks of two-a-day football practices had gone.
"I feel pretty good about where we are," Mason said Saturday after an intrasquid scrimage at Memorial Stadium. "We talked about whether we worked them too hard or not hard enough. You don't want to wear them out, and you don't want to bang them up. Yeah, I'm pretty well pleased."
Kansas starts its season Saturday against Florida State, currently ranked the No. 1 team in the nation, in the 11th annual Kickoff Classic at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. Both the Jayhawks and Seminoles have had injuries during practices leading up to the game that will keep players from each team out of the game.
Kansas junior linebacker Don Davis will miss the game with a sprained right knee suffered two weeks ago. Originally, it was thought that Davis would miss about six weeks, but Mason said Davis could be back in time for the home opener on Sept. 4 against Western Carolina.
Junior linebacker/fullback Chris Powell is out with a broken foot, and senior defensive end Ty Moeder will miss the entire season with a shoulder injury.
Senior center Dan Schmidt missed all practices last week with a sprained ankle but was expected to return to practice today.
Florida State lost three potential starting players for the season to knee injuries during its first week of noncontact drills.
Seminole senior cornerback Fuller suffered ligament damage in his right knee.
Junior tailback Tiger McMillon ruptured a tendon below the right knee. Junior free safety Steve Gilmer reinjured ligaments in his left knee, an injury he originally suffered in the Seminoles spring game. Gilmer's injury will require major reconstructive surgery.
Sophomore wide receiver Tamarick Vanover entered fall practice at 222 pounds, 21 pounds above his playing weight from a year ago. Florida State coach Bobby Bowden said he wants Vanver's weight down to 210 pounds for the opener against Kansas, and that Vanover is slowly losing that excess weight
The Jayhawk players elected team captains last week. Two offensive linemen and two defensive linemen were selected for the honor.
Schmidt and junior guard John Jones were voted offensive captains while senior tackle Chris Maumalanga and senior end Guy Howard were voted defensive captains.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
KU
SPORTS in brief
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Hancock to play at Indiana State, says 'no' to Europe
Kansan staff report
Former Kansas basketball forward Darrin Hancock has made plans to attend Indiana State University.
Hancock, 6-foot-7-inch and 215 pounds, was not allowed to return to the Jayhawk program this year after he failed to complete his summer academic requirements.
1994 basketball season because of NCAA transfer rules
After deciding not to play in Europe, as Hancock considered, he will have to sit out the 1983
Hancock will be coached at Indiana State by his former high school coach, James Martin, who is an assistant to head coach Tates Locke at Indiana State.
Widely known for his electrifying dunks, Hancock will be playing at the same school as basketball great Larry Bird
Indiana State com-
WATER SPORTS
pets in the Missouri Valley Conference, which includes Wichita State and Illinois State, led by former Kansas assistant coach Kevin Stallings.
Darrin Hancock
Rough water
O. J. Ojala, Lawrence resident and member of the Lawrence Windsurfing Association, windsurfers at Clinton Lake. The association sponsored Teach-a-Friend Day yesterday at the lake, although windy conditions made learning hard.
Kansas City put brakes on New York with shutout
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL
NEW YORK — Chris Haney wanted to prove to himself, his manager and opposing hitters that he was more than a pitcher who needed help.
Hanley did it, at least for a day. Sunday, by pitching his first shutout of the season, leading the Kansas City Royals past the New York Yankees 7-0.
Mike Macfarlane's 18th home run, a career high total, in the second inning gave Haney all the support he needed. The Royals scored three times in the fifth, highlighted by Brian McRae's mad dash home, and added three more in the sixth, two on Greg Gagne's triple.
The Royals stayed four games behind first-place Chicago in the AL West.
Haney. 9-5, allowed only four hits,
worked around a season-high five
walks and struck out five batters.
Discount travel available for Kickoff Classic
Airline, ticket office offering reduced rates to New Jersey
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas football team will clash with the Florida State Seminoles in the Kickoff Classic on Saturday. And thanks to the ticket office, fans can see the game in person.
An employee of Continental said the flight must include a Saturday night stay for the reduced rates to apply. She also said that the flight could not be guaranteed.
Tickets for the game in East Rutherford, N.J., sell for $28 per seat. Through a special promotion with the ticket office and Continental Airlines, Jayhawk fans can fly from anywhere in the United States to Newark, N.J., for a reduced fare that ranges from about $170 to $480 plus a 10-percent discount. The flight from Kansas City, Mo., will cost about $170.
The Alumni Association is encouraging fans to wear red and blue. Hot dogs and hamburgers will be sold, but the party itself will be free.
John Summers, 1966 KU graduate from New Hope, Pa. bought 10 tickets for the game.
He said that he wanted to see the team play and that he tried to see Kansas play as often as he could. He said he used to help out with recruiting.
Bernie Kish, tickets operations and sales director, said the office had sold about 2,000 tickets as of Friday. That is approximately twice as many tickets as it sold for the Aloha Bowl last year, Kish said.
He said the price, location and time of year in which the game was played had a lot to do with how many tickets were sold.
Kansas football is also on the rise overall, which helps ticket sales. Kish said.
Friends and families of players and coaches are heading to New Jersey in full force.
Dave Warner, Kansas quarterback coach who is originally from the Philadelphia area, has a contingent of 90 people traveling two buses down to watch him coach.
Two hundred people who went to high school in New Jersey with head coach Glen Mason have purchased tickets. And running back L.T. Lavine's mother purchased 70 tickets for friends and family.
Tickets are available at the ticket office in Allen Field House. The Alumni Association is organizing a group to go to the game. To inquire about the reduced fees from Continental Airlines, call 1-800-468-7022, extension ZHB70.
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Back to School Hours Thru August 29 M-F9:30-8:30 Sat. 9:30-5:30 Sun.12-5 736 Massachusetts
Douglas
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23.1993
13
ComputerLand
HP Docking B2 Printer
841-4611
Don't sink this low...Recycle.
If everyone in America recycled only 10 percent of their newspapers,25 million trees would be saved every year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Don't sink this low...Recycle.
If everyone in America recycled only 10 percent of their newspapers, 25 million trees would be saved every year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Classified Directory
100s
Amouncements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Amouncements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
320 Mealwareous
370 Want to Buy
400s
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, religion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan 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 any perfume, cosmetic or other goods that race color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference limitation on dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this news article are paid.
I
Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Light mechanical work your home or mine also van
available for moving or hauling 542-2688
FRIENDS
WELCOME BACK
MELISSA & JOJO
Here's to agreat year!
Wanna order a pizza?
LOVE,
LOVE,
MINDY
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobbs, Kansas Union.
BAPSTH STUDENT UNION. First meeting of the semester will be on Thursday, August 26, 5:30 p.m. at BAPSTH, 1900 Northwest Avenue, #801. Rick Clock, campus minister. Lee CBS,管理员. 665-352-8. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, intramural sports, mission projects, friendships. A Christian Campus ministry.
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WORKSHOP
FREE!
for students who want to study smarter, not harder
Wednesday, August 25, 7.8 p.m
offered by the Student Assistance Center
STUDY SMARTER. NO HATTER. Learn strategies to help you excel academically, techniques to increase concentration and improve retention, and tips for success. Presented by the Student Assistance Center
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer you to inquiries to your Student Assistance Center (SAC).
FUNDRAISERS.FUNDRAISERS
FUNDRAISERS!
RAISE $150-$300
GUARANTEED in one
BLUISHCOAT
up to $500!
Margeage promotions for top companies for one week on your campus. Call for FREE GIFT and to qualify for FREE TRIP to MTV
SPRING break '94.
Call1-800-950-1037, ext.25.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Street
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
NEED A RIDER/REDER Use the Self Servic Car Poa Exhaustion Main Lebby, Kansas Union
Cottonwood Inc. A facility for adults with de-velo-
mental alexisatisms has full and part time positions.
Responsibilities include training individuals in
self help, community awareness, socialization
skills and assisting in the daily management of
a group home. Some positions may require sleep
and/or meal preparation. Driving record required. Please at Cottonwood Inc. 2001 W. 31st Street, LAWSON 6840 EOE
JD's wanted for JD service and Karaka. Experience preferred: Michael Hees Entertainment
Drivers need for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. ins. needs drivers for SAFRIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a driving record of 8-22 per week.
Evening delivery driver wanted. Dependable, must have own job. Apply at Peking restaurant.
full time independent living skill trainer to assist individual with disability and learning skills to attain/maintain independent life style. High range of life skills, demonstrated commitment to independent living required. Experience working with people with disability and creative teaching skills. Opportunities for ability are encouraged to apply. Complete job description available upon request. Send resume and cover letter to: Independence Incorporated Ave. Lawrence, KS 65048, by Sept. 2. EOE/AA
time full live in many need for 3 active children (toddler, 4-7). Reliable, non-laundry, have carouse Housekeepes need incl R/B + salary housekeeping. Previews exp, raps. Call 149-802-9228 after 7am.
Hirung students to contact Alumna 5:49-6:49 on
Wednesday and Thursdays 11:30 am wage.
September 7 to November 18. Please call Marle
Anne Dooley at 642-430-214 or 2-4 Monday
afternoon.
Like to work independently in a pleasant environment? Flexible scheduling for part-time hrs. available. Be a certified nurse aide. Apply to M.D., Pharmacist, or Nurse Practitioner. Inversed Drive. Lawrence, KS E.O.E.
Kansas and Burge Unit hiring part-time, hourly
workers. Must have a Bachelor's degree or
available. Must run fall class schedule to
apply. See job board. Union Personnel Office.
E. Kansas Unit Building for job specs
E. Kansas Unit Building for job specs
KU GAME PARKING ATTENDANTS : 35 People needed at KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested please apply immediately.
LAN COORDINATION ASSISTANT *Student*
monthly deadline; 9/1/18. Salary $350/month, 20
weeks hour. Duties include assisting with
database updates, filing and other duties as
assigned. Writing database reports using RAR
Report writer is requested to apply. Job
description includes writing, filing and transcript
to Angela Barnet, Personnel Officer, Computer
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
Cloudy
Needed warm responsible female to receive free room and board in exchange for part time care of my 3½ year old son. Transportation needed. Refs: Call Kristine 823-0000
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Now accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time banque service. Willing to train the right people. All Shifa are available. Apply at Adams Alumni Center, 1266
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Now Taking Applicat
PRODELIARA
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
Now accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time bandage service. Willing to train the right people All Shirts are available. Apply at Adams University Center, 1260 W. 43rd St.,
Adamia alumini center needs AM PM Dishwasher,
toilet, dishwashing machine, phone no. phone call. Address 186d Eagle Ave.
Full & Part Time
Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Baby
Needed warm responsible female to receive free room and board in exchange for part time care of my 3 yr old son. Transportation needed. Refa
PARTY TIME SUPERVISOR. Mass Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start with a $25/hour job up to $45/hour up to $6.25/hour, 20-30 hours a week, e威, and wenkes. Apply at Schumann Food Company. Business office ITMass (upstairs) above Smokehouse. M-F-P.
Old-man jobs man, occasional worker, rental pro-
perties paint, yard, clean out, carpentry, etc.
Truck? Send skills info, P.O. Box 1997, Lawrence,
KS 60944
NEED A RIDE/RIDER' Use the Self Serve CAT
Do Well Poorly Maintain Lainy Kansas Union
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
PUBLIC RELATIONS FALL '10 INTERN-Gain experience working with public relations team promoting Kansas City metroropolitan area. Job duties include research, story ideas, filling information requests, etc. This position is non-nachiated but can apply for course credit. It may be full or part time. Please submit resume and writing sample to Prime Time News Bureau, 911 Main Street, Suite 260, Kansas City, KS 74103, cont. kisses_draessman@aol.com (855) 221-5186
Office help needed 11:30:20 30 MWF & 11:56:20
T7TH. Must be a business major, be enrolled at
12 least hrs, at KU have GPA of at least 2.0 and
a Kansas resident. Call 641-6000 3-0, M-F
Part-time Office Assistant need 20 hrs/wk M/W/am, T/C/F/SH (F) call 749-1380
Apply in person
nursing with 2 year's experience with clinical
psychical services required. Please submit resume
to HR Department.
After-Hours Emergency Screener for the pre-admission screening for psychiatric hospitalization. Master's in psychology, social work or nursing with 2 years' experience with clinical therapy.
Bk Named CMHIC, 338 Missouri; See 202, Lawrence.
KB 6044. Open until filled. EOE.
10am-2pm, Must enjoy children. Sunshine Acres
Preschool 842-223-6927
Required qualifications: Master's degree, organizational and administrative ability, superior interpersonal skills, good writing skills. Good work experience. Preferred: Ph.D. and a knowledge of KU.
Duties: Assisting Graduate School dean in day-to-day operations; keeping track of fellowship applications and awards; working with gravesends and program reviews; carrying on correspondence with faculty members; doing clean job description and application form available upon request at (913) 864-3301.
Application Procedure: Contact the Graduate School at (813-864-3301) for an application form and position announcement. Send completed application form, current resume and three letters of recommendation from Virginia State. The Graduate School, 222 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045.
Baby sister needed for 7 yr. old girl> 3:00 to 10:30 pm
M.F.P. transport required: 84223
Child care for 9yr old girl* Non-smoker with car 3
or pum to 18 or pum to 2 pm 3 days a week; k/7h
4w-6m
Deadline: September 1, 1993
CHILD CARE WANTED: Occasional care for our two children ages 6 and 12. In our home near camper
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Requires good academic record in chemistry,
pharmacy or related science, laboratory exp;
and prior post-baccalaureate experience.
wk/sk. Submit application with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to INTERX
employment, M/F/M/IV. Be Equal Opportunity Employer. M/F/M/IV.
Children Learning Center is now hiring 1 am and 2 pm teacher assist for infant and preschool children. Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 311 Maine, 841-2165.
CITY OF LAWRENCE
BARNS INFORMATION DEPT.
Part-time Instructions for Slimmestia's Children's Art, and Aqua Slimmestia's Water Walking. Prefer experience in instruction area. $70 per hour. More information and applications are available at Admin. Services. Room 210. City Hall. 6th. 850-624-6044. Deadline Aug. 30. 10AM (F/M/T).
We are currently accepting applications for teaching counselor (TC) positions to work with & enhance the vocational and daily living skills of students. We also accept CLOE seeks to hire day, evening & night TCs for full-time, part-time & overstaffed positions at the Lawrence Overland Park site with a degree, prefer related to Behavioral Sciences. Homemaker skills needed for the night teachers will be required. Apply with a fit, competitive salary & family style work atmosphere. Apply at/send resume to: CLO 211 Delaware, KS 60046, or apply August 25, 1982 at the university Booch near booth EOE in bondage.
X
PRESCHOOL TEACHERS
Everyday Mon-Fri 7-11 Tue-Sun 8-30 Fri-Sun 5-30
Provide 3 child development courses and experi-
ences.
Read Books for Pay. Earn $100 per title. Free
Envelopes. Save $25 per stamp. Envelope
Box 40214 Ganville, FISLE 1247.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a student assistant position available. REQUIRED
to have a Bachelor's degree from the University of Kansas, academic year 1999-94.
2. Excellent communication skills. PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS: 1. Eligible for work study program; 2. Prior experience as a receptionist; 3. Experience working in a POSITION AVAILABLE. 1. September 1, 1999 to May 17, 1994. DEADLINE: Eligible persons are invited to submit an application by 5:00 p.m. on Monday, March 16, 2000, to the Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KC 60540-1850; 913-854-3520 EOAA/ANA
Student Assista Position
No experience needed. Flexible full and part time schedules. No canvassing or telephone calls.
ment and experience. Sunshine Acres 842-2222.
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student or individual who will be grad student in Spring 1994. Position will be hourly for Fall 1995. Resume should include Assistant position in January, 1994. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community resources, highly computer literacies, interest in professional experiences, organizational skills, sense of humor, empathy, interested in helping others. Come by KU Info, 420 Union, for an application. Must return by SPM, Friday, Aug 27.
305 For Sale
For interview now!
SUB TEACHERS
Immediate opening for person with PC networking, LAN management. NOVEL experience, technical skills in Windows Responditions includes installation/support of work and applications. Attractive salary, benefits. Send resume to 60%7 to Director of Client Support. Mail resume to 813 Mass, Lawrence: EO/M/F/V/H
300s Merchandise
Headquarter Counseling center 603 Counsel训层
providing PSOI中心会议, Sun. #8/24 or Wed. #1/
Wed. #1.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the School of Business Professionals Yu and other departures.
225 Professional Services
1984 Mards GLC, 82,000 miles, runs very well,
unrounded* car. $300 offer @ 1000-14,000 leave.
(For a discount, call 1-800-555-4040.)
OUI / Traffic
Criminal Defense
FOR FREE CONSULTATION Call
RICK FRYDMAN, ATTORNEY
843-4023
822 Minneapolis, MN A Fargo & Amniu
J.D.'s Baseball Cards
Buy-Sell-Trade
711 W 23rd #12
Malls Shopping Center
842-1002
823 Missouri Weekend & Evening By Apptmt
235 Typing Services
**184 Magina V. 500 KCC excond. cold, low mi$61**
**186 Toyota Cup pick-up, A4. 84,000 miles/1 owner, runs great $190-$190 offer **192 Nissan Sentaire CX4 FE**
**193 Toyota Camry for small growing family $800-$227**
**182 D22-027**
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
BIKES ON SALE FOR THE ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE AND BEGINNER COMPARE AND PREDICT PRODUCTIONS OF MODELS BEFORE YOU GONE AND YOUR LEFT WALKIN
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
- written Word Processing. Former editor
- written Word Processing to accurate pages of letter
type. #95 203
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
T
TREK
The law offices of DONALDG.STROLE
Are you Making the grade
WORD PROCESSING& LASER PRINTING for
Call Makin' the grade at 863-2855.
4
WORD PROCESSING&LASER PRI1-TING for all your tying needs
910 5499 5480
910 6479 6459
910 6799 6759
7000 6699 6699
9000 51200 51150
9000 51200 51150
850 HX50 5529 5499
8200 51199 5499
8200 51199 5499
PRJU0272 MILANO $399 $350
ROCKHOPPER COMP $680 $699
STUMPIPER S775 $815
$5 OFF BASIC TUNE-UP
RING ON THIS COUPON TO UNWIND
AND RECEIVE 10 OFF THE REGULAR
PRICE OF $34.99
1988 Mercury Cougar, wagon. AT, PS, good shape.
10.700 lbs. $1500/offer. 864-8033
Liquidating estate of former professor 100 albums in new condition $800 each, for the lot. Bill Fair $400.
65 gal. aquarium with oak stand for $650.00
asking. 65 gal. Call 842-4135.
Newspaper ad available.
Queen size w/ frame, & cover $235. 2 Nagel $90 or for £69 each. Dishes, mini furniture
Call 841-759-6000
Call 841-759-6000
Water queenbed, complete setup. New heater & mattress. 100 obs. 843-287.
Schwinn mountain bike 18 sp. 25t 'frame' 1 year, 1
$150 I O B Call 841-9274
FUTON SALE
Cheapy Sleepy frame
& foam-core futon starting at
$119
BLUE HERON
340 Auto Sales
- Futon Manufacturers •
937 Mass. St. • 841-9443
Over the Edge
81 Yamaha 600c 55K Midnite Black #750/BOB 832-235
84 Yamaha 600c 55K Midnite Black #750/BOB 832-235
Want to Sell Motorcycle '76 Kawa K2400 Great
ride 100 miles, fairway and highway
and customization
enables independent
0 Ford Pinto $500/Best offer 841-2746
360 Miscellaneous
Nashimith Hals services give students the competitive edge.
Naismith Halls'
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics face and facial
makeup. 10% off all select semi-
sale items. No obligation to purchase $185.
Available Monday-Friday.
- Front door bus service
Fitness room
24 hr. computer center
Wanted: Sports Package. Call 841-1102
A house
Dine anytime meals
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
- Weekly maid service
Holiday Apartments
4 Bedroom $800
Tropical Island
3 Bedroom $650
NAISMITH Hall
Recently constructed
- On bus route
- Energy efficient
- Nice quiet setting.
Advertise in the Kansan!
210 Mount Hope Court
843-0011
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
4 bedroom apartment for rent. Call 769-0445.
Available immediately 3 Bedroom | Trial house
Phone: 769-0445 | Fax: 769-0445
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate needed in exchange for third child care. Iphone: 1,758-4029
2 M, NS looking for 3rd rmt for 3rd apt. Rept
Bellows, near Near campus. Near Cathedral 1481.
Lv message.
- $25m for an off-cam
pus. $25m including utilities. 79% of
bus users include
Female non smoker to share 2 BR house off-camif
pac $250/mo, including utilities. 749-546.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female roommate to share new bedroom on bbt r. No smoking No pets Year lease $250
8th yr pre-med student looking for clean room
cabin. Call 641-8951, Pool, laundry. Go to clean
room. Call 641-8951
How to schedule an ad:
FRIENDLY, grad-level modern bi-level duplex,
clean on a wall, beautiful 4BR, bright 2SLR,
c/w/ d/w office smoking. Responsible (female)
seminar instructor. 24hr keep up.
This rents this $138 = *$18* and
will hold for 6 mos.
Looking for a roommate to share 4 bdrm. (furnished with
a bed, desk, TV, $192.00/month, and utility
phone. Call 822-356-7777.)
Responsible, non-smoking female student to share
their knowledge complex. #12 $30. of Ref: Resd 85-1977
Ref: Resd 85-1977
- Bv Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
White male seeking non-smoking male student
or foreigner for a low $12/month and /
\uufiles BD-9080
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1968 by Walt Disney. © OpenEdward by Joyce Nunnery.
That evening, with her blinds pulled,
Mary had three helpings of corn, two baked potatoes, extra bread and a little lamb.
14
Monday, August 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BACK TO SCHOOL
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAMPUS
MONDAY, AUGUST 23,1993
Pilgrims to the papal visit
Kansan photographer Doug Hesse followed KU student on their trip to see Pope John Paul II in Denver. He brought back sights from a journey for faith.
SECTION B
Page 3B.
Play takes look at AIDS crisis
A
Taking responsibility is cast's urgent message
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
Your best friend could be HIV positive. Your brother might be showing the first symptoms of AIDS. And the one time you had sex without a condom, you may have been infected with the virus which causes AIDS.
As part of Freshman Orientation, the play
The message — that the AIDS virus affects us all — is what cast members of "The Inner Circle," a play by Patricia Loughrey, are trying to convey to KU students.
was performed at Oliver Hall on Thursday and at Hashinger Hall on Saturday. Another performance will be at 8 pm, Saturday in the Inge Theater at Murphy Hall.
"There's a reason we did it at Freshman Orientation," said director Phoebe Zimmermann, Wichita senior. "We did it for this age group because they're the educators of their generation. They know it's OK to buy a condom if they're going to have sex."
"The Inner Circle" is about a young man named Mark, played by Sean Holland. Kismet senior, who tests HIV positive. After testing positive, Mark must face his own mortality and his friend's fear of the
And although the play addresses educational issues, the focus is on the reality that young people die of complications of AIDS.
disease as he experiences the onslaught of AIDS symptoms.
But she added that being responsible didn't mean living in constant fear.
Pfat Latham-Winter-Green, Virgin Islands senior, plays the part of Sarah, Mark's girlfriend. After the play she stressed the importance of young women in the politics and AIDS prevention.
"You don't have to live with morbid thoughts," she said. "Just take responsibility for yourself."
Students in the audience agreed with the cast that most people are educated about AIDS but do not take the disease seriously.
"Most people don't have any concept of how much AIDS affects society," said Janet Pryor, Lawrence senior. "I'm a part of the gay community, and I have lost friends."
According to a 1960 study by the Center for Disease Control, AIDS is the second leading cause of death in men and the sixth leading cause of death in women ages 25-44 nationally. The HIV virus can be dormant for a number of years, thus it is possible that most of those 25-35 acquired AIDS in their late teens or early twenties.
"We're encouraging them to be tested," said Steven Bryce-Holtzman, Lawrence junior.
The play is followed by a question-and-answer session where students are encouraged to ask about any concerns they might have.
Randy Weinstein, Skokie, Ill. freshman, said that even though he knew quite a bit about AIDS, the play was worth seeing.
"Ireinforced what I do know in a powerful kind of way," he said.
JACKIE
Renee Knoeber/ KANSAN
It's really you
D. J. Paulsen; Morton Grove, Ill., freshman, reacts to a caricature drawn by artist Fred Gonzalez of Kansas City, Mo., and laughs with others gathered at the Kansas Union Campus as commissioned by Student Union Activities as part of Unionfest '93 Wednesday.
INSIDE
CITY OF BENGALURIA
Snare me
Human Jaybowling was one of the Unionfest '93 activities during Hawk Week. A photo story focuses on last week's activities.
The state of Montana
Page 9B.
The Kansas City Chief's newest quarterback is healthy and serious about winning — when he's not masterminding practical jokes.
PETER BROOKS
Page 108.
Sorority rush ends with bids to 656 new pledges
By Shan Schwartz
Six hundred fifty-six freshmen women, all new pledges to KU sorority chapters, were drained of energy by heat and a week full of activity, but many still jumped with joy when they opened their bid cards Thursday morning on the Allen Field House lawn.
Kansan staff writer
Rush is the term for the week-long process that potential sorority members, or rushees, go through to join the chapter that's right for them. Sorority rush began Aug. 11 and ended Thursday with Bid Day, the assembly where rushees receive bids from the chapter they will be pledging. Rushees are placed in a house by a system of mutual selection between the chapter and the rushee.
The women screamed, hugged each other and cried upon receiving their notices from the sorority chapters. All of the participants remaining on Bid Day knew they would be accepted into one of three chapters they had selected.
Degner said 185 participants withdrew from rush during the week, 16 were dropped by all chapters, mainly because of low high school grades, and 20 were termed "no-reaches," meaning they were acceptable to chapters but couldn't be placed on bid day because of chapter quotas. No-reaches may wait for openings in the year or participate in rush again next year.
Of the 877 rushes she registered and began rush, about 75 percent finished Rush Week and pledged a chapter Thursday, said Randy Degner, adviser to Panhellenic Association.
Jennifer Stoner, Wichita senior and vice president for membership of the Panhellenic Association, said preparation for this year's rush began last November. Stoner said rush was orchestrated by 48 rush counselors, who helped rushes through the emotional week, and 12 rush staff members, who handled administrative duties.
Deger said that during the week, the rushes attended a series of house parties in which chapter members met the rushes and rushes were acquainted with the traditions and facilities of each chapter. Rushes then ranked the chapters they wanted to join, and chapters ranked who they wanted to pledge. This year, each chapter made bids to 47 new pledges.
Bid Day was an emotional end to a
"It was tedious and tiresome. But it was worth it."
Sara Necessary
Lenexa, freshman
long, nerve-wracking week for the rushes.
"The process wasn't what I expected," said Sara Necessary, Lenexa freshman, after the initial excitement died down. "It was tedious and tiresome. But it was worth it."
"Waiting has been the worst," said Joy Franklin, Overland Park freshman, as she celebrated with two of her nledge sisters in the Gamma Phi Beta chapter. "I was really nervous. But all of the people were great."
"I'm so excited I can't believe it," said Kristin Stomp, Olive the freshman. "I was scared that I wouldn't get my first choice."
Johnny's offers new bus service
keeping people off the streets will keep city safer, owners say
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Owners of Johnn's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., know that many students come to their bar to get drunk. They will do so on the phone home.
many students come to them out to get data.
That's why the owners decided to drive them home
"We've been here 15 years and feel now is the time to make a conscious effort to give everybody a safe way to and from Johnny's, as well as other establishments," said Louie Riederer, Johnny's co-owner. "It will keep the streets safer for all of us."
On Thursday, the tavern began a bus service that runs customers between Johnny's and five Greek houses and four downtown street corners. The 47-passenger bus runs Wednesday through Saturday five times a night from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.
A few Lawrence bar owners said Johnny's service was just a temporary way to help business while street construction was rerouting traffic away from the bar.
"The hole affects lunch business, but at night it doesn't as much," Renfro said. "The service will insure the status quo for business."
But Johnny's co-owner Rick Renfro said construction work on the hole in front of the bar was not the primary reason he had decided to start the service.
Other Lawrence bar owners are supportive of the idea, but many savit it is not affordable or practical.
"We want to make a difference in the number of DWIs this year," Renfro said. "This, we hope, will do it."
Renfro and Riederer said the $800 a week price tag for the service was worth it.
Lawrence police logged 790 driving under the influence arrests in 1992, according to the Lawrence police's crime analysis unit.
Taking responsibility
Johnny's bus shuttle, a unique service to the Lawrence bar scene, raises the question of who is responsible for getting drunken people home.
ring drunk drivers, bar owners, police and drunken driving awareness groups agreed that the primary responsibility for stopping drunken driving resists with the individual. But those groups realize that intoxicated people don't always take that responsibility.
Julie Huntstinger, Watkins Health Educator and faculty adviser for PARTY, or Promote Alcohol Awareness Through You, said free transportation services such as SafeRide, a free University-sponsored transportation service, have been popular.
But she questioned the effectiveness of a shuttle that doesn't take riders directly home.
"It concerns me, with a bar providing this kind of service, that they might let people off near other bars," she said. "Then how are they going to get home?"
Huntingstar said bars had to take responsibility and train their employees to look for people who were drunk.
"They should stop serving people who look intoxicated, but that is difficult," she said. "They shouldn't keep serving and serving."
Lance Rutledge, manager of Hockenberry's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St., said bartenders should be responsible for "cutting off" people when they were too intoxicated.
"We do it a couple times a night, but they probably just sit in their car and drive to another bar."
"We do it a couple times a night, but they probably just get in their car and drive to another bar." Rutledge said the bar often calls SafeRide to take patrons home.
Continuing service
The idea of a shuttle bus transporting customers to and from points in Lawrence was discussed five or six years ago, Johnny's Renfo said.
"We could never afford it back then, but we're in a position now to provide this type of safety and convenience." Renfro said.
Renfo said the number of patrons that ride the bus every night will determine how long the bus keeps rolling.
After a month, we will re-evaluate the service and
Renfo said the service, if successful, would expand to include users at government complexes.
Lawrence and KU police and drunken driving awareness groups said there was an increased concern in curbing drunken driving.
"Bars are increasingly very public in their support of SafeRide and designated drivers," said Lt. Mark Brothers, Lawrence police. "That is encouraging."
2B
Monday, August 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Heat raises concerns of related illnesses
Drinking water, staying in a cool area can prevent heat cramps, exhaustion
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
In sweltering 90-degree heat, Lea Thu Erazmus, lawrence senior, did all she could Thursday to keep cool as the Baby Jay muscoot.
"That's the only way I can survive." Errazurus said.
She wore only a camisole underneath her polyester fur outfit.
Erazmus said she cooled off by taking a break inside the air-conditioned Kansas Union during Unionfest and
drinking a Sprite
She was trying to avoid a heat-related illness, something physicians at Watkins Memorial Health Center treat every summer.
The intake of fluids, especially water, is one of the best ways to prevent heat-related illnesses, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
Last week, Watkins treated approximately 20 heat-related illnesses.
exhaustion and heat stroke were the three most common heat related illnesses. Heat cramps, the earliest sign of heat-related injury, occur when muscles involuntarily contract for a prolonged period because of the loss of bodily fluids and salts. Symptoms of heat cramps include profuse sweating and dizziness.
Yockey said that heat cramps, heat
Barbara Schuhker, director of nurses at the Lawrence Douglas County Health Department, 336 Missouri St., said heat cramps can be treated by moving sufferers to a cooler environment and giving them sips of water that are cool but not ice-cold.
Heat exhaustion is a condition that forms when blood in the capillaries closest to the skin's surface begin pooling and taking blood away from
Victims of heat exhaustion also should move to a cooler area, drink sips of cool water and restrict strenuous activity for seven to 10 days.
the major organs. People experiencing a heat stroke may have headaches and a fluttery feeling in the chest.
Heat stroke is the most serious heat-related illness and requires immediate medical attention. It has a 20 percent mortality rate. Schmitter said,
Victims of heat stroke do not perspire. Indicators of heat stroke include a loss of consciousness, dry, hot and reddened skin, deep breathing, muscle twitching, a fast pulse, dilated pupils and a temperature of 105 degrees or more.
Yockey said a high internal body
temperature of 106 degrees or more causes the liver, which is mostly protein, to coagulate. He said that most deaths were the result of liver failure.
Schnitzer said most heat stroke vtms were infants or the elderly.
Yockey said that an awareness of heat-related illnesses and taking measures to prevent them would safeguard most people from a high risk condition.
"You don't go from heat cramps to heat stroke in ten minutes," said Yockey. "By the time you get heat stroke, you have ignored a lot of symptoms for a long time."
Beat the heat
How to prevent heat related illness es
- Drink plenty of fluids, especially water, to keep the body hydrated at all times.
- Wear lightweight, light colored clothing.
- Stay away from alcohol, caffeine and drinks containing large amounts of caffeine which should be kept out.
- Reduce levels of physical activity during the hotstreet part of the day, which is usually from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and ensures hydration at 4 a.m.
- Allow the body to adjust to new environments and activities.
Use sunscreen and limit time in the sun to avoid a sunburn.
Check your urine color and amount.
Fee payment, zone limit sidewalk solicitation
Urine will be clear and in large quam,
if the body is healthy. An unhealthy
person's urine will be dark yellow, infrequent and in small amounts.
By Shan Schwartz
Source: Charles Yockey KANSAN
Bachelor's Degree
Kansan staff writer
KU students trying to pay their fees or attend their first classes of the semester must first walk through a corridor of people pushing coupon books, credit card applications and newspaper subscriptions.
These people line the sidewalks between Dyche and Lippincott halls, distributing their products to students, many of whom are not interested.
Ann Eversole, director of the Organizations and Activities Center and head of the University Events Committee, said she walks through the group of solicitors each August to check up on those who are marketing on campus.
The gantlet, as Eversole calls it, is not as bad this year compared to previous years because of mail-in fee payment and a no-solicitation zone. The zone, which prevents the groups from operating in the area, is marked by signs in front of the Kansas Union and Dyche Hall during Hawk Weel and the first week of classes.
Eversole said that approval from the Events committee is not needed to distribute literature on campus. However, any collection of names or
money, such as selling newspaper subscriptions, must be approved by the committee. To be approved, an event must be sponsored by a registered organization or University unit.
Lara Hayes, Lawrence graduate student, was hired by Manpower, a temporary employment agency, to hand out credit card applications on campus last week.
"People shun us," she said. "I think freshman take our stuff because they haven't been through this. But once they have, they usually don't take it again."
Andy Goldblatt, owner of Airmark Advertising in Overland Park, markets credit cards at the University of Kansas and colleges in the metropolitan Kansas City area. He said that mail-in fee payment at KU had reduced his return on applications, but he that would still come to KU each August to distribute flyers to students.
Some students are happy to take advantage of the free materials available.
"It's not too bad when you can just ignore them," said Fanolo. "But when they shove it at you, I don't like it."
Chanda Fanolio, Mission Hills sophomore, said that she thought the vendors were annoying.
MOVING
WITH
LIFE
Lawrence residents Jason Alonzo and Scott Giesler hand out coupons Thursday to passers-by on Javahawk Boulevard.
Renee Knoeber/ KANSAN
Start of new semester is good news for some businesses
By Carlos Tejada
University of California
Summer business may be bad business for some Lawrence merchants.
With the shortage of students, it is not feasible to keep your doors open during the summers.
When more than 25,000 University of Kansas students leave for the summer, business can be difficult, sad Betty Markley, small business and membership services coordinator with the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Drew Yarbrough, assistant manager of Bull Winkles Bake, 1344 Tennessee St., said he was
glad that the bar closed after graduation because most bars that were open during the summer lost money.
"During the summer, there are only a few places people go," he said.
Concerns about losing money also closed the Wheel Tavern, 507 W. 14th St. John Wooden, owner of the tavern, said he closed for lack of business despite requests that he keep his doors open.
"People ask me, 'Why do you close in the summer?' he said. "I tell them I remodel."
One business, Joe's Bakery, 616 W. 9th St. closes during the summer even though its owner said he could do well in the summer.
Ralph Smith, owner, said the bakery closed so that he could rest.
"Really, the best way for me to do business is to close the doors and walk away and come back in August," he said. "It's worked for me for 13 years."
Angie Hawkins, manager of the Glass Onion,
624 W. 12th St., said that after four years of business the Glass Onion had enough local clientele to stay open next summer. In past years, the restaurant has closed during school holidays and between semesters.
"We got a response from our customers that they would like to see us open all year round," she said.
But she said the first summer might be tough.
"We want to be around here all the time, but we have to look at the bottom line," she said. "It's very difficult to do business with the students gone."
But closing for the summer might not be a smart business move, Markley said. The closure might drive away customers who live in Lawrence all year.
"If you have other clientele, you may lose them and they might not come back," she said.
The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., closed for the summer in 1988, said Ken Wallace, the bar's owner. The bar's clientele was mostly
younger students because the drinking age then was 18. Now that the bar's customers tend to be older and have the means to live in Lawrence during the summer, it stays open all year.
Wallace she he stayed open because he did not want to lose any regular chentele and because he wanted to keep his local customers. He can tolerate the slump in business.
"Sometimes it seems like you're spinning your wheels, but I figure it's better to be open than closed," he said.
Wallace said that summer business con-
cerns disappeared when classes begin.
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Intel 486DX.33MHz
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240Mb,15ms Hard Drive
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1Mb SVGA Windows Accl. Card
Game Port
First 50 people to bring in this
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14" 28 SVGA Color Monitor
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101-Key Keyboard
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MS-DOS 6 (OS/2 Optional)
Windows 3.1 & Micros Works for Windows
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24-Pin dot matrix printer
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Panasonic KX-P4410 $569
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HP LaserJet Series IIIP emulation
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MICROTECH COMPUTERS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23, 1993
3B
PILGRIMAGE to see THE POPE
THOMPSON'S
BIRD CREEK
TRAVEL
GROUP
Photographer Doug Hesse followed University of Kansas students to Denver for Pope John Paul II's visit Aug.12-15. He captures the sights of a group of believers in their jouney for fellowship, worship and souvenirs.
UNITC
PHOTOS by DOUG HESSE
LIM
EL MON MUNDO DE LAS TOMALES
PAPA BENEDICTO XVI
ABOVE: Angie Holoekebr (right),
Lawrence, Mary Pechous, Kenosha,
Wis., and Michael Weishaar, Topeka
junior, perform the sign of the cross at
the opening mass for World Youth
Day.
TOP: Students from the St. Lawrence Catholic Center hold a prayer service in a Rocky Mountain stream. The students blessed one another with stream water.
BELOW: Pilgrims show how their faith is spread by lighting each other's candles during the vigil, the night before the palacal mass. About 100,000 pilgrims cherry Creek State Park in Denver for the vigil.
FAR LEFT: Vendors in Denver sold everything from papal postcards to pope hats and cashed in on the excitement stirred by the pope's visit. Both the pope and President Clinton made appearances in Denver.
BELLOW LEFT: A priest prepares to administer the Host to Catholics at the opening eucharist, a Christian commemorating Christ's last supper.
LEFT: Pope John Paul II speaks at the candlelight vigil. Emotions run high when the pope encouraged Catholics to be strong in their faith.
THE CANDLES WERE LIGHTED ON THE DAY OF THE DEATH.
4B
Mondav. August 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A new set of TV shows lights up the fall season
The Associated Press
Surprise! The new fall TV lineup isn't that bad.
This is startling news, particularly at a time when the networks are playing it safer than ever.
Of course, you may not agree. But see for yourself.
SUNDAY
ABC
"LOIS & CLARK THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN" (premières Sept. 12)
Billed as a romantic, action-adventure series with comedic overtones,
"Lois & Clark" stars Dean Cain as a funky but very boyish Man of Steel and Teri Hatcher as a '90s Lois Lane.
"SEAQUEST DSV" (premiers Sept.
12):
Hang onto your roving submersible vehicles, folks. This futuristic tale is about mankind's retreat from a despoiled earth into the sea. And its executive producer? Just a guy named Steven Spielberg.
"TOWNSEND TELEVISION" (pre-
mières Sept. 12).
This one-hour variety show starring actor-director Robert Townsend is virtually unwatchable.
In addition to acting in the sketches, Townsend sings with the singers. This show is only an hour? Funny, it seems a LOT longer.
"LIVING SINGLE" (premieres Aug. 22).
This is pure sitcom hell.
Fap star Queen Latifah makes henstar debut in a sitcom about four upwardly mobile black women "in search of love and success in New York City."
"DADBY DEAREST", (premiers)
Sent 51.
The premise is that newly divorced son (Richard Lewis), a psychotherapist, no less, allows his father to move in with him after his parents' marriage breaks up. It's a false conflict, with enervated dialogue and characters who are airless and mean.
MONDAY
"Dave's World."
CRS
"DAVE'S WORLD" (premiere Sept. 20)
The sitcom is based on the writing and life of newspaper humor columnist Dave Barry.
Dave is 40 and having trouble growing up...and he is not sure he wants to. That's about as funny as it gets on
"Dave's World" seems to be based more on the persona of its star, Harry Anderson.
That's about as funny as it gets on
Here, Anderson is simply the free-wheeling Judge Stone out of his robes and into family life.
TUESDAY
"PHENOM"(premieres Sept.14):
"Phenom" is about 14-year-old Angela (Angela Goethals), who doesn't know if she wants to be special or normal.
A promising tennis player, she has the chance for a scholarship to the Lou Della Rosa Tennis Academy, run by the self-proclaimed "greatest damn tennis coach that ever lived."
A man of sneering egomania, Della Rosa is played to a turn by William Devane. But he meets his match in Angela's mother (played by Judith Light), who doesn't want tennis to take over her daughter's life.
NYPD BLUE" (premiers Sept. 21): In a season marked by rampant tinnidity, "NYPD Blue" creator Steven Bochco has taken heat and second-guessing for little more than refusing to retreat from ground he broke years ago with his much-honored "Hill Street Blues" and "L.A. Law."
Well-written, and well-acted by David Caruso and Dennis Franz, it is a solid and gritty police show.
"SAVED BY THE BELL THE COLUMBINE"
1947, 5th ed.
A particular trio of guys — Brown Hair, Blond Hair and a Geek— have graduated from high school and entered college.
Reprising their roles from the original Saturday morning series. Mark-Paul Gosselair (as Zack), Mario Lopez (as A.C.) and Dustin Diamond (as Screech) are a lesson in the Platonic ideal of higher education: talking about girls, trading wiscracks with girls and getting nowhere close to a classroom.
"JOHN LARROQUETTE" (previews
Sent. 2, premiers Sent. 7)
A sitcom about a sleazy downtown bus station whose night manager is a former alcoholic goes up against "Roseanne" over ABC.
But despite its unconventionally dark premise and its daunting compe-
tition, "John Larroque" turns out to be a ride worth taking.
In his latest nocturnal sitcom, Larroquette does a fine job at fleshing out a lost soul who has come to a bus station seeking his way out, yet whose real obstacles aren't the people he confronts there, but the devils within him.
"BAKERSFIELD P.D." (premieres Sept. 14).
This new show follows detective Paul Gigante (Giancarlo Esposito), a half-African-American, half Italian cop who must adjust to life where he is repeatedly mistaken for a criminal because of his skin color.
What truly sets this show apart from any other comedy on the fall schedule is its handsome cinematic look and, even better, the lack of a laugh track.
sumed死 for 10 years" who resur-
faces and moves in with his former
wife (Shanna Reed), her new hus-
band (Perry King) and the daughter
he never knew (Alex McKenna).
WEDNESDAY
"THEA" (previews Sept. 8, 10 and
15, premiers Sept. 22):
ABC
Standup comedian Thea Vidale can play a proud, cheerful, scrappy, loving single mom.
Thea has two sons, played by genial young actors Adam Jeffries and Jasson Weaver.
"JOE'S LIFE" (premieres Sept. 22; preview not available)
Peter Onorati ("Civil Wars") stars with Mary Page Keller ("Camp Wilder") as an unemployed auto mechanic who chooses to stay-at-home while his wife works.
"GRACE UNDER FIRE" (premiere
Sept. 22);
Standup comedian Brett Butler stars as Grace, a recent divorcee who's struggling to raise three kids, and maybe have a nice date once in a while.
"THE NANNY" (October premiere to be announced):
"MOON OVER MIAMI" (previews
Sept. 15; premières Sept. 22);
This romantic comedy stars Bill Campbell ("The Rocketeer") as a witty, handsome private eye who is teamed with pert, rich runaway Ally Walker. Of course, He and She fight like cat and dog, but ... there's this SEX thing...
This one's a winner.
Fran Drescher stars as the nanny to the three spoiled children of a successful Broadway producer (Charles Shaughnessy).
"SOUTH OF SUNSET" (October premiere to be announced; preview not available):
Former Eagle Glenn Frey plays a private eye ex-mudio security chief who teams with sidekick Aries Spears for action and adventure.
"THE TROUBLE WITH LARRY"
(premieres Aug. 25; preview not available)
Bronson Pinchot, from "Perfect Strangers," stars in a comedy about "an adventurer, missing and preit's a clever premise, because the conflicts that derive from multigenerational families are familiar to just about everyone.
CBS
"NOW" (premiered Aug. 18):
A weekly newsmagazine with
Nightly News' anchor Tom Brokaw
and a staff of writers.
"MISSING PERSONS" (previews Aug. 30 and Sept. 9; premieres Sept. 23)
THURSDAY
ABC
Breathtakingly simple in concept, "Missing Persons" stars Daniel J. Travanti as the head of the Chicago Police Department's Missing Persons Bureau.
Perfect for the current non-violent demands, "Missing Persons" has plenty of human drama with minimal need for rough stuff.
Nothing highbrow or innovative here. Just solid storytelling.
CRS
"ANGEL FALLS" (premieres Aug.
6; preview not available):
This one-hour drama focuses on a single mother who returns to her hometown of Angel Falls after a long absence, searching for a more peaceful life for herself and her teenage son.
TASK 13 (principle except 10)
Why not leave well enough alone?
"Fraser" straps a character with proven appeal into the straitjacket of a needlessly contrived and stifling premise.
Leaving behind his bar buddies and broken marriage in Boston, psychiatrist Dr. Frasier Crane (Kelsey Grammer) returns to his native Seattle to host a radio show and pursue an urbane and self-absorbed bachelor's life.
FOX
THE SINBAD SHOW* (premiers
Sept. 16; preview not available)
This sitcom stars actor-comic Sunbad as a successful video game designer and swinging bachelor when he takes in two deserl kids.
FRIDAY
ARC
"BOY MEETS WORLD" (premiers
Sept. 24)
William Daniels ("St. Elsewhere") plays a fussy old teacher, and Ben Savage plays a normal, 11-year-old boy learning about life. There is nothing original or even memorable, however, in this formulac three-camera sitcom from Disney.
"IT HAD TO BE YOU" (premiers Sept. 24):
Faye Dunaway and Robert Urich strike sparks in this sweet, romantic comedy with strong family values.
They have nothing in common except good looks, kind hearts and a tremendous attraction for each other.
"FAMILY ALBUM" (premières Sept.
24);
Peter Scolari finally gets the star turn he deserves in this wry, domestic comedy, playing opposite the formidably talented Pamela Reed.
*AGAINST THE GRAIN* (previews Sept. 30; premieres Oct. 1);
John Terry plays Ed Clemons, a former high school football star who gives his insurance business to his wife, Maggie (Doona Bullock), so that he can coach his hometown prep team.
A slender premise, but it's saved by strong writing and superb performances from Terry, Bullock and Ben Afflec.
FOX
"THE ADVENTURES OF BRISCO COUNTY. JR." (previews Aug. 27; premieres Sept. 3).
This dark, wonderful Western is the most fun on horseback since "The Wild Wild West."
Bruce Campbell plays a 20th century man in the late 19th century West
This is a wonderful reason to stay home on a Friday night.
"THE X-FILES" (premiers Sept.
10):
it's a suspenseful thriller aimed at young adults looking for different kinds of TV entertainment.
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson star as a team of FBI agents working on a group of the bureau's toughest unsolved cases.
At every turn, "X-Files" surprises and delights.
SATURDAY
ARC
"GEORGE" (premiere to be announced)
One of the season's major miscalculations, "George" must have seemed like a sure-fire Nielsen KO, but he hits the canvas from the first moment.
Poor Foreman. He is cast in what the public calls "a tailor-made role" as George Foster, a retired ex-boxer. He's disply miscast.
"PAULA POUNDSTONE" (premiere to be announced; preview not available):
Well, it's no wonder a preview wasn't available. Billed as an irreverent and spontaneous variety hour, this show, hosted by the standup comic, will be broadcast live.
CBS
"HARTS OF THE WEST" (premieres Sept. 25);
Beau Bridges, one of those actors good you forget how wonderfully good he really is, plays a disgruntled Chicago husband and father who, after suffering a heart attack, buys a ranch out west to fulfill a lifelong dream.
NBC
THE MOMMIES (previews Sept. 18;
promises Sev. 25)
They call themselves "real women with real children and real bodies" (by which they mean, not exactly Christie Brinklevs')
Laughing and quipping their way through life's tribulations. Marilyn Kentz and Caryl Kristensen play nextdoor neighbors who seem scarcely evolved beyond Phyllis Diller's chaotic homemaker of a quarter-century ago.
{"CAFE AMERICAIN" (previews) Sept 18; premieres Sept. 25):
Valerie Bertinelli proves herself a pretty good comedian, and "Café" turns out to be a better than average sitcom.
Recently divorced and looking for a fresh start, wide-eye Holly Aldridge (Bertinelli) moves from her native Minneapolis to Paris, looking to "smoke cigarettes, drink absinthe and date artists."
The Taco Bell Supremes. We've given them all we've got.
If you like our original Taco, you'll love our Taco Supreme™. And our Nachos Supreme. And our Burrito Supreme®. That's because all our taco Bell Supremes come loaded with the works--stuff like real sour cream, diced tomatoes, onions and seasoned beef... The Taco Bell Supremes. Starting at 79¢, they're something special.
PEPSI
Dr Pepper
TACO BELL
- 1220W6th Lawrence
- 1408W23rd
LIFE'S ABEACH • BIG JOHNSON • TEVA
BILLABONG • BIG DOG • QUIKSILVER
NEW
STORE IN
LAWRENCE
SHARK'S
SURF SHOP
He who dies with the most toys, still dies
VANS
MOSSIMO®
MOSSIMO, INC.
Big Johnson
BAD BOY CLUB
STUSSY
BILLABONG
NO FEAR
Lawrence
701 D West 9th Street
841-8289
Bannister Mall
Upper Level
763-6208
Mission
6518 Martway
432-0707
MOSSIMO • OAKLEY • REDSAND • SIDEOUT
FRESH JIVE • STUSSY • NO FARF • VANS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23, 1993
5B
DAILY
molly mcgees
grill & bar
Monday
SPECIAL PRICED BURGERS
$1 OFF ANY OF OUR GREAT BURGERS!
Thursday
STEAK YOUR CLAIM!
10 OZ. TOP SHELL, HOUSE salad,
CHOICE OF ADOPTABLE OR FRIES
BINGO ROLL
B79 all day!
Friday
MR. BEER DAY
MR. BEER DRAWS $2.29
* DOMESTIC ONLY*
Saturday
$2.00 IMPORT BEER DAY
all day long!
Sunday
DRINK ON OUR RESOURCES DAY
NO OVERDRAW BEERS $145
2429 Iowa
Lawrence, KS
(913)841-9922
LOUISE'S WEST "World Famous" DRINK SPECIALS!
DIRECTORY
Sundays
Mondays
Tuesdays
Wednesdays
Thursdays
D
Bloody Mary Night
Schooner Night
Well Night
Schooner night
Bottle Night
Shot Specials
DAILY SHOT SPECIALS!
Fridays & Saturdays
7th & Michigan Lawrence
S
SPECIAL
Bottleneck
LIVE MUSIC
SIX
NIGHTS A WEEK
DRINK SPECIALS
mon - $1.75 imports
tue - 25¢ draws
wed - vodka wells $1.50
thur - $3 pitchers
fri - $1.50 gin wells
sat $1.50 rum wells
sun $1.50 all wells
Every Monday Open Mic
Support Live Music
737 New Hampshire • Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
THE NEW HARBOUR
"Home of the original 32 oz. JAM JAR"
- $1^{50} JAM JARS Tuesday & Thursday
Under New Ownership
Daily Drink Specials
- NO COVER CHARGE
Come Experience
1031 Massachusetts 841-9898
Scott's Brass Apple GRILL & BAR
THE NEW HARBOUR
WELCOME BACK ALL STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF!
COME IN TO SCOTT'S BRASS APPLE FOR OUR
COLD AT BEER
HOT PRICES
SUN - PITCHERS $4.50
SUN PYCHERS $4.50 HOT OR BBQ WINGS & 1.50 DOZ
HOT OR BBQ WINGS & 1.50 DOZ
MON - BIG BEERS $2.00
APBETIZER "SPECIAL" $4.25
SPAGHETTI DINNER" $4.95
SAT - DRAWS $.75
TUES - IMPORT BUCKET $11.00
"ALL YOU CAN EAT
SPAGHETTI DINNER"
3300 W. 15TH • ORCHARD CORNERS
841-0033
THE SANDBAR 17 E.8TH STREET
L
THE SANDBAR
17 E. 8TH STREET
LAWRENCE,KS
Monday $1.25
Domestic Bottles
Tuesday $1.00
Anything you want
Wednesday $2.00
34 oz. draws
Thursday $1.50
any shot you want
The largest Jimmy Buffett
selection in Lawrence!!!!
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
Specials
SUN. $2.50 Cheeseburger, fries & beverage
MON. $3.00 pitchers
TUES. $3.00 pitchers
WEDS. $.50 draws - NO COVER!
$1.25 PITCHERS at the up & under!
THURS $1.25 bottles
FRI. shot special
SAT. shot special
Daily food specials.
Up & Under available for private parties
(call for reservations)
842-0377
JOHNNY'S EXPRESS
Last year in Lawrence there were 800 D.W.I.'s! Don't worry about it by taking the FREE J.T. EXPRESS BUS. Wed. thru Sat. 9:00 pm to 2:00 am the bus will be making the rounds:
9:00 & 10:00 Phi Cap house
9:10 & 10:10 SAE lot
9:20 & 10:20 Kappa Sig lot
9:25&10:25 Delti lot
9:30 & 10:30 Sigma Chi house
9:35 & 10:35 SigEphouse
9:45 & 10:45 J.T.
11:00 10th&Mass
11:00 10th & Mass
12:00 Downtown
9th & Mass.
8th & New Hampshire
Busses leave J.T. @ 12:30, 1:30, 2:00
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
ClassicSpicy, Red Wine Sauce
Traditional White Crust
Taste the RUDY'S Difference
Honey-Whole Wheat Crust
Specials every day of the week
Original Thickness or Ultra Thin
St. Louis Style Pizza
New Quality Bratwurst
Polish Dogs
All Beef Dogs
Pizza by the Slice
"Home of the Pocket Za!"
Lawrence, Kansas
620W.12th
(RIGHT BEHIND THE CROSSING)
FREE Delivery
749-0055
6B
Monday, August 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DAILY
Amigos
Come Check Out Our Specials!
Tacos all day everyday
39¢
39¢
WE'RE OPEN LATE!
Soft Pinto Burrito for
79¢
Sun.-Mon. 10:30am -1am
Tues.-Wed. 10:30am -2am
Thurs. 10:30am -3am
Fri.-Sat. 10:30am -4am
D
Crisp Pinto Burrito for
DIRECTORY
S
SPECIAL
JACQUES
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Restaurant & Ultimate Sports Bar
DAILY SPECIALS
FOOD DRINK
FOOD BRICK
MON. $3.50 Chef Salad $1.15 Hot Wings (After 7) $3.75 Pitchers
TUES. Chicken Sandwich $3.50 2 for 1 Well Drinks
WED. 2 for 1 Burgers 11-2-7 $ .75 Draws No Cover
THUR. Soup & 1/2 Sandwich $3.95 $1.50 Longnecks
FRI. Bacon Cheese Burger $3.95 2 for 1 Well Drinks
SAT. Philly Sandwich $3.75 $1 Draws $1 Shots
SUN. 2 for 1 Naco Supremes $1.50 Margaritas $3.75 Pitchers
WELCOME BACK KU STUDENTS
Be sure to visit the ultimate sports bar! 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center 865-4040
The Jazzhaus
Daily Drink Specials
926½ Massachusetts
Open 7 days a week
4pm-2am
Sundays: $150 Vodka/Tonics
Monday: Miller Lite - $.50 draws and $250 pitchers
Boulevard-$.75 draws and $4^{25}$ pitchers
Tuesdays: $1^{50}$ EVERYTHING
except cognacs, pitchers and UK beers Wednesdays: $.50 Miller Lite draws
$2^{50} Miller Lite pitchers
Thursdays: $1^{50}Gin/Tonics & Bud bottles
Fridays: $1 Run Drinks & Coors Light bottles
Saturdays: $15⁰ BourbonDrinks & Bud lightbottles
Work Hard - Play Hard SLEEP LATER
The Jazzhaus 926 $ ^{1/2} $ Massachusetts
BENCHWARMERS
Daily Specials
Sunday $4.50 Chicken Baskets $1.75 Bloody Mary's Screwdrivers
Monday $.15 Wings
$4.00Pitchers
Tuesday$3.00Charpup Basket
Wednesday $3.00 Burger Baskets
$1.50 Big Beers
Domestic Longneck Special
Thursday $.25 Draft Beers
Friday and Saturday 2 for1 Well Drinks
Live Entertainment
August
19 Turquoise Sol
20 Milhous Nixons
21 Broken English
26 John Brown's
Underground
27 LoveSquad
28 LA Ramblers
11 Lonesome Hounddogs
Cafe18+
9 Cooties
10TBA
16 LostBet
September
2They Came In
Droves
3&4SoulFood
23 Turquoise Sol
24 Common Ground
30 Broken English
17 Baghdad Jones
25 Wake
BENCHWARMERS
18 Mango Jam
molly mcgees
molly mcgees
grill & bar
Specials
Specials
Sunday Wing Dings $ .15
SWEETS
841-9922
Monday 1/2 Price Milano Sticks
Tuesday 1/2 Price Cheese McGees
2429 Iowa Lawrence, KS
Wednesday 1/2 Price Potato Dug Outs
9p.m. to Midnight Sunday thru Wednesday
THE POP ROOM
Daily Drink Specials
Monday $3 Pitchers
Tuesday $1.50 16 oz Cans
C3 Pitbors
Wednesday S3 Pitchers
Thursday
$.50 Kamikaze
Friday $1.50 Well Drinks
and Margaritas
Saturday $2 Imperial
Sunday $1.75 Bloody Marys
$.50 Kamikaze
Saturday $2 Imports
52 Gustos (one liter)
&
$1.75 Domestic Longnecks
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
749-5038
925 Iowa
Pool Room
Expanded Game Area!
Pool
1 5 8-ball tables $ .50
5 9-ball tables $ .25
1 8-pocket Right Angle table $ .50
tables $4.50 per hr
4 9-foot tables **£4.50 perhr**
1 Snooker table **£4.50 perhr**
Arcade
Air Hockey
Shuffleboard
Pinball
Electronic Darts
Steel Darts
Video Games
PLUS:
Big Screen TV's
2 Juke Boxes
2 Full Service Bars
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23,1993
7B
DAILY
SPECIAL
S
D
•615 MASSACHUSETTS
842-6560
DIRECTORY
Quinton's BAR & DELI
OPEN
11AM
Drink Specials
- Full Service Restaurant & Bar-
- Serving The Best Grilled Sandwiches &
Bread Bowl Soup in Town-
- Music Selections from Alternative to Reggae with No Cover·
- Everyday Low Price 23oz Big Girl Beers
- Great Selection of Import Beers & Frozen Drinks
- Outstanding Deck for Dining & Drinks-
Carry Out Orders Available 842-6560
Jayhawk CAFE DAILY SPECIALS
Mon $1^{25}$ Well Drinks
Tues $1^{25}$ Long Neck Bottles
Wed 25c DRAWS
Thur Shootarama
Fri 25c Draws
Sat $2^{25}$ Monster Cocktails
Sun $2^{75}$ Pitcher Refills
7 Beers on Tap Great Air Conditioning
It could only Happen at...
4 Pooltables
3 Dartmachines
THE HAWK 1340OHIO843-9273 A Campus Tradition Since 1919
Let's ParTea!
Teller's
--and the hard to find...
Come see the area's largest CD selection...
from classical to grunge (and all stops in between).
Thursdays • All Teas $2.25 Long Island, Long Beach, & Texas Tea Corner of 8th & Mass
DOS
HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
MONDAY: $4.25 All You Can Eat Beef Tacos
$6.95 Margarita Pitchers
$3.25 Beer Pitchers
TUESDAY: $5.25 Burritos
$1.50 Strawberry Margaritas
$1.50 Amaretto Sours
THURSDAY: $2.00 Off Fajitas
$1.25 Longnecks
75¢ Margaritas
WEDNESDAY: $5.25 Chimichangas
25¢ Draws
$1.00 Margaritas
FRIDAY: $8.95 Margarita Pitchers
SATURDAY: 2 for 1 Well Drinks
$3.50 32oz. Draws of Sam Adams
SUNDAY: $2.00 Off Fajitas
$3.25 Beer Pitchers
$2.00 Mexican Imports
AMERICAN EXPRESS
815NEWHAMPSHIRE·841-7286 PARTYONTHEPATIO! PERSONALCHECKSACCEPTED
DISCOVER
The hits
Kief'sHasItAll!
- CD Tuesdays... 25% off CDs
MasterCard
- Wednesday...
CD Salvage Day
nwanted CDs for up to $5.00 exchange v
MasterCard VISA
VISA
(trade in unwanted CDs for up to $5.00 exchange value)
KIEF'S CDS/TAPES
24th & Iowa St, P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS.60644
CDS & TAPES - AUDIQVIDEO - CARSTEREO
913*842+1544 913*842+1811 913*842+1438
Henry T's Bar & Grill
Mon. Monday Night Footh $2.95 Beer & Brat Tues. 2 for 1 Hamburgers $2.0033 oz.Gustos
Wed. 15¢ Buffalo Wings $1.50 Longnecks
Thurs. 75¢ Draws
3520 W.6th(6th & Kasold)
749-2999
Sun. 50¢ Tacos $1.50 Margaritas
Fri. $1.50 Black & Tan
Sat. 8oz.Ribeye Steak $6.95 $2.00.33 oz.Gustos
$2.00 33 oz. Gustos
LOUISE'S BAR
DOWNTOWN
H
1009 Mass 843-9032
Mon. & $2.50 Pale Ale Schooners Wed.
& $1.50 Domestic
Tues.
Thurs. Schooners
Fri. $1.25 PBR Longnecks
Sat. 75¢ Kami Kazis
Sun. $1.50 Margaritas
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
MON: Bar & Restaurant Employee Night $1.00 Boulevard Draws $1.50 Call & Premiums
TUES: 25¢ Domestic Draws 50¢ Boulevard Draws
WED: $4.00 Boulevard Pitchers
THURS: $2.0032 oz.Draws $2.50Boulevard
FRI: $1.75 Vodka Drinks
SAT: $1.75 Rum Drinks
SUN: Open Mic Night.
1016 Massachusetts 865-4055
8B
Monday, August 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE KANSAS UNION
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
Sign-Up for Fall Leagues
Monday Mixer 7 p.m.
Tuesday Tri-Mixer 7 p.m.
Wednesday Mixer 7 p.m.
Thursday Guys'n'Dolls 7 p.m.
Leagues begin September 7
Sign-Up at the Kansas Union Jaybowl
Level One - 964-3545
KU Men's and Women's Bowling Team
sign up for tryouts now Team meeting Aug. 31
Represent KU in intercollegiate competition. For more information contact Coach Michael Fine or Tim DeMars The Kansas Union Jayhawl Level One • 864-3545
Trophy Maultry
KILL SPORTS
PARK
KANSAS
KANSAS
KANSAS
JAYHAWK SPIRIT
- Sweatshirts
- T-shirts
- Hats
- Greek apparel
Hours: M-S 9:30-5:30, Thurs 'till 8:30
Sun., noon - 5:00
1000 Massachusetts 842-1000
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
$2.00 OFF
Any.Printed KU Sweatshirt
OR
$1.00 OFF
Any Printed KU T-Shirt
expires Sept 31, 1993.
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
VISA
AMERICAN EXPRESS
$2.00 OFF
Any Printed KU Sweatshirt
OR
$1.00 OFF
Any Printed KU T-Shirt
expires Sept 31, 1993
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
Joe cool Jayhawk
just used Jaytalk to
meet a Jammin' lady Jay.
Call for more information.
New classifications available now.
864-4358
STARTS SEPTEMBER 13TH
Heavy-metal dancers can get whiplash from head banging
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Rock music now has its own malady — "head banger's whirlwind."
And Dr. Marilyn Kassiter warns that, after the music ends, the malady lingers on.
The neurologist at Boston University School of Medicine concedes that she is no expert on youth culture. But she does know injuries. And she wrote up these in a case report in The Clinical Journal of Pain.
head勇挠 a whipstand develops when muscles that control movement of the head and neck are flexed and extended about as much as they can be, so the head and neck are rhythmically and repetitively rotated. Kaisser said
She found it among 37 Newton, Mass., eighth graders who took part in a five-to-seven hour dance marathon for charity. During three heavy metal songs, dancers got their beads moving with such force that many of them developed neck pain that lasted one to three days, the article said.
The doctor followed up by surveying the young dancers on the extent of their pain
Nine of the 11 girls and one of the six boys who danced to the heavy metal music reported pain, the article said. The association was not statistically significant for boys. But for girls, the link between dancing and pain was so strong that researchers would not consider it the result of chance.
the girls had long hair and whipped it in a circle as they danced, adding centrifugal force to the strain of the movement. Kassiter said.
The injuries had healed by the time Kassirer found out about them. The youngsters used common remedies such as aspirin and ibuprofen, the doctor said.
The injuries were self-limiting partly because they were self-induced, Kassirer said. In whiplish that results from impact, such as a car accident, the forces involved and the extent of the injuries are greater, she said.
Also, people under 16 have remarkably elastic ligaments, which also probably helped recovery, Kassirer's article said.
Head banger's whiplash appears to be a simple case of too much strain on muscles and ligaments, said Dr. Charles Anderson, associate coordinator of Primary Care Sports Medicine at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.
Anderson also conceded that he is not up on all the latest dances. But he believes those dancers were stretching a bit more.
As long as they are not banging into each other or into objects, the young head bangers should do fine. Anderson said.
In any case, listeners will not stand still. Movement gets you into the music, said Daniel Fidler, an assistant editor of Spirz a youth culture magazine in New York.
“It’s kind of trippy, in a way,” Fidler said. “You get clated. You are throwing your body into the music. It’s like a joining thing.”
At a crowded dance or concert, throwing your head around is about all the movement there is room for. Filler said.
Adult leukemia linked to smoking
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Smokers have a 50 percent greater risk of contracting a deadly form of adult leukemia, according to government research that presents the strongest link yet between cigarettes and leukemia.
Tobacco smoke causes 22 percent of all cases of myeloid leukemia, making it the leading known cause of the disease, the study by a national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scientist found.
"A lot of people are worried about exposure to radiation and electromagnetic fields, which are linked to leukemia," the scientist, Dr. Michael Siegel, said Thursday. "But it's clear that smoking is much more deadly."
it's yet another cancer related to a known carcinogen, which is tobacco smoke," said Dr. Clark Heath of the American Cancer Society.
Leukemia is a cancer of the blood cells. The cancer society expects 26,700 new cases in U.S. adults this
year. About 12,000 of those will be myeloid leukemia, which is often fatal
Doctors do not know everything that causes myeloid leukemia, although the chemical benzene, radiation and certain viruses are known to cause some cases.
Since 1986, doctors have been looking for evidence that smoking also causes adult leukemia.
Now Siegel has gone a step further.
For just myeloid leukemia, he found that smokers have a 50 percent greater risk than non-smokers.
In February, the strongest evidence to date was reported in the Archives of Internal Medicine. Researchers found that smokers had a 30 percent higher risk for contracting adult leukemias and that tobacco smoke caused about 14 percent of all cases — or 3,600 a year.
Also, his analysis of 15 smoking- and cancer studies found that smoking caused more of that cancer than did all other known risks combined
"Because myeloid leukemia is often
fatal, if we could eliminate smoking,
we could eliminate 20 percent of adult
leukemia deaths," Siegel said.
There is biological evidence to back up his findings.
Tobacco smoke contains high levels of benzene, radioactive lead and radioactive potium, all of which are carcinogens.
■ Smokers have high levels of radioactive lead in their bones, which is where the blood cells that leukemia attacks are produced.
- Smoking suppresses the immune system, preventing it from fighting cancer cells.
Siegel urged more study to determine the effects of smoking on other forms of adult leukemia.
He did find some good news. The longer a former smoker had gone without a cigarette, the lower the person's risk of developing myeloid leukemia.
"So it's not too late to quit," Siegel said.
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Monday, August 23,1993
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New students got their first look at campus life at the University during Hawk Week activities.
Getting acquainted
Photos by Kansan photographers Kip Chin, Richard Devinki, Melissa Lacey and Renee Knoeber
HEARTS IN MIND
WITH YOU THANK YOU
ABOVE: Members of Alpha Delta Psi sorority participate in Traditions Night on Thursday by singing KU's fight song, "I'm a Jawkah."
FAR LEFT: Doing a flip, Steve Makinen, Flossmoor, III., freshman, sticks to the Velcro jump named Spider Web at the unionfest '93 on Wednesday. The Kansas Union and Student Union Activities hosted the event to kickoff the school year and show off the renovatedunion.
BELLOW LEFT: Cindy Yelkin, Topeka senior, rolls toward the pins in the Human Jaybowl hosted by Jaybow during UNifest.
**BELLOW:** ZetaPhi Beta sorority members perform a step routine for a crowd of more than 500 people at the BeachN.Boulevard event in front of Wescose Hall Wednesday night. **LEFT:** As part of hawk Week activities at Hashinger Hall, Amber Holmes, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman, designs a t-shirt with hand prints. Hashinger government organized the Musical Balloon tie dye event Thursday to help residents get to know each another.
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Monday, August 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Move sparks more than Montana's career
From family man to team prankster, football star becomes legend in KC
The Associated Press
Before someone jumped the gate at his new house just to say "hello," and before someone else grabbed one of his empty beer cans off the table at a bar and stashed it in her purse, and even before 73,550 someone else's turned up at Arrowhead Stadium screaming "JOE! JOE! JOE!" until they were hoarse, this is how Joe Montana was welcomed to the Kansas City Chiefs:
Someone stole his underwear.
"I'm not saying I know who did it," new teammate Bennie Thompson says. "But if I was a guy with a dirtry-tricks reputation like Joe's, I know it wouldn't surprise me at all. Not ... at ... all.
"I mean, training camp just started, but you could see where some guy figured he'd better get Joe before Joe gets him. And so just to protect himself, this guy goes ahead and takes his underwear out of his locker . . .
"But how come, out of all the guys in this room, Joe comes after me?" Thompson says.
"Imean, I'mnewtothisteam, too. So how come he takes my underwear? Mine! Why don't you go ask the famous quarterback that?"
When the question is put to him, Montana is sitting in his holder, head down, elbows propped on his knees. When he straightens up, he shakes his head from side to side, and with a poker face that has duped well-paid defensive coordinators, ornishing defensive lineman and peeking defensive backs alike for more than a decade, he replies.
"I don't know what he's talking about."
And that's it. But beneath the bill of a baseball cap pulled low over a dirty blond hair, Joe's ice-blue eyes are positively dancing with mischief.
When the trade brought him to Kansas City from San Francisco last April, plenty of the bright lights he left behind assumed the worst: that he was through. Or else, they thought Montana moving to Kansas City was the punch line to a bad joke.
But as he scans the locker room — presumably in search of his next victim — both Joe and his revitalized right arm feel great. And when he finally settles on Marcus Allen, the one-time Los Angeles Raider and another Hall of Famer relocating from the West Coast, it probably occurs to the famous quarterback that he still might get the last laugh, after all.
Joe brings expectations
One thing Joe knows: Life would be easier if a reputation as a prankster was the only one he brought to the midwest from the 49er dynasty he left behind.
But if Joe was only funny, no way would the Chiefs' front office gamble a first-round pick and a multiyear, multimillion-dollar contract on a 37 year old. Especially a 37-year-old passer with a surgically repaired right elbow who hasn't thrown a meaningful pass in more than two years. And no way does one of the largest, most electrified crowds in club history materialize for a preseason game on a sizzling August night with even hotter expectations.
Joe knows this, too. They expect the greatest quarterback of all time in his prime to show up for every game. They want the cotton mouthed, heart-stopping, 90-yard drives in the last seconds of the biggest games. They want memories like Montana-to-Taylor against Cincinnati in Super Bowl XIII, or Montana-to-Clark against the Cowboys in the NPC championship seven years before that, or Montana-to-Rice against anybody, any time.
Only they want him to produce those memories with a receiving corps several rungs below the group he had in San Francisco, with a line built for drive-blocking instead of trap-blocking, like in San Francisco. And with an entire offensive unit trying to learn a new system — San Francisco's — that only Joe knows.
He also knows there are more Super Bowls behind him — four — than could possibly be ahead, and fewer rabbits to be pulled out of his helmet. And he knows that just because the percentages haven't caught up with him doesn't mean that age won't.
"After a while, you lose something on your arm," Montana said. "But you don't need a lot of speed in my job."
"It isn't all of those where you're running all the time, like a running back or wide receiver. But you lose something. All skills, to a certain degree, are that way, no matter what position you're in.
"Mentally, I'm probably better," he said. "Physically, I don't know because I've been out for two years. I've been throwing the ball well during camp and I feel pretty confident. But I'll just have to wait and let it take care of itself."
KC
Yet none of that — neither his own uncertainty nor others' expectations — is keeping him awake at night.
"No," Montana said, "because if I hadn't thought about putting myself in that position, I never would have left.
"I could have had it easy in San Francisco."
KC offers better family life
He is right, of course. Back by the bay in California, Montana was practically a civic treasure, the first fixture out-of-towners think of when they think of San Francisco. But through a kind of addition by subtraction, the move to Kansas City has enriched him.
He now has the two things he wants most — a contending team to direct and a system that maximizes the skills he has left — without the thing he liked least: a quarterbacking controversy that developed more twists and turns than a long-running soap opera.
I am a man of many races.
Besides, Joe's wife, Jennifer Montana, explained, the easy way is not always the best one.
"He's happier," she said after the move. "He's happy about playing again. It has taken a lot of weight off his shoulders not to be stuck in the place he was in San Francisco.
"He might not say much about that, and with him it's always difficult to tell what's going on. Joe's always kept his composure so well that you can't tell he's getting ready for a preseason game or the Super Bowl. But
Joe Montana
there's definitely a little more bounce in his step. He's happier all around. I think we all are, in a way.
"I feel kind of fortunate to come to the Midwest. The neighborhood is much different from San Francisco. We were more secluded there. Here, it's open and friendly. The kids can ride their bikes around the block.
Joe's first changes were his uniform and his number. The Chiefs retired No. 16 in honor of Len Dawson and so no big deal, Joe said he'd like No. 19 because that was his number back in midget league.
"We were lucky, not having to move around like plenty of players' families, until now. But change can be good. And this is a way for the kids — for all of us — to learn that things change."
Montana reacts to change
Montana's next adjustment was remembering where the light switches were while padding around in the dark at the new house. Adjusting to
new teammates was easier than that.
"I'm pretty easy to get along with and I can figure out how to fit into most situations. I'm not a controversial-type of guy," he said. "Some guys, when they come in, you know it's going to be tough to fit in."
"If you try to find a place on the team, you know, make a place on the team, guys see with them that and they know. You're with them every day, you can't hide, so you just go about your business the way you normally do — and let them dictate where things go."
It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out where that would lead. Eventually.
"At first, yeah, I think there were some skepics," said Chiefs offensive coordinator Paul Hackett, who spent three years as an assistant under Bill Walsh at San Francisco, where he helped refine the scheme now in place in Kansas City.
"There were questions in people's minds; it was only natural," Hackett said. "The guy hadn't played in two years and he wasn't getting younger. On top of that, we kept him under wraps early when he came in.
"But one had to see much before the sense developed that he could still throw. And once they had that, everything else fell into place. No one had to be reminded what the guy had accomplished.
"But you know what surprised me? He's throwing harder than before. He was never a fastball threer or anything like that. But in rehabilitating the arm and the shoulder, he made his whole upper body stronger.
"Now just think about that. You've got Joe Montana, with a new enthusiasm and a joy about playing. And, he's actually throwing the ball harder."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 23, 1993
118
Free agency changes teams' faces
NFL's new rules, rosters may bring playoff surprises
By Dave Goldberg
Associated Press writer
Associated Press writer
A lot of familiar names are in unfamiliar places in
the National Football league.
National Football League
Reggie White is in Green Bay. Joe Montana is in Kansas City. Anthony Munoz is in Tampa Bay.
Welcome to free agency in football.
Still others were lured out of retirement.
The NFL's 74th season begins Sept. 5, and for the first time, many of its players were free to change teams. A total of 126 players took advantage of the opportunity.
o inmers were firmed but will look
As a result, a lot of teams will look markedly different.
- three titles in Washington. Mike Ditka, fired in
Chicago after a 5-11 season. And one is back: Bill
Also, some big-name coaches are gone. Joe Gibbs,
who stepped down after four Super Bowls and
three titles in Washington. Mike Dika, fired in
Gibbs to step up 4.500gr. And one账本, Bill
" Chicago after a 5-11 season. And one is back! BM Parceles, who won two Super Bowls with the New York Giants. Parceles is in New England after two years in broadcasting.
How much will all the changes affect the product?
For one thing, free agency seems to be lengthening careers
Munoz and Taylor, two future Hall of Famers, decided to return to the game even though both sustained severe injuries last season. Taylor is back with the Giants, while Munoz joined his old Cincinnati coach, Sam Wyche, in Tampa Bay.
Ronnie Lott, another free agent, signed with the New York Jets, delaying his entry into the ball. And
trades influenced by free agency sent Mohtamil adda Marcus Allen to the Chiefs and Eric Dickerson to the
But whether the balance of power has changed is unclear.
It's possible that some clubs have improved themselves more than others for the time being.
San Antonio office. Laguna
This year, free agency has both hurt and helped teams. Next year's planned salary cap will have a leveling influence.
The Dallas Cowboys, who won the Super Bowl last season with the league's youngest team, signed no free agents, lost just two and remain strong
favors to repeat.
On the other hand, one of their biggest challengers will be the Packers, who haven't had back-to-back games. Virus Johnson's teams
ANALYSIS
winning seasons since Vince Lombardi's teams won the first two Super Bowls more than a quarter-
NFL
But both teams may find themselves in trouble next year, when the salary cap will probably take effect.
century ago.
lammates' pay — or even to cut their teammates. It's already having an impact this year — Emmitt Smith, who led the league in rushing the past two years, was a holdout because the Cowboys are offering $1.4 million less than the $4 million he wants.
"You've got to look ahead," said Jerry Jones, who bought the Cowboys in 1989 and rebuilt them in five years under coach Jimmy Johnson.
"If I pay Emmitt what he wants and renegotiate with Troy Aikman, I've already used up a third of my salaries. As it is, we may have to fit $50 million worth of players into a $30 million cap."
Smith or no Smith, the Cowboys enter the season as prohibitive favorites to win the NFC East, although the Cowboys have been hit hard by pre-season injuries.
Both the Giants and Redskins, two previous Super Bowl winners, are rebuilding.
White makes the Packers a favorite in the NFC Central, where they figure to compete with Minnesota and perhaps Detroit. That's another division where free agency has had a big impact — the defending champion Vikings lost three offensive linemen, and the Lions, who slipped from 12-4 to 5-11 last year, have added three offensive linemen plus linebacker Pat Swilling.
San Francisco, which wins Super Bowls when NFC East teams do not, is probably the only National Conference team that can seriously challenge the Cowboys.
The favorite may be Miami, which has added four former Eagles to Dan Marino and a young defense that should keep getting better. Miami probably will deprive Buffalo, losers of the last three Super Bowls, of a dubious "fourpeat." No team has ever
No American Conference team has won a Super Bowl in a decade, and whoever wins the conference this year will be the underdog in the Super Bowl. But AFC teams keep trying.
But Houston and Pittsburgh in the AFC Central and San Diego and Kansas City in the West also figure to have a shot.
made it four straight years.
The Oilers, who blew a 35-1 lead in a playoff game in Buffalo last year, hired Buddy Ryan as defensive coordinator and added Pro Bowl linebacker Wilber Marshall, one of Ryan's favorite players, in a trade with Washington.
Montana, traded by the 49ers after losing his job to Young, is a curiosity.
"It's his presence as much as his ability," said wide receiver Willie Davis, who hopes Montana turns him into the next Jerry Rice. "It's like playing with a legend."
Even at 37 and coming off a two year elbow injury, Montana has raised impossible thoughts in Kansas City — nearly 80,000 people turned out for the team's first home exhibition anticipating nothing less than the four titles he brought to San Francisco.
The players in New England also think they're looking at a legend in Parcels.
Perhaps the third most successful coach of the eighties behind Gibbs and Bill Walsh, Parcels takes over a 2-14 team that has little prospect of immediate improvement. He arrives with Drew Bledsee, the Washington State quarterback, who was the top pick in April's draft, and with the bark that made him so successful in New York.
The other new coaches: Dan Reeves with the Giants, succeeding Ray Handley, who was 14-18 as Parcelc's successor in New York; Richie Petitbon, the longtime assistant head coach to Gibbs in Washington; Wade Phillips, up from defensive coordinator in Denver for Reeves, who was fired because he couldn't get along with quarterback John Elway; and Dave Wannettd succeeded Ditka in Chicago. Wannettd had been the defensive coordinator for Johnson in Dallas.
They will be operating with only two major rule changes; reducing the time between plays to 40 seconds, instead of 45 seconds, and allowing some intentional grounding by a quarterback if he is both out of the pocket and propels the ball beyond the line of scrimmage. The latter change is intended to cut down on quarterback injuries that have plagued the game.
The impact of free agency? Can be argued either way.
Miami, which added such premier free agents as wide receiver Mark Ingram and running back Keith Byars, should win the AFC title. But Dallas, which added nobody, should win the NFC.
Even with free agency, it's likely the NFC will win the Super Bowl.
Because it always does.
Future Hall of Famers continue to succeed
Football greats still key to team success
The Associated Press
Next stop: Canton.
Joe Montana's itinerary has taken him from San Francisco to Kansas City. Next stop: Canton.
Lawrence Taylor's resume includes just one stop, in the New Jersey Meadowlands.
Next stop,
Anthony Munoz spent 13 years in
Cincinnati establishing himself as
one of the greatest tackles in NFL history.
He has made a side trip to Tampa
this year. Next stop: Canton.
No one is saying this is the final season for pro football's quarterback, defender and blocker of the 1980s. Nor is anybody claiming that Ronnie Lott, now a New York Jets safety after starring for the 49ers and Raiders, is ready for retirement. Or that Eric Dickerson, playing for the Falcons this season after building his reputation as a game-breaking runner and back-breaking complainer with the Rams, Colts and Raiders, has nothing left
What all of them will have left when their now-ebbing NFL careers conclude is a date at Canton, Ohio, for entry into the Hall of Fame.
"We know we're closer to the end than the beginning," notes Taylor,
who said last season he was retiring, then tore his Achilles' tendon a week later and missed the second half of the schedule. "But that doesn't mean we can't play, or we wouldn't be back out here."
Taylor, who decided to come back when Ray Handley was fired by the Giants and Dan Reeves took over as coach, is the only member of the surefire future Hall of Famers who stayed with the same team. He isn't the only All-'80s player who came out of a planned retirement, though.
Munoz saw all the dollar signs being waved in front of free-agent offensive lineman with one-tenth his credentials. He figured he could earn a cool $1 million or so for another year — but certainly not from the stingy Bengals.
“Initially, it was just a matter of choice to go play where you want to play,” Munoz says. “For 13 years, it was basically. ‘You've got to play here or you don't play the game.’ All of this kind of started before all the salaries were printed. But then the salaries came out, and maybe that's when talked got a little more serious.”
Wyche was serious about adding "the best tackle I've ever coached or seen."
With the freedom to name his new employer and, basically, the price, Munoz contacted Sam Wyche, his former coach in Cincinnati. Soon, he no longer was retired and was in Tampa.
"He's got the juices flowing. I've been around him for eight years and I can read him. "Wyche adds. "He is tremendously disciplined, so when he tells you he is determined to play, you can count on him doing everything necessary. There are no downsides to signing Anthony Munoz."
Or to signing Lott. The Jets desperately need veteran leadership. In the NFL, you spell that L-O-T-T, says Jays general manager Dick Steinberg.
"One of the big motivating factors for who we signed was that we were looking for guys with leadership ability." Steinberg says. "They bring credibility. These are guys who played in Super Bowls and won them, and in Pro Bowls. They've been around a long time, and they know how to prepare themselves to compete for a championship.
Dickerson has been through all the pluses and minuses in his decade as a pro. Recently, as he moved into second place on the all-time rushing yardage list, the negatives — fines, suspensions, injuries, criticism from coaches and teammates — have outweighed the positives.
Still, there was a demand for him in Atlanta, where the Falcons hope Dickerson can recapture the speed, cuts and moves that made him the most feared runner in football.
"They know how to react to good things and bad things, because they have been through both."
"This whole change to Atlanta and an offense I like, it is had me feeling like a young colt again," he says. "I don't feel 32, and when people see me on the field, they won't believe I am. I know what the calendar says, but I think under the right conditions, I could still gain 1,000 yards or more."
The Chiefs aren't looking for 1,000 yards from another likely Hall of Famer, Marcus Allen. But adding the former Raider as a free agent after they traded for Montana gave the Chiefs an enticing new look. And, perhaps, the spark the offense desperately needs.
"You don't get many opportunities to acquire people like Marcus Allen," says Chiefs president Carl Peterson. "The intangibles he provides off the field are as important as the skills he brings on the field. You need people who have been there, who understand how it's done."
No one has been there more often and knows better how to get it done than Montana.
"Wherever we've been in the past, there have always been a lot of expectations," Montana says. "It's not a big deal with us. At the 49ers, they expected us to go to the Super Bowl every year. With the talent on this team, they've got a chance to do that, too."
which would be just another impressive stop for Montana en route to Canton.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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SPORTS: Cornerback Tony Blevins has a big challenge in his first college football game. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
VOL.102.NO.3
TUESDAY, AUGUST 24,1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Hallmark executive to head Regents Center
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansas staff writer
When Robert Stark retired after 35 years with HallMarn Cards Inc., he went fishing.
"When I retired I thought I would be doing a lot more of that, but it looks like I got a little detoured," said the 60-year-old fishing and hunting enthusiast.
Instead of fishing, the former executive vice president of the Kansas City, Mo., company will take a two-year appointment as the first dean of the University of Kansas Regents Center in Overland Park. His appointment was announced yesterday.
The Regents Center is an extension of the University and offers 10 master's degree programs and is used primarily by working professionals in the Kansas City area, said Linda Booth, public relations specialist for
NEWS:864-4810
the center.
Stark, who graduated from KU in 1955 with a bachelor's degree in finance, will begin Sept. 1.
Stark replaces acting director Robert Senecal, who is also associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and dean of the Division of Continuing Education
Robert Stark
PETER C. BROWN
Stark said he would work to improve the relations between the center and the Kansas City business area. The new dean position was created to show the University's commitment to the Kansas City area, said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor
for academic affairs.
"It's a sign of how important we feel it (the Regents center) is to the University," he said.
"We'd like Mr. Stark in this position to find out what offerings in Kansas City would help Kansas City and the campus," he said.
Shulenburger said that Stark's business background in Kansas City made him ideal for the job.
He is a member of the board of directors for the Salvation Army and heads the organization's Capital Campaign, which almost has reached its goal of raising $11.5 million.
Stark serves on the board of directors of the Mercantile Bank Corporation, Century Products Co. and Packer Plastics Inc. He also is vice chair of the board of Health Midwest and a member of the board of Trinity Lutheran Hospital and the KU School of Business advisory board.
Stark first was contacted about the dean's position in late June.
"It was an intriguing challenge and an opportunity, and being a Jayhawk, it was hard to turn down," he said.
Stark said his main goal was to secure a future for the center.
"We want to make sure that we are addressing the resources of the University for the most important needs for higher education in the greater Kansas City area," he said.
Booth said she was looking forward to having Stark join the center.
"It's an exciting time," she said. "We're bringing in someone who is a visionary and will chart the future."
Haskell sets out on new course
New accreditation allows college to grant 4-year bachelor's degrees
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Since its founding in 1884, Haskell Indian Junior College has been everything from an elementary school to a junior college for Americans Indians.
Earlier this month, the school took another step forward. Haskell received accreditation from the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools to offer baccalaureate degrees in its elementary teachers education program
and degrees in its educational education program.
The new accreditation allows Haskell to grant bachelor's degrees in the program. Before, it could only offer junior college credit hours and associate degrees.
The college's first baccalaurate accreditation is only one indication that the school will grow in the future, said Dan Wildcat, head of the department of natural and social sciences at Haskell.
"Accreditation is the first step toward Haskell becoming a full liberal-arts-granting institution," he said. "There is a demand in Indian country for a national university or college that will serve the people."
"We're trying to assess what our needs are, and where we are best situated to proceed with four-year degrees," he said.
Wildcat said Haskell would not stop there. By the year 2000, the school plans to offer baccalaureate degrees in some liberal arts programs, resource management and nursing.
Haskell will not apply for additional accreditation until its administration is sure the programs meet accreditation standards. Wildcat said.
"We're in no great hurry to get baccalureaates in place until we're sure we have a good program," he said.
Wildcat said the attempt at accreditation was part of a recent trend by American Indians to guide their own system of education. The trend emphasizes American Indian culture more and assimilation into Western culture less.
"Since 1970, we've had a revolution in Indian education where native educators themselves have claimed ownership of our resources."
A proposed name change to Haskell Indian Nations University is another sign of the school's transition, said Hannes Combest, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin.
The name change has yet to be approved by the Office of Indian Educational Programs in Washington, D.C.
The name reflects the diversity of American-Indian nations at Haskell, Combest said. Haskell has students from 140 nations, such as Cherokee and Apache.
Liane Davis, associate dean for academic programs at KU's School of Social Welfare, said Haskell's accreditation would bring it closer to KU. The school works with Haskell students who are interested in careers in social welfare and wish to transfer to KU. Accreditation would eliminate that need.
"We've been met with a lot of acceptance in Indian country throughout the nation," she said.
"It appears to me this can only strengthen Haskell itself, which would be a bonus to us," she said.
Lipton
THE GREAT
NEW TASTE
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Cookout on the patio
Jay Glatz, manager of food service for the Kansas and Burge Unions, cooks hot dogs outside the Kansas Union. The cookout yesterday was part of the week's events designed to acquaint students with the new patio area at the Union.
Two officers are convicted of murder; third is acquitted
PARKING
Green's Nov. 5 death had raised tensions in Detroit because the officers on trial were white and Green was Black. No testimony indicated the beating was racially motivated, and lawyers and community activists in the city, which is 75 percent Black, played down the racial element.
Former officer Robert Lessnau, 33, opted to have Recorder's Court Judge George Crockett decide his fate, and Lessnau was acquitted of assault with intent to do great bodily harm. He could have received up to 10 years in prison.
Mayor Coleman Young said justice was done with the separate convictions of former officers Larry Nevers, 53, and Walter Budzyn, 47, on second-degree murder charges. Both verdicts were returned by juries composed mainly of Blacks.
Tom Schneider, president of the Detroit Police Officers Association, complained: "The one message that the media have failed to promote is that these situations simply will not occur if the person about to be arrested simply compiles with the orders of the officers involved."
Appearing on "Jeopardy!" was a nerve-racking nirvana for KU graduate student Brent Noel. And as other students who have been featured on similar television shows know, 30 minutes of fame on the boob tube can bring odd surprises.
Detroit beating trials end
Monica Green, the victim's sister, said, "I think my brother can rest in peace, finally."
DETROIT — People cheered yesterday from the desolate street corner where Malice Green died, after two former police officers were convicted of murdering him in a beating in front of a crack house.
An autopsy showed that Green died of at least 14 blows to the head. Part of his scalp was torn off.
A few still grumbled when a judge acquitted a third police officer of assault and allowed the two convicted officers to go free until their sentencing Oct. 12. They could face up to life in prison for the crime.
Prosecutors portrayed Nevers during the 13-week trial as an aging officer who was trying to teach Green the rules of the neighborhood by repeatedly smashing the blood-soaked man in the head with a flashlight, demanding that he obey orders to open his hand.
Lawvers for Nevers and Budzyn said they would appeal.
Page 7.
INSIDE
Budyn demands that Green open his clenched fist and hits him with his flashlight. He dives into the car and is seen swinging his light as Nevers approaches from the other side.
Plainclothes officers Walter Budzyn and Larry
park and walk behind Green's car, back stop,
and park behind Green's car.
**Budzyn approaches Green and friend on the side**
Green sits down on the car's passenger
side.
Malice Green's fatal beating
Nevers hits Green in the head with his flashlight as Green fails halfway out of the car.
At 10:30 p.m. Green parks his car in front of an apartment building known to police as a crack house. He gets out of the car.
-500
Witnesses and police sources describe what led to Malice Green's death on Nov. 5, 1992:
A dispatcher hears what sounds like a call for help from Budzyn; several more police cars arrive. Officer Robert Lessnaun lifts Green from his car, puts him on the ground and handcuffs him. Nevers flags down a passing EMS unit, the first of two to stop at the blood-soaked scene.
Green is dead on arrival at the hospital.
Green goes into a seizure. Police find a knife in his pocket.
Going ga-ga over that game show
Heatherwood disallows KU buses
Detroit Free Press, Knight-Ridder Tribune
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
KU On Wheels coordinators said they were not notified of Heatherwood Valley's decision to discontinue the project, and were already printed. Heatherwood Valley owners said they would not allow the buses to go through their parking lot because of extensive asphalt damage, which they said the was caused by the buses' weight.
Some students who live at Heatherwood Valley Apartments are dismayed because they can no longer catch the KU On Wheels bus in their parking lot.
Students living at Heatherwood Valley, two blocks east of Kasold off 21st Street, now use the stop at the Peppertreet Apartments on 22nd Street. The change cuts two blocks off the route and forces Heatherwood Valley residents to walk that distance to the bus stop.
Tanya Walsh, graduate teaching assistant, said she was upset when she found out the buses would no longer be able to pick up students in the Heatherwood parking lot.
"I agreed to the schedule I was given only because I thought I could
Walsh said what upset her the most was that the first notice of the change came Aug. 18 in a letter from the apartment manager, Gina Horne.
Horne said the late date of the notice was because KU on Wheels did not notify her of the change.
But Bob Grunzinger, who heads of
Students can receive refunds on their bus passes during the first three weeks of classes, said Grunzinger. To receive a refund students should contact Grunzinger at the KU On Wheels office.
"Given the amount of time we had, there was no way we could do it," he said.
the university's Senate Transportation Committee, said he was not notified of Heatherwood's decision to disallow KU On Wheels in its parking lot until the end of July, too late to change maps and schedules.
KU on Wheels rejected the proposal of an alternate route planned out by Heatherwood in July. Chris Ogle, owner of the Lawrence Bus Co., said the proposal came too late to restructure the route.
THE FIRE ESCAPE HOUSE IS IN THE WAY. THE FIRE ESCAPE HOUSE IS IN THE WAY. THE FIRE ESCAPE HOUSE IS IN THE WAY. THE FIRE ESCAPE HOUSE IS IN THE WAY.
Heatherwood Valley Apartment owners say bus traffic has torn up its, parking lot.
2
Tuesday, August 24,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately? Reservations only: 843-1151
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TREK
REGULAR PRICE SALE PRICE
820 $159 $310
830 $199 $180
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HASDROCK $299 $280
HASDROCK SPORT $199 $140
ROCKHOPPER $460 $440
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THE FUTURE IS HERE. THE PAST IS NOT.
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EXPIRES 10-9-19.
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Tuesday and Thursday evenings
5-45-9 or 45 p.m.
September 7 through November 18
$4.90 per hour starting wage.
MORE USED BOOKS
Call Marie Adams-Young 9-11 and 2-4 M-F 864-4201
KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION Open Until 7 p.m. August 23-25
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Kansas Union ... 864-4640 Burge Union ... 864-5697
Textbook line ... 864-5285 Mt. Oread Bookshop.. 864-4311
Union Technology Ctr ... 864-5690
Rock Chalk Revue will hold an informational meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Those interested can find out about Rock Chalk Revue and positions available on the advisory board and special committees. For more information, call Kristi Klepper at 855-4223.
The University Free Kansan prints free announcements of meetings of campus groups.
THE total look!
KU Environs will hold its weekly meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the International Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7325.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
ON CAMPUS
The St. Lawrence Catholic Center will hold its annual St. Lawrence Center Fiesta at 5:00 p.m. Wednesday at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. The fiesta will include food, a karake machine, a dunk tank and prizes from area businesses. For more information, call 864-4126.
■ Robert Minor, professor and head of religious studies, will present a program, "The Men's Movement: Can Real Men Really Identify Themselves?" at noon tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. Lunch can be provided if reservations are made by noon today. For more information, call 843-4933.
Welcome Back Students!
Visit us for that new look
that makes first impressions
842-5921
9th & Mississippi
the total look!
For Men & Women
The department of communication studies has scheduled the Oral Communication Exemption Examination for Sept. 15. Registration, with a $10 fee, is due in 3009 Wescoe by Sept. 10. For more information, call 864-3633.
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Regular
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MENS • WOMENS • CHILDS SPECIAL GROUP
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12:5 SUN
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SHOES-SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES
Learn to Fly
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction • Charter
Services • Rental
842-0000
WEATHER
Omaha: 73' / 69'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 96'/73'
Chicago: 80'/61'
Houston: 100'/79'
Miami: 97'/80'
Minneapolis: 79'/64'
Phoenix: 105'/89'
Salt Lake City: 80'/59'
Seattle: 69'/55'
LAWRENCE: 87'/73'
Kansas City: 77'/73'
St. Louis: 83'/72'
Wichita: 101'/78'
Tulsa: 104'/79'
TODAY
Partly cloudy
High: 87'
Low: 73'
Tomorrow
Sunny
High: 93'
Low: 72'
Wednesday
Sunny
High: 95'
Low: 74'
Source: Associated Press
John Paul Fogel/KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
Towers Saturday, KU police reported.
A student's two window air-conditioner units, valued together at $200, were taken from a residence in the 1300 block of Kentucky on Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
A Student's scar was damaged in the 1500 block of Tennessee Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported. The damage was estimated at $1,000.
A student's sheets and pillow case, towels, jeans, pants, T-shirts and underwear, valued together at $250, were taken from the laundry room at Stouffer Place #1 on Saturday, KU police reported.
A student's car stereo equipment, valued at $485, was taken and a car window was damaged in KU parking lot 112 on Saturday, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle tires and seat, valued at $300, were taken from a parking lot at Jayhawk
A student's car window was broken in the 1200 block of Mississippi Street on Sunday, Lawrence police reported. The damage was estimated at $350.
A student's car window was broken and the license plate was taken in the 1700 block of Ohio Street on Sunday, Lawrence police reported. The total damage was estimated at $200.
ComputerLand
2449 Iowa
841-4611
HP Duplex 500 Printer
$335.00
HP Duplex 500 Printer
$435.00
HP Duplex 500 Printer
$639.00
HP DeskJet 5260 Printer $335.00
HP DeskJet 5260 Printer $435.00
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staircase-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6604, 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, K6045.
ARTS & EVENTS FINANCE
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
STUDENT RIGHTS
Opportunities For Involvement In The
K. U. Student Senate.
Please Take The Time This Week To Pick Up An Application For The Committees And Boards Of The Student Senate.
Pick Up And Return Applications At The Student Senate Office At 410 Kansas Union By Friday, Aug.27
Call 864-3710 For Questions
MULTI-CULTURALAFFFAIRS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 24, 1993
3
Rotationplasty surgery replaces knee with ankle
The rotationplasty knee replacement surgery 10-year-old Christopher Barnett received at the KU Med Center was the first of its kind in Kansas. Barnett's ankle was used to replace his knee.
Barnett was diagnosed with malignant bone cancer just above the knee in May.
Doctors removed everything from the child's mid-thigh to lower leg, leaving the main artery, veins and nerve.
Barnett's lower leg was rotated $180^\circ$ and attached to his upper thigh.
The ankle, placed where Barnett's knee would have been as an adult, has full flexibility.
An artificial limb will be fitted in a few weeks to replace the lower leg.
Source: University of Kansas Medical Center, The Kansas City Star
Med Center's rare surgery gives boy a sporting chance
Doctors replaced cancerous knee with his ankle
By Liz Kringer
Kansan staff writer
A recent surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center replaced a 10-year-old cancer victim's knee with his ankle, giving him an opportunity to play sports again.
On Aug. 10, a rotationplasty was performed on Christopher Barnett of Wichita. The operation was the first of its kind in Kansas. Only five rotationplasties typically are performed a year in the United States.
Barnett was taken to the hospital last May after he was injured in a collision with one of his cousins while playing basketball. X-rays of his left knee, which had caused Barnett pain before, showed a growth.
A biopsy of the growth's tissue revealed that Barnett had a highly malignant tumor known as osteogenic sarcoma, one of the rarest forms of cancer.
Greg Horton, chief orthopedic resident at the Med Center, said the
tumor probably began growing in the bone six months to a year ago and then eventually grew outward
If Barnett was an adult, surgeons would have most likely amputated the leg above the knee, and he would then undergo reconstructive surgery or be fitted for a prosthesis.
Howard Rosenthal, orthopedic oncologist at the Med Center, said that since Barnett was a child, his right leg would grow significantly before reaching adulthood, and the adult procedures would not account for Barnett's leg growth. The result would be an uneven balance between his legs that would force him to wear a 6-inch shoe lift.
There were only two possibilities for Barnett "a growing" prosthesis or rotationplasty. The growing prosthesis, which basically consists of a metal prosthesis and a screw mechanism, would involve multiple surgeries.
the rotationplasty was chosen because it would require only one surgery and ensure Barnett of the sport's active in sports, Rosenthal said.
attempt to shrink the tumor or kill it before it was removed.
Before the surgery, Barnett underwent chemotherapy treatment.
Three months after treatments began, in an eight-hour operation, Rosenthal removed the mid-section of Barnett's left leg from the upper shin bone to the upper thigh bone, leaving intact only the main nerve, two main veins and an artery.
Rosenthal then shortened the lower leg, rotated it 180 degrees, and reattached all the muscles of the thigh to the muscles of the calf. He used metal brackets to reattach the bones.
Rosenthal explained that the ankle functions in the same manner as the knee, only in the opposite direction. By turning the lower leg backward, the ankle will function as a knee.
Barnett, who will continue chemotherapy treatments for the next year, was walking on crutches less than a week after the operation. Within a few weeks he will be fitted with a prosthesis.
Horton, who assisted in the operation, said Barnett should be able to stand and shoot baskets within six weeks and should be back to school participating in all the activities by next year.
Free tables no longer provided for groups
Budget cuts leave work to students
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
KU student groups are re-evaluating their plans to set up tables on campus after discovering that the University has taken free use of tables away.
The service was previously provided to the groups by facilities operations, but a new budget that took effect July 1 cut the service. The elimination was a result of program review by the Kansas Board of Regents.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said the department decided to eliminate the table service and one related staff position because the service was not directly related to the academic mission of the University. He said that program review required the department to cut $122,000 from its budget each year for the next three years.
Tables and chairs alone, Richardson said, cost the department $7,000 last year for repair and replacement. The labor to provide those tables cost even more, he said.
for providing tables and chairs on campus. He said many other universities did not provide tables at all, and some provided them only to academic units for a fee.
Facilities operations will continue to provide free tables to academic departments and to administrative activities directly related to academics, Richardson said.
Richardson said that the department studied other colleges' policies
Richardson said he was not happy about cutting any service to students.
Ann Eversole, director of the Organizations and Activities Center, said that eliminating the table service would have a big impact on organizations who used them for their activities.
In previous years, organizations only had to get approval from the University Events Committee to use a table from facilities operations, Eversole said. She said that although soliciting signatures or operating any sale still required committee approval, all a group had to do was bring its own table and set up shop.
"I'm concerned about the fallout on Wescoe Beach," she said. "Before, we limited them to one table. Now, we could approve three sales on Wescoe, and there could be tables everywhere."
Eversole said that control of the space would be much more difficult now.
Eversole said the only two options for student organizations now was to provide tables of their own or to set up at the Kansas Union.
The Union provides tables for organizations if they remain on Union property. Gene Wee, reservations coordinator for the Kansas Union, said registered organizations could reserve a limited amount of space on the Union plaza or in the fourth floor lobby. Wee said no fees were charged unless the organization was sponsoring a sale at its table.
Liz Pareja, president of AIESEC, an international business organization, said she was unhappy that facilities operations would no longer provide tables for organization use.
"It will be a big disadvantage for us since we're not financially strong," said Pareja, a David, Panama, senior. "We have a lot of tables throughout the year for membership recruitment and sales to raise money for our programs. This will hurt us."
Pareja said that the change would be inconvenient for them, but that AIESEC would continue having membership tables and sales on campus.
"We have to," she said. "We have a table of our own down in our office in Summerfield. I guess we'll have to move it around."
Scholarships, jobs focus for Budig
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
"Today's college students are troubled, deeply troubled, by the economic uncertainties of the times," Budig said to an audience of about 250 administrators and faculty at the afternoon ceremony in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Helping KU graduates find jobs to go along with their degrees will be one of the most important goals for improving the University, said Chancellor Gene Budig in a speech at the faculty and staff convocation yesterday.
do it quickly, because we must do it.*
Budig also said that increasing the amount of scholarship money for students would remain the primary focus of his work.
"I want the University to be more concerned with the employment placement for graduates," Budig said.
"My highest priority for post-Campaign Kansas is increasing scholarship." Budg said. "We will do it, and
do it quickly, because we must do it.
Campaign Kansas was a fund-raising effort by the University that garnered more than $250 million.
Budig said the new fund-raising target was $27.5 million.
As well as greeting familiar faces, administrators use faculty convocation officially to welcome the new staff and faculty members, said Sandra Gaut, assistant vice chancellor of academic affairs.
This year 53 new members joined the KU faculty, Gaunt said.
In his introductory speech to the faculty, Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said one of the most distinguishing aspects of the professors and staff at KU was the uniquely high level of faculty participation, especially in improving University operations.
"The most important positive we have is the way this institute is governed," Meyen said. "Our faculty involvement indicates there is a collective commitment to the institution."
Meyen said the danger that institutions such as KU could suffer setbacks always existed.
Among the newly hired faculty who heard speeches by Meyen and other administrators were professors in departments ranging from bio-organic chemistry to art history.
John Pultz, assistant professor of history of art, said what impressed him most so far about KU was the apparent lack of a rigid hierarchy among the faculty.
"It's a very open environment," Pultz said.
Another new member of the faculty, David Benson, assistant professor of chemistry, said the close relationship among different disciplines would make his research work much easier and more efficient.
"Interaction is very highly prized here," Benson said. "It makes it easier to get research done."
Summer 1993 enrollment stays even with 1992
CAMPUS in brief
Enrollment for Summer 1993 changed little from Summer 1992 figures, indicating a leveling off for summer enrollment after a marked drop between Summer 1991 and 1992 enrollments.
Summer 1993 had a three-student increase on the Lawrence and off-campus sites, from 7,725 last summer to this year's 7,728, KU officials said. Figures from the University of Kansas Medical Center showed an increase
of 32 students, from 1,856 to 1,888 students.
The total increase for all of Summer 1963 was 35 students, KU officials said. This contrasted from a drop of about 650 students between the enrollments of Summer 1991 and Summer 1992.
Summer 1992 and 1993's steady enrollments seemed to indicate KU is providing enough classes to meet the needs of summer
students, said Rich Morrell, University registrar.
"The intention is to make sure there is a breadth to the course offerings for the summer," Morrell said.
"We want to maintain the same type of enrollment that meets those concerns, but we're not necessarily wanting to see that number increase by any significant amount."
Student charged in theft of piece of Chi-O fountain
A KU student was arrested Friday in connection with the theft of the top piece of the Chi Omega fountain, KU police reports said.
Galen Adams, Lawrence junior, was arrested a few blocks from the fountain with the piece — valued at $60 — in his possession. He was charged with theft.
According to the report, KU police officers were driving by the fountain around 1:45 a.m. and noticed the top piece was missing. A little later, the police saw Adams in a group of people with the piece.
Adams was issued a notice to appear Sept. 9 in court.
Stephenson Hall reports damage to recreation area
Stephenson Hall reported $605 in damage to its recreation room Saturday morning, according to KU police reports.
According to the report, two males broke pool cues, punched holes in the ceiling tiles, damaged the pool table covers and a wooden table top and stained the carpet.
The report has been sent to the Douglas County District Attorney's office for investigation. Chris Kenney, Douglas County charging attorney, said she would review the case to determine whether criminal charges would be filed.
Compiled by Kansan staff reports.
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Tuesday. August 24. 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
A ban on smoking in all campus buildings went into effect July 1.
THE BACKGROUND
The decision by the University will ban smoking anywhere on campus. The ban is in response to complaints by nonsmoking students and to a recent study that reveals second-hand smoke to be a "class A carcinogen."
THE OPINION
Campus policy will help students breathe easier
The new smoking ban that went in effect July 1 is a positive measure by the University to protect the health of all students.
The decision to ban smoking was inevitable. Few arguments can be made against it. The traditional justification based on personal rights falls short in light of new evidence. The argument "It's my life, and I'll end it early if I want to" suddenly becomes "I have no respect for anyone's health and will kill us all if I want to."
Opponents of the ban attack the National Lung Association and other organizations involved with the study. The argument is made that the study is biased with inconclusive proof of the link between cancer and secondhand smoke. However, what is indisputable is that smoking affects everyone close to the smoker. If there is any doubt as to whether it has endangering effects on others, then the benefit of the doubt should fall in support of the ban.
Whether cancer-inducing or not, there also is the simple comfort factor. Smoking is not like drinking; it 's not self-contained. Sitting next to someone who has had a few too many drinks won't induce cirrhosis of the liver or make one unable to drive home.
In contrast, when sitting in any public place where smoking is allowed it is easy to see that smoke does not obey the posted signs and eventually invades nonsmokers' space.
Smoking is a choice like anything else. It is unfortunate that it has the negative side effects that it does For years, studies have shown that smoking causes cancer in those who smoke heavily. New evidence suggests that second-hand smoke may cause cancer in nonsmokers as well.
What it really comes down to is if an individual's right to smoke takes priority over others' right to be healthy. The decision is obvious. It doesn't.
CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New fee payment plan should consider loans
Fee payment by mail is a qualified success for the University and KU students. Since its introduction in the fall of 1992, most students have been spared the crawl and confusion of fee payment lines that plagued KU. The old manual process, which took place during the week before classes started, was a frustrating process that made enrollment look quick and painless
However, bureaucratic frustration with fee payment still runs high for many KU students dependent on financial aid. Many forms of aid, including some widely-used student loans such as the Stafford, are not credited to student accounts until after the early August deadline for fee payment. Affected students, who have yet to receive any of their loan money, must pay the steep sum of $260 to hold their enrollment. If a student cannot pay to hold the enrollment, the University strikes it and penalizes the student with the additional financial burdens of reinstatement and late enrollment fees if the student is to re-enroll. KU must address these problems with a focus on student needs, as well as financial aid timetables, so that fee payment by mail will benefit all students, including those dependent on financial aid.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSANSTAFF
KCTRAUER, Editor
Spelling bee offered more than competition
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BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
The four of us were there in front of the small audience of parents, and we were spelling at light speed for a record amount of time. Never in the history of Geneva, Ill., had a spelling bee lasted this long.
Here's the story: In the third grade, we all were taken to the gym one day and told to stand in a line. We did, and an authority figure of some sort gave us words that we were told to spell. I spelled more of them correctly than the rest of my class, so I got to go to the gym again and do it some more. Again, I out-spelled the competition.
The girl next to me wasn't content with spelling as fast as the rest of us—she had to be faster. She began to anticipate and started spelling the word before the proctor had finished saying it, I started to tremble. Rumors spread throughout the crowd like the proverbial wildfire: Lisa doped her blood before the bee. Terry has a professional coach; see that dark-haired guy in front? Bobby needs his insulin shot soon and might pass out
Assistant to the editor J.R. Clairborne
News Stacy Friedman
Editorial Terrifty McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Kri茄 Foster
Photo Kip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features Erra Wolfe
Graphics John Paul Fogel
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
This time, I won the opportunity to do similar things at the library the next Saturday in a cryptically named thing called the City-Wide Spelling Bee. I went and spelled my way confidently to the final four contestants. With nary apause, I spelled each word I was given. So did my opponents. Soon, it had become a contest of speed, and we all understood that although we would not be "out" if we thought too long before spelling, we would rotten eggs (or something equally as horrifying).
8087416
And so I try to live my life with that thought in mind. As a matter of fact, I wrote to the editor of my hometown newspaper last summer to inform him that mannequin was not spelled manikin, without even bothering to check the dictionary to see if I was right. I, of course, was proven wrong. (Manikin is used for CPR dummies and the like, mannequin is for department store dummies and movie titles.) It was at that point that I realized there was not only a very important lesson in my mother's word that hot day in 1983 but a moral to put at the end of this column: Don't bother.
it was then that I learned life's most valuable lesson. My mother turned from her position in the front seat and said, "How can Ben be embarrassed by you? He didn't even make it to the spelling bee."
Ryan McGee is a Worland, Wy., sophomore liberal arts and science major.
Welfare reform should give dignity not focus on offering cushy benefits
Business Staff
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
BUSINESS MANAGER
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
gear. My mother did an admirable job of consoling me, and I almost was convinced the sun would rise again as Ben and I walked to school. I suddenly realized that Ben probably would never talk to me again, and that I would probably even have to find a different route to walk to school just so I wouldn't have to face him. If I didn't he probably would get really mad at me and beat me up for embarrassing him by being his best friend and for being so stupid. So I started up bawling again, and explained to my mother that no, the sun would never rise again after all.
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Pollls show that welfare reform would be very popular with the American people, who long ago concluded that the current system gives people incentives not to work. But Tom Bethell warned in the current issue of National Review that "reform" was not likely. Cushier benefits are.
The next hour or so is only a blur in my memory. I don't remember who won. I don't even remember receiving the ribbon that my mother still has. The next thing I remember is the drive home with my parents. I started to cry as we walked to the car and was in a full-blowbawl by the time it was in
letters amount to typeed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. 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 typeed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be 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 Floor Hall.
The fatal word was citizen. I spell it out loud each time I write it to this day. I was growing more over weary, and the proctor told me to spell citizen. I didn't stop to think and blurted up. "Citizen-C.I-T-E-Z-E-N.Citizen."
STAFF COLUMNIST
beneaths are.
Bettel's view of the prospects for reform might seem too bleak were it not for a story on the proceedings of President Clinton's welfare-reform task force. The hearings consisted of complaints from welfare recipients that the taxpayers are not giving them good service. One can see the direction in which this is going. Clinif he doesn't get it. The rules don't allow breaks for insulin shots.
RYAN
McGE
I resolved to outdo the girl next to me. The Anticipator. I did for a bit, but then I began to tire and realized that if I didn't slow down a little I might make a grave error. I stopped anticipating and began to listen to the whole word again before spelling it. I knew, however, that I couldn't afford to fall behind the rest of the pack the way I had with The Anticipator. I would be all right, I decided, if I just didn't pause before spelling. That would be fine; the rest of them weren't good enough to anticipate.
"The problem is that the total value of benefits available to the welfare client approaches or exceeds the dollar amount that can be earned in entry-level jobs," writes Bethell. "This is the welfare trap."
ton wants to adopt a "work fare" program in which people would spend no more than two years on the welfare rolls. But to get people off the welfare rolls it is clear that an expensive array of additional benefits will be deemed necessary.
Only by turning that around will the federal government give people back their dignity — and restore their hopes for a future of independence.
Charleston, W.Va.
Daily Mail
STAFF COLUMNIST
TISHA
HEYK
Co-workers should be notified of convictions
On June 30, Stephanie Schmidt went out for the last time. The Pittsburgh State University student went to a bar with friends to celebrate her birthday. Among those friends that were invited was 31-year-old Donald Ray Gideon, a co-worker of Stephanie. Gideon offered Stephanie an early ride home because she was not feeling well.
She never made it home. Gideon took her to a rural area, where she was sodomized and murdered.
Gideon is charged with first-degree murder, aggravated criminal sodomy and aggravated kidnapping. For the murder charge, attorney Barry Disney is pushing for the Hard 40 rule. Under this rule Gideon would have to serve 40 years before he would be eligible for parole. This is considered a tough sentence, but nothing will compensate for the loss of Stephanie Schmidt.
The facts surrounding Stephanie's death are both devastating and frightening. Fact No. 1: In 1982 Gideon was convicted of raping and sodomizing a college student in Parsons. He spent 10 years in prison and was released at the end of last year. Fact No. 2: The law does not require a parolee to inform the employer of his background. Fact No. 3: Gideon and Stephanie worked together for six months and often saw each other socially along with other co-workers.
These factors have caused me to really stop and think about our system. I can understand both sides of the issue of whether an employee should be required to inform his or her boss of past convictions. On the one hand you've got the person who has served the time and wants to make a clean start. On the other hand you have people such as Gideon who leave jail and become repeat offenders. I believe sex-offenders should be required to tell their boss of their past convictions. I am positive that if Stephanie would have known about Gideon's past she would have been more cautious.
I know there are countless times when I have accepted a ride home from a co-worker. They could have had prior convictions like Gideon. I don't know because it never occurred to me to ask about their backgrounds. On the job, friends usually discuss work or what they did the previous night, not their history. Now I am going to take the time to find out. Don't get me wrong, you never can be 100 percent safe from being hurt, but there are precautions a person can take. It is unfortunate that we are living in a society where we constantly need to have our guard up when we meet new people. I know I'll be more careful when it comes to differentiating between strangers and friends.
Right now, Donald Ray Gideon is awaiting trial. At the same time Leawood residents Gene and Peggy Schmidt are grieving over the loss of their daughter.
Tiaha Heyka is Leawood senior majoring in psychology and creative writing.
Jeff Fitzpatrick
For the birds
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Tuesday, August 24, 1993
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Alabama doctor killed by gunman
Doctor performed abortions,but police are unsure of motive
The Associated Press
MOBILE, Ala. — An abortion clinic doctor was shot to death over the weekend, but police did not know the gunman's motive.
Dr. George Wayne Patterson was shot in the neck and killed Saturday evening in a parking lot in the city's nightclub district, site of several recent robberies, police said. A witness said the shooter appeared to break into Patterson's car, a 1993 Cadillac.
There had been no arrests as of yesterday morning. Police Chief Harold Johnson said yesterday that the case was given special emphasis "because of the abortion upheaval" but that there was no reason at this point for abortion clinics to be critically concerned.
Johnson said the doctor's car showed no sign of forced entry and his wallet was not taken.
"But that don't indicate it was not a robbery," he said.
Patterson, 44, had worked at Family Planning of Fort Walton Beach, Fla. and at the Bay City Women's Clinic in Mobile.
A witness told the Mobile Register
that a gunman fired two shots, then opened the door of Patterson's car and took something from inside.
The Pensacola (Pla.) News Journal reported that Patterson also owned the Women's Medical Services Clinic in Pensacola, where Dr. Drew Gunn was killed last March. Anti-abortion activist Michael F. Griffin faces trial. Sept. 20 for that shooting.
activist Rachelle Renae Shannon of Grants Pass, Ore., was charged with attempted murder.
The Mobile clinic was damaged by arson in 1900, and that case remains unsolved, said agent Ken Murphy of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which investigated the fire.
Kennedy assassination papers released
The Associated Press
In recent days a Roman Catholic priest tried to run an anl in the Mobile Register advocating the shooting of abortionists as "justifiable homicide." The Rev. David Trosch of Magnolia Springs in adjoining Baldwin County was ordered by church leaders last week to cease espousing such actions.
On Thursday, a doctor who performs abortions was wounded in both arms in Wichita. Anti-abortion
WASHINGTON — The government unlocked 30 years of secrets yesterday in John F. Kennedy's assassination — from CIA theories of Soviet involvement to a second-hand report that Lee Harvey Oswald boasted to a Russian friend, "I will kill the president."
hundreds of thousands of government documents made public for the first time chronicle the effort by the CIA in the months after Kennedy was killed to determine if there was foreign involvement.
They also detail efforts by the Warren Commission, which investigated the killing; the follow-up Rockefeller Commission in 1975; the FBI and others to answer persistent questions in the decades that followed.
A former Marine, Oswald defected to the Soviet
一、1. 在下面括号里填上正确的汉字。
Union for a period and then returned to the United States before Kennedy was killed. ___
The Sept. 19, 1977, classified memo to then-FBI Director Clarence Kelley detailed the FBI's interview of a Russian emperor who recalled nearly verbatim a conversation with a friend, Pavel Golovachev, who had spoken with Oswald in 1962 in Russia.
Russia.
"I will kill the president," the memo quotes the emigre as saying, recounting Golovachev's recollection of Oswald's words.
**reaction to Oswald's embarrassment**
"Golovachev, who assumed Oswald was joking, also pointed out that he would be arrested and asked what he expected to be paid," the memo said.
"Oswald responded, 'You don't know America. If manage this, my wife will become rich.' He said this quietly, but with an angry expression, and sounded serious." i" added
For instance, a Soviet defector working for the CIA speculated in a Nov. 27, 1963 memo that the murder had been instigated by the KGB to relieve internal pressures on Nikita Khrushchev, then the leader of the Soviet Union. Khrushchev was deposed in October 1964.
sumar second-hand information or speculation by U.S. intelligence employees trying to make sense of the assassination.
Many of the newly released documents detailed
"Our president's death ... effectively divers the Soviets' attention from their internal problems. It directly affects Khrushchev's longevity," wrote Peter Deryabin, in an eight-page, single-spaced, typewritten memo.
Deryabin was a Soviet KGB agent who defected to the West in 1954.
The Associated Press
Mississippi reopened to two-way barge traffic
The National Archives made the documents public as required under a 1992 law.
ST LOUIS — Barge traffic was free to move in both directions on the Mississippi River yesterday for the first time after a summer of record flooding.
The end of the longest shutdown on the river since shipping began is welcome news to the $8-million-a-day barge industry, which began feeling the effects in late June as rising water shut down locks and surrounded some of them. A few restrictions on traffic remain.
Southbound traffic was allowed to resume on the 800-mile length of the river from Minneapolis to Cairo, Ill., on Sunday, and the first northbound tows were permitted yesterday, said Lt. Tim Deal of the Coast Guard.
12
Short sections south of Minneapolis, the head o shipping on the river, had been reopened earlier as water receded.
"We're still hindered, but at least we're still moving," said Tommy Seals, marine superintendent for American Commercial Lines, based in Jeffersonville, Ind.
"This is about as close to a grand opening as we're going to get." Coast Guard Cmdr. Scott Cooper said Sunday.
The Coast Guard was awaiting results from a test run before fully dropping all restrictions on traffic between St. Louis to Cairo.
Cooper said travel restrictions and some localized closings continue along the river because of shallow water and unfinished test runs. Dredging is needed to clear the channel on some stretches of the river, Cooper said. That could take a few days.
"We're extremely happy and optimistic that (the river) will be open shortly to full movement," said George Foster, president of Midway Marine Inc. in St. Louis.
Foster said that more than 50 percent of his work force had been laid off. Normally, his company handles 12 to 15 million tons of cargo each month. Foster said Sunday that his company had restored about one-third of its capacity to normal operations.
The river closure tied up Seals' company's 1,000 barges and 47 tow boats for more than a month, he said.
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Tuesday, August 24, 1993
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THE NEWS in brief
MANAGUA, Nicaragua
Nicaraguan guerrillas issue new conditions for release of hostages
A rightist guerrilla leader issued new conditions yesterday for releasing at least 18 government officials held hostage. The announcement came a day after he raised hopes of an end to Nicaragua's four-day hostage crisis by freeing 20 others.
Rival left肟 gunmen, who held 27 hostages in Managua, freed two captives yesterday as a goodwill gesture. They still are holding Vice President Virgilio Godoy, eight congressmen and at least nine journalists.
Rearmed former soldiers from both sides have elapsed repeatedly with troops during the past year as President Violeta Chamorro's reconciliation policies have been foiled by political emunity and a crippled economy.
The hostage crisis involves rival groups of ex-combatants from the war between the former leftist Sandinista government and the U.S.-backed Contras that ended in 1990.
former Contras have accused the government of failing to provide the land and aid promised when they disarmed. They also claim that their rivals have continued to persecute and murder them.
Reich favors raising minimum wage
WASHINGTON, D.C
The hourly minimum wage, which has been $4.25 since 1990, should be raised and indexed to automatically reflect cost-of-living increases, Labor Secretary Robert Reich says.
But Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole said on the same program that linking minimum wage increases to cost-of-living increases "would be a big, big mistake and I don't even think it would pass" Congress.
Reich, appearing Sunday on CBS" "Face the Nation," said workers receiving the minimum wage earned less than they did in the 1970s and 1890s, based on inflation.
Republicans and other opponents of raising the minimum wage say it would result in businesses hiring fewer young and untrained workers, the group most in need of minimum wage jobs.
LOS ANGELES
Gas prices rise after downward trend
National gasoline prices at the pump rose almost half a cent per gallon, ending the lower than-usual prices that drivers enjoyed most of the summer.
The average price of all grades, including taxes, was $1.14.96 cents, up 0.39 cents from two weeks earlier, according to the Aug. 20 Lundberg Survey of 10,000 gas stations nationwide.
The price jump was caused by a combination of retailers raising the price of gas to increase revenues coupled with a greater demand for gas, said analyst Trishy Lundberg. Prices had been dropping since the beginning of June.
Average prices at self serve pumps were regular unleaded $1.08 04 cents; mid-grade unleaded $1.19 32; premium unleaded $1.27 17 cents; and regular leaded $1.10 29 cents, according to the survey.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Official resigns over Bosnian policy
a young U.S. foreign service officer abandoned a promising career Monday to protest the Clinton administration's policy of non-intervention in the civil war in Bosnia.
In resigning, Stephen Walker, 30, wrote Secretary of State Warren Christopher that U.S. policy accepts genocide and aggression in the former Yugoslav republic.
"Our policies are misguided, vacillating and dangerous," he wrote.
Walker is the third State Department official to quit this month — the fourth in a year — as dissension has spread over a policy that has threatened military action to curb Bosnian Serbs but has relied primarily on diplomacy and economic sanctions.
The exodus is the largest since a handful of National Security Council staff members quit the Nixon administration 20 years ago to protest U.S. military involvement in Southeast Asia.
WICHITA
Woman held on bail in Tiller case
A woman accused of shooting a doctor outside a clinic where abortions are performed was ordered held on $1 million bail yesterday by a judge who said activists may be using terror as a political tool.
Rachelie Renae "Shelley" Shannon is accused of wounding Dr. George Tiller in both arms Thursday outside his Women's Health Care Services clinic. Tiller was treated at a local hospital and returned to work less than 12 hours later.
Songwick County District Judge Paul Clark set bail and scheduled Sept. 7 as the tentative preliminary hearing date for Shannon, 37, of Grants Pass, Ore.
The judge caught reporters off guard by moving yesterday's hearing to another judge's courtroom and holding it about an hour earlier than scheduled. Reporters waiting at Clark's courtroom were told by a secretary that the hearing was already over.
Clark told KFDI radio he was concerned about pretral publicity and wanted to avoid large crowds of demonstrators during the hearing.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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television
Some people have had a hickey superimposed on their face, made a suggestive pick-up line about Pebbles and Bam Bam even met Miss America. why?
Brent Noel describes his appearance on leopardy! as "polka dots and moonbeans. It was everything good in life."
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
In other words, it was a nerve-racking experience.
Noel, Lawrence graduate student, is one of many KU students who have appeared on national television. Most said their brushes with fame had been full of surprises and more than a little embarrassing.
"It was kind of a traumatizing experience," said Philip Larsen, Indianapolis, Ind. freshman about his appearance on MTV's "Like We Care," a traveling show that features interviews with students about subjects ranging from their most embarrassing moments to favorite weekend activities.
on Jeop
eams. It was
nerve-racking expe
ace graduate student, is one of
students who have appeared on
st said their brushes with
of surprises and more than a
strau-
cience."
arsen.
nd,
out
s
ranging
st embar-
nents to
end activi
TAPLEY
Trebeck: A heraldic charge called a label often represents the eldest one of these in an English family.
Noel: What is the Pure Food and Drug Act?
Noel: What is the son?
"I was watching it, and I was talking about hickeys, and there was this kissing noise, and all of a sudden they had this computer graphic of a huge hickey on my face. I was on another day that week talking about pick-up lines, and
KU graduate student Brent Noel answered these questions correctly when he appeared on Jeopardy!:
A Television Experience
Alex Trebeck: This "pure" 1906 act followed complaints about harmful chemical food additives.
Treeback: Some species of this insect obtain their cellulose from grass and humus in the soil other than from wood.
Noel: What are termites?
$ 1500
Trebeck: The government of this empire was sometimes called the Sublime Porte after a gate in Constantinople.
Noel! What is the Ottoman Empire?
they edited it to make it sound like these lines were ones I would really use. I got teased about it for a long time afterwards, said Larsen.
Shawn McClaren, a Dallas
STUDIO 2019
junior who was a finalist for Stuns, an entire audition process was embarrassed. He said, however, that he had known what he was getting into because he understood the show's premise.
SIR CHARLES
MICHAEL J. SALMON
"It was the most embarrassing thing I've ever seen," he said. "They had you stand onstage in this bar, and they'd call girls out of the audience, and you had a card full of stupid things you had to do. I had to make up a chant to get the audience going and make up three pick-up lines with characters from Universal Studios."
One of his winning lines? "If you were Pebbles,
and I was Bam Bam. I give you a bone."
"Everything had sexual overtones," he said. "They were looking for that."
They were very hard on Joepardy was dealing with his nerves while waiting for his show to be taped.
"They get you there at 10 in the morning, and I immediately went into nervous shock," he said. "I was on the last show, so I spent the day drinking coffee and getting nervous."
"When it came time for Final Jeopardy, I knew I couldn't win so I made up a gag answer," he said. "After the show Alex Trebek had like my sense of humor."
Noel said his nerves settled once he got on the set, where he found himself competing against two lawyers in categories he knew nothing about.
Getting on television can be as easy as being in the right place at the right time or as complicated as a drawn-out audition process. McClaren, who has yet to be contacted by Studs, was on spring break in Los Angeles when he was provided to participate by family and friends. Noel went to California, took a 50-question test, played a mock round complete with buzzers and had an interview.
No matter how they got their breaks, most students felt that luck also played a role in their
*Almost all the guys there had bleach blond
-500
hair and sunglasses, and some of them were actors," said McClaren of the Studs audition. "I thought 'there's no way.' All of these guys looked like they knew they were going to make it. But when they called names, I heard 'and from Kansas ...' and I was up onstage before they even said my name."
Although Noel and McClaren have different opinions about their experiences, both said positive things happened as a result. As a Studs finalist, McClaren won $75 in prizes and an invitation to Studs host. Mark DeCarlo's penthouse party, where he met Miss America. He also sat in the front row at the show's taping with the other Studs and Studettes.
"It was a ball," he said. "It made my spring break."
Noel got a part in a local movie as a result of his appearance on Jeopardy, and he said an on-air conversation with Trebek helped KU's theater department.
"He asked about my work in theater, and I told him I was interested in audience participation. He told me I should look into children's theater. KU has an excellent children's theater program, and since then, I've been told people have seen it and contacted the department, "Noel said.
Both Noel and McClaren said their television experiences were memorable.
"It was an adventure," said Noel. "The only regret I have is that I didn't win."
McClaren said, "If you're not afraid of embarrassing yourself, it's a great experience."
Students' favorite game show? It's Jeopardy!
By Sara Bennett
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Students may grumble about having to go to class and memorize facts, yet many race home every evening to watch and play along with their favorite trivia show.
"Jeopardy" overwhelmingly beat out "Studs" and the "Price is Right" as a favorite game show, an informal poll of KU students revealed. Most
said they liked the show because it challenged them intellectually.
"It's not mindless," said Erich Timkar, Concordia senior. "It actually requires some basic education to play."
"Actually, he just watched it because he liked to see Diane Parkinson in a swimsuit."
said she was impressed by the people on the show.
before five, then act like you know all the answers when it comes on later." Kristi Lundy, Lawrence senior, said watching "Jeopardy!" was more challenging than many shows.
Stefanie Moore,
Lawrence
sephorae
"It makes me feel so stupid to watch 'Jeopardy!'," she said. "So I always feel great when I get a right answer."
"The Price is Right" is a close second among students' favorite game shows. Dave Fisher, Leawood senior, said he watched the show a lot during
"Alex Trebek is hysterical. He's so pompous," she said. "And the people on it are so remarkably intelligent, it blows me away."
Almost all students interviewed admitted to testing their own knowledge by playing along with "Jeopardy!"
Dave Fisher Leawood senior
"All the guys sit around and try to answer the questions," said Jeff Nichols, Topeka junior "The thing to do is watch the one that comes on
the summer.
"Me and this little kid I baby-sat for had this competition going." he said. "Actually, he just watched it because he liked to see Diane Parkinson in a swimsuit."
For Craig Kenkel,
Denison, Iowa,
sophomore, watching
"The Price is Right"
is a nostalgic
experience.
"It's the one thing that's always been there," he said. "I've
Although some KU students watch game shows to be entertained or intellectually stimulated, others, like computer science majors, aren't as knowledgeable about them.
watched it since I was really little, and it's neat to think Bob Barker has been on forever."
Other favorite game shows were "Supermarket Sweep," "Studs" and "Golf."
"Do they still have that one with the whammies?" he said.
That's "Press Your Luck," Steve.
Here's how to apply for moment of fame
Sara Bennett
Do you think you have what it takes to be on television? Here's what some of the most popular shows are looking for and how to get on to them.
Kansan staff write
jeopardy! is looking for full-time undergraduate students to compete in its annual college tournament. Names of interested students will be drawn at random next month for interviews to be held around the country. Those chosen must pass a 50-question test, play a mock round of the game and complete an interview. Fifteen students will then be chosen to compete in the college round that will be taped in February and aired two weeks in May.
"We're looking for game-playing abilities and degree of nervousness," said Susanne Thurber, head contestant coordinator for Jeopardy. "We're certainly looking for different people from different locales and mix of juniors, seniors and so on."
Interested students should send a postcard to:
Jeopardy College Tournament P.O.Box 931417
Los Angeles. CA 90093-1417
On "The Price Is Right," all audience members are potential contestants, so those interested in being on the show should be prepared to get up early and wait in line. The lines start at 8 a.m., and people are let in on a first-come, first-served basis.
For tickets, send a self- addressed, stamped envelope along with potential show dates to: Phone No. Fight
The Price is right
Los Angeles, CA 90036
If MTV'S unscripted soap opera "The Real World" goes into a third season, casting will begin in February. Producers and cast directors will conduct interviews in random cities where they will be looking for seven outgoing and outsoken young people.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"We don't want seven robots," said Scott. Acord, a publicist for MTV. "We're looking for people who could get along without killing each other, yet create interest."
Interested people should send letters and applications to:
The Best World
10 Universal Plaza, 33rd Floor
Universal City, CA 91608
AUGUST 24,1993 PAGE 7
KU Life
Issues and Trends at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Lead Story
South African Kwazalu leader Mangosurthu Buthelezi began his annual state-of-the state policy address to the Kwazalu Legislature on March 12, spake continuously during weekday business hours, and finished on March 30. He read 427 pages of text which had to be translated from English to Zulu.
Inexplicable
In Julky in Elkton, Va. Jarrette Arlo Dean, 43, gnawed the head off a rattlesnake that had bitten him on the hand while he was transporting the snake on his motorcycle. Dean apparently became exasperated because of the bites and took pre-emptive action by biting the snake's head. Dean was hospitalized in intensive care with severely swollen lips and tongue.
*The Chicago Tribune* reported in June that lawyers for William Carlson, 19, who is serving a 90-year sentence in Illinois for killing his parents, were optimistic that Carlson would be awarded the parents' estate. In a plea bargain, Carlson confessed to killing his father, who died first. At the moment of his death, Carlson's father's estate passed to the man's mother, whose beneficiary is Carlson. He was not convicted of killing her.
The U.S. Treasury Department's Historical Association announced that it is raising money this year by offering Internal Revenue Service gift ornaments for sale at $11 each. The ornaments commemorate the 80th anniversary of the 16th Amendment, which authorized the income tax. The ornaments are 24-carat, gold-finished, three-dimensional models of a 1913 tax form.
Weird News
■ In a June profile, the New York Times reported that the New York City Sanitation Department's artist-in-residence, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, had accomplished the following: she built an archway made of gloves discarded by city employees and a structure made of piled steel shavings from subway car wheels; choreographed a dance of street-sweeping machines and conducted a performance art piece in which she shook hands with all 8,500 employees of the department. On the side, the self-described maintenance artist conducted a ballet of garbage barges in Pittsburgh.
Police in Gonzales, La., arrested Garrick "Lucky" Lewis, 20, in April after a 21-year-old woman complained that Lewis broke into her apartment, lectured her about the need to lock her windows and doors, and left. A half-hour later, Lewis broke in again and allegedly tried to rape her.
District of Columbia Superior Court Judge John Bayley was forced to declare a mishair in a child-bearing case in July when, in the middle of the trial, the defendant's lawyer casually informed the judge that he was leaving on vacation that evening. Lawyer Clayton J. Powell Jr. cited a commitment to his family and to his non-refundable airline tickets. Another lawyer said Powell was committed "professional suicide."
The Hill and Cormier families, neighbors in Kittery, Maine, have been feuding for years about the noisy Cormier family dogs. The Hills have complained that police never take action to stop the constant barking. In April, the police issued the first summons in the feud — to the Hills' son, Henry Paradis, for creating a nuisance by barking back at Cormiers' dogs.
1993 Universal Press Syndicate
8
Tuesday August 24.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Fiske guide gives KU high marks
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
Students at the University of Kansas can now be content that the college they picked to attend earned one of the highest marks by America's most respected college guide.
The University received a rating of four stars out of a possible five by the 1994 Fiske Guide to Colleges in all categories, including academics, social activities and quality of life. Only seven state universities earned higher marks than KU.
"We are very proud of the University of Kansas and what it represents," he said. "The Fiske ranking underscores the exceptional value of the educational experience here."
The recognition reinforces KU's excellent reputation, said Chancellor Gene Budig.
The Fiske guide is edited by former New York Times education editor Edward B. Fiske. KU is the only Kansas college rated in the guide.
KU ranked higher than any other Big Eight university in academics, according to the guide, which reviews, in its opinion, 300 of the nation's best and most interesting schools.
The guide noted the University's recently completed fund-raising drive, which drew $285 million, and said that KU was improving academically every year.
"Kansas has been fighting the battle against academic mediocrity for years and is now seeing the payoff."
"This big public university can compete with more expensive Eastern schools in a myriad of things — excellent faculty, strength in a variety of disciplines, school spirit, even the ubiquitous campus parking shortage."
Fiske praised KU's social atmosphere, honors program, professional schools and the bus system.
the guide said.
But the guide reserved special honors for KU's scenic landscape.
"The real beauty of the campus be in the landscape, and anyone with a knee-jerk regional prejudice against the Midwestern countryside (no, it's not all flat and colorless) should visit Kansas in the fall to witness breathtaking foliage," the guide said.
"I'm delighted that the Fiske guide recognizes the quality we have here," said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
KU's Fiske ranking attracted quality students to the University while keeping Kansas students from going out-of-state. Shulenburger said.
"This makes us more visible to excellent students nationwide, and it helps the state hold onto some of its best students," he said.
Fiske's praise is nothing new to the students who know KU best.
Jennifer Whang, Overland Park senior, said KU's journalism school and college atmosphere attracted her to the University.
"It's very scenic" she said. Lawrence is very cultural, and KU has great sports."
A woman is being carried out of the hospital by three police officers.
Andrew Mitchell, Lawrence junior, is treated by KU police Sgt. Mark Witt and Officer Rick Johnson after being struck by a pickup truck while riding his bicycle behind the Kansas Union.
Student on bicycle collides with truck
Kansan staff report
A student was injured yesterday morning when his bicycle wasstruck by a pickup truck.
Andrew Mitchell, Lawrence junior, was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital by the Douglas County ambulance service. He was admitted with a broken leg and was listed in fair condition last night.
Mitchell was riding his bicycle northbound on Mississippi Street as Richard Ice was turning into the loading dock area behind the Kansas Union in a GMC pickup truck, according to KU police reports. The report said Mitchell
hit the side of Ice's truck and was thrown off the bicycle.
Ice was cited for making an illegal left-hand turn, according to police records.
Lawanna Huslig, a KU Bookstore employee, was outside the Union when the accident occurred and said she helped Mitchell stay calm until the ambulance arrived.
"I heard the crash and saw the bike fly," she said. "Then I just responded the way I was trained to do."
Huslig has been in the Army Reserves for 2/12 years, where she has received training as an emergency medical technician.
Simple precautions could keep students safe
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
ommend that you take it with you.'
As students return to campus, the KU police department is gearing up for another possible semester of unlocked doors, unattended backpacks and unescorted students walking at night.
Rozmirek said textbooks were a favorite target for thieves because they could be resold easily.
But if students took a few simple precautions, the gearing up may become unnecessary, said KU police Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek.
The first precaution students could take is to not leave belongings unattended at any time.
night. Rozmiarek said.
Another area Rozmiarek stressed was protecting property in residence hall rooms. She said students should lock their doors whenever they leave their rooms, even if they are just going down the hall to talk to a friend.
"The most common reports we get are regarding unattended property — bags left lying around." Rozmiarek said. "For anytime you are going to be gone and your property will be out of sight, we rec-
"They think of it like their bedroom, but it's really more like your apartment — you have to secure it," she said. "Once you lock it, double check it to make sure it latches."
She also said students should lock their car doors and keep valuables in the trunk or glove box.
Students should take precautions regarding their personal safety, especially if they are on campus at
She also said students should avoid taking shortcuts across campus, because the regular routes are the ones that are well-lighted. In addition, officers patrol regularly traveled routes more often at night.
"If you're going to the library at night to study, see if a group of people from your hall want to go with you," she said.
Rozmiarek said that while she liked to remind students of safety tips at the beginning of the school year, she would like students to make personal safety part of their daily routine.
"We want students to do these things on a continuous basis, not just now that we've mentioned it," she said. "We want students to keep safety in mind throughout the year."
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday. August 24.1993
9
Former Husky criticizes Pac-10's penalties
Ex-quarterback calls sanctions biased, unfair
The Associated Press
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — Former University of Washington quarterback Billy Joe Hobert said yesterday that the Huskies were punished unfairly by the Pacific-10 Conference because they had been so successful.
Hobert's acceptance of a $50,000
loan was one of the NCAA violations cited by the Pac-10 on Sunday when it announced a two-year bowl ban and other sanctions against the school, which has been to three straight Rose Bowls.
"I think it was totally biased," said Hobert, a rookie with the Los Angeles Raiders. "I think (other Pac-10 schools were) sick and tired of the University of Washington kicking their hind end every time they played them.
Hobert said he felt badly about his role in the scandal, which led to his early departure from school and Monday's resignation of coach Don James.
"They should have had some other unbiased institution come in. Maybe
somebody like the Big Ten, Big Sky or something like that. I just don't think the nenalties levied fit the crimes."
"I've felt remorse since this whole thing started, as far as the university is concerned," Hobert said. "I don't feel bad about me leaving, because I know I can make the best of any situation. But I'm not sure about the other guys. I don't know what their plans are."
Hobert said he and his family received threats last year after his loan was publicized.
"A guy called up and said, 'Are you the father of Billy Joe Hobert?'" Hobert said. "Then he said, 'I'm going to hurt your wife and hurt your family."
In addition to the bowl ban, the Pac 10 ordered Washington to give up scholarships and $1.4 million in television revenue.
"The NCAA isn't even that tough," Hobert said. "That just blows me away. Coach James doesn't deserve
this. The university doesn't deserve this. It's just disappointing."
Hobert said he had not spoken with James yet.
"The guy is like a god up there," Hobert said. "He's had a phenomenal career. He's done great things for the university and accomplished so many things. For him to leave like this, it's just not right. He deserves to go out on a silver cloud."
Steve Emtman, another former Washington star now in the NPL, said he was shocked by the penalties and sorry to see James leave.
"The penalty is not a direct reflection on him or the rest of the coaching staff," said Emtman, a defensive lineman with the Indianapolis Colts. "It's sad to see a guy with a great career like Don's end like this."
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said he was surprised that James quit after 18 seasons at Washington. James won more games — 153 — than any coach in the school's history.
"It comes back to the deal of institutional control," Osborne said. "You can control some things that go on but not everything."
KU's Blevins ready for Seminoles
Kansan sportswriter
There were many expectations of Kansas freshman Tony Blevins when he arrived on campus earlier this month for fall football practice.
Blevins had his expectations, too, of helping the Jayhawks in whatever area they needed his talents. He could not have imagined earning a starting position for the season-opening game.
"I didn't know what to expect when I first got here." Blevins said. "Then all of a sudden, I was thrown in there with the first team. It was a pleasant surprise."
Bleivins is scheduled to start at cornerback Saturday in the Kickoff Classic in East Rutherford, N.J. against No. 1-ranked Florida State. He moved up to one of the starting cornerback positions, opposite junior Gerald McBurrows, when senior Robert Vaughn was shifted from cornerback to strong safety.
"He's got a ways to go yet, but right now he is our starting cornerback," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "He's doing well over there."
Blevins was the headline recruit from last winter's recruiting class for the Jayhawks. The 6-foot, 170-pound freshman from Rockhurst High School in Kansas City, Mo., was listed on three prep All-America teams after making 43 tackles and intercepting four passes in his senior season.
Mason had made a point to redshirt many of his incoming freshmen in the last few years. But he also had said that if an incoming freshman was good enough, he would play him.
Blevins said he could have handled being redshirted this season if that was what the Kansas coaches wanted. Instead, he is preparing to face the top team in college football.
"He's a very mature kid, a very heads-up kid," Mason said. "He's got the same problems as any player with no experience, and he is going to play against some guys who are pretty fast."
28
One of those fast guys is Florida State sophomore Tamarick Vanover, who was listed on several preseason All-American teams after leading the Seminoles in receiving last season as a freshman. He also averaged 51.6 yards on eight kickoff returns, two of which went for touchdowns.
Blevins said that he and McBurrows will share the responsibility of covering Vanover.
Kin Chin / KANSAN
Freshman cornerback Tony Blevins practices covering a receiver during football practice on the practice field south of Allen Field House. Blevins is expected to start against the Florida State Seminoles on Saturday.
By Anne Felstet
Karagán sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
The KU men's tennis team has a lofty goal: to qualify for the Indoor Team Nationalists in February. To participate in the 20-school indoor tournament, Kansas must win the Regional Team Playoffs in November.
Junior player Manny Ortiz said that the team had won the regional tournament three of the last four years and that he believed it had a good chance of returning.
Kansas coach Michael Center agreed.
Kansas retains five members from last season's team, with five new players adding their skills and talents this year.
He said the team has a lot of depth and a lot of youth.
"The new players affect our team in a good way," said Michael Isroff, a sophomore on the team. All the new members have solid skills, he said.
"I am very optimistic about this year," said Center. "Yet I am cautious at this point. It is still very early in the season."
To meet a goal for the fall season, Center had the team conditioning to become physically stronger and quicker. The conditioning helped the
MEN'S TENNIS
The team would use the fall season to prepare for the spring. Center said The fall season is still competitive, but it is not quite as intense as the spring, he said.
team get in shape for the tournaments, he said.
Center said that during the fall the team needed to improve its consistency, as it did not play as consistently as he would have liked to have last season. Isroff would like to see improvement in winning matches.
"We need you in the matches we put ourselves in position to win," he said.
Center, Ortiz and Isroff all said depth was one of the team's strengths.
"We have a lot of good, solid players." Isroff said.
Last year the Jayhawks were competitive in almost every match, but failed to capitalize in all matches. Using this year's added experience, the team needed to take advantage of opportunities to win, he said. :
The fall season will consist of four individual tournaments, culminating with the Regional Team Playoffs Nov; 5-7.
Ryan to return from injury
The Associated Press
Dr. John Conway said the 46-year-old right-hander had a strained muscle in his lower left rib cage.
ARLINGTON, Texas — Nolan Ryan, playing his 27th and final season, will pitch again, the Texas Rangers said Monday after baseball's all-time strikeout leader was checked for arib c injury.
Conway said Ryan is expected to miss his start on Thursday against Boston but believed he would be able to pitch again by early next week. An X-ray of the rib cage was normal, the doctor said.
Ryan sustained the injury while fielding a ground ball in the third inning of Saturday night's start in Baltimore. He is 5-3 with a 4.53 ERA this season and has missed two lengthy spans with a torn cartilage in his right knee and a strained right hip.
The Rangers will not place Ryan on the disabled list.
Ryan said he wanted to work through his injury problem.
"My attitude is if I can help the team in even one or two starts then that's what I want to do," Ryan said. "Having
During the rehabilitation period, he ran into additional trouble when he cut his foot near his ranch and received seven stitches. He returned July 19, with a 4-1 record before Saturday's injury.
to deal with discomfort or to work to come back doesn't bother me. That's part of the job."
Ryan made it plain he was committed to pitching again and would resist ending his career on the disabled list. He announced before the season that this would be his farewell season, but injuries have sidelined him.
Ryan started the season healthy, but after two starts he underwent surgery April 15 to remove tortilage in his right knee. He returned May 7 but injured his hip that night against Kansas City. He then spent 72 days on the disabled list — the longest stint of his career.
Ryan left in the fourth innings when experiencing pain on the mound. To that point, he had given up only one hit, but it was a grand slam by Mike Pagliarulo after Ryan had issued three walks. After that, Ryan retired seven straight batters before taking himself out of the game.
Swim teams set high goals
Men and women work toward strong finish
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The only way the Kansas men's swimming team can improve on last year's Big Eight finish — beat Nebraska.
The Jayhawks finished second to Nebraska last year and are hoping that this might be the year they are able to
MEN'S SWIMMING
knock off the perennial Big Eight champion. The last time Nebraska didn't finish first in the conference was in 1979 when Kansas won the conference championship.
The Jayhawks enter the season after defeating Nebraska in the National Championships last year and finishing 16th in the nation.
Kansas coach Gary Kemp said he was optimistic about the season and expected his team to be competitive against teams like Nebraska.
The Jayhawks' best showing on the national scene came in 1980 when the team finished 13th in the nation.
mners. Kempf said Quercigraosha would be one of the team's best distance swimmers.
Quercigrosassa said he believed this year's team was improved over last year and had a good chance of defeating Nebraska. He said the men's swimming program had improved in the level of competition during his tenure at Kansas.
Team captains Tim Davidson and Dan Quipercagrosa will lead the Jawahra swim
"Tim and Dan have been quiet leaders for the last three years," Kemp said.
"This year I believe we're a better team than Nebraska." Querciagrissoba said.
The team also will feature All-Americans Marc Bontrager, Scott Townsend and Curtis Taylor.
"Both Marc and Scott know what it takes to compete at this level," Kempf said.
Kempf said he thought the team had one of its best freshmen classes since his arrival at Kansas in 1981.
"I'm looking for solid contributions from our freshman class," Kempf said. "Early on we're going to look to develop some of the younger guys."
While the men are trying to improve on a good season, the women's team is coming off what Kempf considered a disappointing end to a good season. After winning the conference championship, the team finished 27th in the country.
"I blame myself for the finish last season." Kempf said. "I think we were a little emotionally drained going into the national meet."
The team will feature All-Americans Katie Chapeau and Frankie Hanson. Senior team captains Krista Cordes and Marsha Trachi will lead the team.
Kempf said the team would be one of the most balanced the school had ever produced.
"There really isn't a weak spot on the squad," Kemp said. "I think we have capable people at every event."
Kempf said the key to the team's success would be dependent on getting the relay teams qualified for nationals, because the relay teams score more points than the individual races.
Cordsen said the relay squads' failure to qualify last year severely hurt the team's chances in the national meet. She agreed with her coaches that last year's team was emotionally dramed going into nationals.
"Last year's finish was very disappointing because we were ranked as high as eighth." Cordsen said. "We were very excited when we were ranked above as like SMU and Northwestern."
Cordsen said she thought this year's team had a good chance of fulfilling her coach's Top 10 expectations. She said she thought the team would put on concerts put on the team would help it improve.
"Last year the pressure really helped us in the big meets against the likes of SMU and Northwestern." Cordsen said. "I think we're hungrier because of last year's finish."
KANSAS
2X
FOOTBALL
X's and O's
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
KU quarterback coach Dave Warner discusses the next play with an offensive practice team. The Jayhawks practiced yesterday, preparing for their season opener against the Florida State Seminoles.
10
Tuesday, August 24, 1993
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Questions? Call Andy at 864-4760
Welcome back to lecture halls, all-nighters, pizza breakfasts, and Kinko's.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jayhawks want next Series
Team starts work on achieving goals
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Although the College World Series is more than 10 months away, the Kansas baseball team is already thinking about a return trip to Omaha, Neb. But this time the team wants to win it all.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said that last year's team had four goals. The team wanted to win the Big Eight regular season title, the Big Eight tournament, the regional tournament and the College World Series.
"We only met one of those goals, winning the regionals," Bingham said. "This year's team is very focused on the other three."
fall schedule that runs from Sept, 20 to Oct. 25. The team will compete in intrasquad games and will play some junior college teams, Bingham said.
Before they can reach those goals, the Jayhawks will prepare for the upcoming season with a five-week
"The goal the fall will be to get our young pitchers some experience." Bingham said. "Mike Green, Scott Tittrington and Clair Baind need more innings, as well as our freshman pitchers."
we're looking at Brian Turney and also Clint Hardesty at that position," Bingham said. Both players were on last year's squad.
The fail practices and games will also be time to work on filling positions left vacant by last year's senior standouts Jeff Berlinger and Jeff Niemeyer. Two players will compete to fill Berlinger's spot at second base, Bingham said.
Bingham said Turney, a sophomore, was the front-runner for the position right now, but he needed to improve defensively.
Jack Wilmont is expected to replace Niemeyer as catcher.
"He is there because of his summer experience at Hays in the Jayhawk League," Bingham said.
Despite his summer baseball play, Bingham said Wilmont needed Division 1 game experience. "He is unproven," Bingham said. "This fall we're going to get him in as many game situations as we can."
Another problem with losing Niemeier was that he provided strong leadership.
Niemeyer was kind of a quarterback for us behind the plate, "Bingham said. "We need back to get that point in a leadership role."
Bingham said he wasn't worried about the team from a talent standpoint, but was concerned with the lack of team leadership.
we lost a great amount of leadership losing seven seniors," he said. "We'll have to see if this group of seniors can provide that kind of leadership. It's a new role for them. I have all the confidence in the world that they can."
Here is what to do to try out for the Kansas baseball team:
Baseball tryouts
Information will be given concerning the equipment needed for practice.
Players will be asked to fill out forms prior to practicing.
Anyone interested should call the baseball office at 8647907 before practice begins Sept. 20.
Practices will be at Hoglund Maupin Stadium, just south of Allen Field House.
KANSAN
"It is an everyday process, and the process is always more fun than the outcome." Bingham said.
The team will start the fall season with walk-on tryouts Sept. 20, which are open to all students.
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL
Royals defeat gives Twins needed boost to end losing slump
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kirby Puckett's 10th-
innning sacrifice fly gave Minnesota a 3-2 victory
over the Kansas City Royals last night and ended the
Twins' six-game losing streak.
Ruckett drove in the winning run against Jeff Montgomery, 3-4. The AL save leader who came on to pitch the 10th. The sacrifice fly to right-center came after singles by Pat Meares and Chuck Knoblauch.
Larry Casian, 4-1, got the victory, allowing two hits, walking one and striking out two in 2-2-3 innings. Paul Willis got his third save, striking out Gary Gaetti for the final out with runners on first and second.
Rick Aguilera, normally the Twins' stopper, missed the game with a sore neck.
Shane Mack singled home the Twins first run in the third after Dave McCarty doubled leading off.
SPORTS in brief
Jose beat the throw to second, but overslid the bag and was tagged out. The umpires, however, ruled that Greg Gagne crossed the plate before the tag-out.
Knoblauch doubled home Mack in the fifth.
Kansas City tied the score 2-2 in the seventh despite Felix Jose's second base-running error in as many innings. Jose reached on a fielder's choice, putting runners at first and third, and Brian McRae followed with a slow grounder to shortstop.
Knoblauch doubled home Mack in the fifth. Doubles by Brian McRae and Wally Joyner gave the Royals their first run in the sixth.
KU
Notes: Kevin Tapai made their team-high 27th start for Minnesota. ... Knoblauch has hit in 20 of his last 22 games. ... Mack has 17 RBI in his last 26 games. ... The Royals swept a three-game series from Minnesota on their last road trip. ... Kansas City had homered in nine consecutive games.
Rovals bring Miller back to KC
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals activated Keith Miller from the disabled list yesterday and sent rookie Phil Hatt to the minors.
Miller has been out since June 5 with a partial ligament tear in his left thumb. He was injured trying to make a tag at third base.
Miller had spent a week on a rehabilitation assignment at Class AAA Omaha where he batted .292 in six games.
Miller, acquired in the Bret Saberhagen trade with Kevin McReynolds and Gregg Jefferies in Dec. 1991, was on the disabled list twice last year and played 106 games. The Royals use Miller at third base and in left field.
McReynolds, who was handed the left field job by Manager Hal McRae after McRae tried platooning him with Chris Gwynn, is down with a sore neck. Gwynn started in left against Minnesota yesterday as the Royals went into the stretch four games
behind the Chicago White Sox in the AL West. Haiti started fast for Kansas City and was virtually the entire offense as the Royals stumbled out of the gate at 2-9. Haiti, one of the young players the Royals are counting on for the future, slumped and was hitting, 218 with seven homers and 36 runs batted in when he was sent down. Much of that production came before June.
Ventura accepts suspension
CHICAGO — Robin Ventura of the Chicago White Sox dropped his appeal of a two-game suspension for fighting with Nolan Ryan, AL president Bobby Brown announced Monday.
Ventura's suspension for the Aug. 4 incident, in which Ventura charged the mound after getting hit by a pitch, began Monday night against the New York Yankees.
Manager Gene Lamont said that the final decision was Ventura's, but that the White Sox wanted the matter out of the way as they battle for the AL West title.
"Personally, I would rather have had a hearing, but I don't want to disrupt things," Ventura said.
The left-handed hitting third baseman was punched six times in the head and face by Ryan, who was not ejected from the game.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 24, 1993
11
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842-1376
841-7421 VISIONS 806 Massachusetts Featuring I.a. Eyeworks
Classified Directory
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
305 For Sale 405 Real Estate
304 Auto Sales 403 Roommate
360 Miscellaneous Wanted
370 Want to Buy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any admittance for housing or employment that discriminates against person group of persons based on nationality, nationality of disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in relation of University of Kansas regulation or
I
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertisements in this newspaper may be obtained from us.
subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any "purpose" or "identifiable" race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin or an intention to, use such preference, limitation or discrimination.
100s
Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Light mechanical work your home or nine also var.
Available for moving or salvaging 548-298
120 Announcements
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION First meeting of the semester will be Thursday, August 9, 2018. S. 306 to 316 BCPCC 448. Rick Clock, campus minister, Scott Lee, BS president, 865-382. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, intramural sports, mission programs. A Christian campus ministry open to everyone.
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COMMUTERS. Sell Servie Car Pool Exchange
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STUDY SMARTER NOT HARDER. Learn strategies to help you excel academically, techniques to increase concentration and improve retention skills. Presented by the Student Assistance Center
Thursday, August 26. 7-8 p.m.
330 Strong Hall
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TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer you inquiries to the Student Assistance Center.
WANT TO HIRE A TUATOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong
TIME MANAGEMENT Workshop Start the semester off早, get control of your time and life. Thursday, August 26, 7:4pm 330 Strong FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WORKSHOP
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男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
PUBLIC RELATIONS FALL 30 INTERN. Gain experience working with public relations team promoting Kansas City metro location. Job includes researching story ideas, filling information requests, etc. This position is non-salaried but can apply for course credit. It may be full or part-time. Please contact HR directly. Time will pay for parking expenses. Please resume and write sample to Prime Time News Bureau, 911 Main Street, Suite 2604, Kansas City, KS 74105. Or, contact Skira Dreamsamat (813) 665-2222.
Adams alumini Center needs AM-PM Dishwasher, Cup & Deskrenters. Flexible hours. Apply in person or online. Call (312) 475-6500 or visit www.adamsalumni.org for Emergency Screener for the pre-admission screening for psychiatric hospitalization. Be available 5:30 p.m to 8:30 a.m and we see them on Monday through Saturday. Provide nursing with 2 years' experience with clinical psychiatric services required. Please submit resume to BERNIE CAMMER, M.S., Missouri State, Lawrence, Benton N.CAH, M.S., Missouri State, Lawrence,
Bert Nash CMHC, 310 Missouri, Ser 292, Lawrence
KS. 8644. Unused filled, EOI.
2pm, Must enjoy children. Sunshine Acres
Preschool 842-2232
Assistant Dean (full time)
Required qualifications. Master's degree, organizational and administrative ability, superior interpersonal skills, good writing skills, Good work experience. Preferred. Ph.D. and a knowledge of KU.
Duties: Assisting Graduate School dean in day-to-day operations, keeping track of fellowship applications and awards; working with greeves and program reviews; carrying on correspondence and other matters as assigned by the dean. Completed duties in a program form available upon request at upl 1913 864-2001.
Application Procedure. Contact the Graduate School at 912-8464-3801 for an application form and position announcement. Send completed application form, current resume and three letters of recommendation to Virginia Saylor. The Graduate School, 222 Hall, St. Marys University, Louisville, Kentucky. LS.NEWS 56054
Baby sister needed for 7 yr. old: 3:00 to 5:30 pm
M.F. Transportation required: 842.5698
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Requires good academic record in chemistry,
pharmacy or related science, laboratory expert
or lab supervisor. Must have 8 yrs.
w/kwl.潜入 application with names of
references, and copies of transcripts to INTEK
and M.P.S. An Equal Opportunity
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Cindy care for you & your child. No smokers with charm.
Card size to fit your boy or girl. 32 mm x 20 mm.
Nominal height: 18 cm (7 ft).
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CHILD CARE WANTED: Occasional care for our two children age 6 and 12. In our home near cambridge, MA.
Children Learning Center is now hiring I am and I m p teacher aid for infant and preschool children Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 311 Mane, 842 2185
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Part-time Instructors for Slimmaats, Children's Art, and Aqua Slimmaats; Water Walking Prefer experience in instruction area. $7.00 per hour More information and applications are available st Admin. Services, Room 120, City Hall. 6th & 8th Floor. KS 60544, Deadaug. December 19, 2013 EOE M/F D
teaching coach (TC) positions to work with & enhance the vocational and daily living skills of our students. We also offer a CLO seeks to hire day, evening & night TCs for full-time, part-time & substitute position; the team needs quality proficiency in the quality, prefected, professional people with a 4 yr degree, prefected. Professional students need skills needed for the night teachers. Experience with MRID/DP preferred. Great benefit, competitiveness, excellent work atmosphere & work effort. Please send resume to Delaware, Lawrence. KS 60046, or apply August 23 or 14, at the law firm Floor near the boat in Delaware.
COMPUTER SYSTEM ENGINEER
immediate opening for person with PC networking, LAN management, NOVELL experience, good customer skills CNE training a benefit to the organization. Work on work and applications. Attractive salary benefits. Resume by 6/7 to Director of Client Support Connecting *Point* #11 Mass, Lawrence
Cottonwood Inc. A facility for adults with developmental disabilities, has full and part time positions available, in their residential department. Responsibilities include early awareness, socialization skills and assisting in the daily management of a group home. Some positions may require sleep overs, evening and weekend hours. Proof of good driving record required. Contact Lawrence KS 65042 EOE
JD's wanted for DJ service and Karaoke. Experience prefers Toreen. Michael Beers Entertainment
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. Int needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a driver record. 4-22 hrs per wk.
Faculty family in Lawrence require after school care for 10 yr old boy and 7 yr old girl, 10 to 12 yrs a week. Must have own car. Salary negotiable. Call 843-3394.
Evening delivery driver wanted. Dependable,
must have own phone. Apply at Pekingrestaurant
Full-time live in many needed for 3 active children (toddler, 4.) Reliable, non-smoker, have own car. Housekeeping duties incl B/R + salary and benefits. Previen exf. ref. 641-78292.
full time independent living skill trainer to assist individual with disability and learning skills to attain/ maintain independent life skills; provide a familiarity with a range of life skills; demonstrated commitment to independent living required. Experience working with people with disability and creative teaching skills. Demonstrated ability are encouraged to apply. Complete job description available upon request. Send resume and cover letter to Independence Incorporated Ave Lawrence, RS 6546; by Sept. 3 EOE/A.
Like to work independently in a pleasant environment? Flexible scheduling for part-time jobs available. Must be a certified technician. Apply by calling (800) 327-6941, 1000 Inwood Drive, LAKES KS E O E
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Hiring students to contact Alumina 5-15 6 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays 14:40 hr. starting wage:
September 7 to November 18. Pleas see call Marian
Adams Young at 846-4201, 11 and 2-4 Mondays.
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part time, hourly for Fall Semester jobs. Many job openings will require a full class schedule to apply. See job board, Union Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas University Building for job specifics.
Now Taking Applications
RU GAME PARKING ATTENDANTS: 35 People needed at KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested please apply immediately.
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LAKOR COORDINATION ASSISTANT. Student月ly日耗费 9/19/18, Salary $500/month,20-hour week Dates included training and tasks as assigned Database updates, filing and other duties as assigned, storing database reports using LaTeX, preparing applications for application, current resume, and transcript to Angela Bentrell, Personnel Officer. Computer technicia
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Needed warm responsible female to receive free room and board in exchange for part time care of my 39 year old son. Transportation needed: Refs Call Kristine 823-0030
Now accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time banquet service. Willing to train the right people All Shirts are available. Applicate at Adams Alumni Center, 1260 S. Broadway, New York, NY 10017.
Old-man jobs man, occupational work, rental prop-
ition-paint, yard, clean out, carpentry, etc.
Truck? Skill skills info. P.O. Box #1997, Lawrence,
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Office help needed 11-30 7-28 MWF & 11-31 7-29 AWF.
The last 12hrs at KU have GAf at 1aT and 2aT and be-
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Omeia Factory Store seeks part time sales clerk,
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Outgoing. friendly, dependable person needed at local country club 1809 Crosstea
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PART TIME TIMEPUSVISOR. Mass Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smoketown. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start up to $45/hr 25-30 days, up to $62/hr 25-30 weeks, a week, eve and wkends. Apply at Schumann Food Company. Business office at 719 Magnus, upstairs above Smoketown. M-F: 8-5.
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The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a student assistant position available. REQUEST JOB FOR A STUDENT ASSISTANT IN THE University of Kansas, academic year 1993-94. 2 Excellent communication skills PREPARE PLAN OF AN INTERNSHIP study program. 2. Prior experience as a receptionist. 3. Interpersonal skills. POSITION AVAILABLE September 1, 1993 to May 17, 1994 DEADLINE! Deadline persons are requested by the University of Kansas, day August, 27 1993 to Dr. Barbara W. Ballard, Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a student assistant in the University of Lawrence, KS 65045-1800, (913) 844-3552 EEO/AA
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morning or afternoon in university INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate student (or individual who will be grad student in Spring with strong consideration for Graduate Assistant position in January, 1994. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU and community resources, high school education, leadership experiences, organizational skills, sense of humor, empathy, interested in helping others. Come by KU Info, 420 Union for an application. Must return by Friday, April 26, Coordinator, by 5pm, Friday Aug. 27
Headquarter Counseling center Counselor training provided INFO team, Sun. #28 or Wed. #91
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the School of Business at Cornell University (or 815-346-9288) for positions in our business administration program, 185 Sermont Street, NY.
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Liquidating patent of former professor 100 albums in new condition. $300 ene. for the inf. Bill Fair 842
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
**der women Word Processing.** Former editor
randforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters
169 Chevy Camarafin Z24 5 speed, good cond,
2006 Honda Civic DSi 2.5L gas, good cond,
$ for your HP48 box flap with hex code Leave
Are you Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING& LASER PRINTING for
all your typing needs
Call Makin' the grade at 863-7855
65 gal. aquarium with oak stand for $650 new
$499.00. Call 842-431-83
Donald G Strole SallyG Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
1989 Chevy Cavalier 224. 3 speed, good cond,
$600/offer, must mail 842/1092, leave message.
235 Typing Services
$ for your HP 48 box flap with bar code.
message at 864 5269
Fake iD's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
1980 Manda GLC 82.00 milk run run very well,
*great "runout" car* $cars/0% $aids/84-114, leave
away.
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Merchandise
711 W 23rd #12
Malls Shopping Center
842-1002
BIKES ON SALE FOR THE ADVANCED
INTERMEDIATE AND BEGINNER
COMPARE AND SAVE ON REDUCTIONS
OF THE 91 MODELS BEFORE THYE
ARE PURCHASED.
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
813-526-3000
bike.shop.sunflower.com
X
TREK
Dura: room size roll of carpet in good shape. Call
623-8900
305 For Sale
V
300s
For Sale Fender Precision Jazz Bass Special, also
Praemer P M A. P. Head. 749-2348
4
PROVIDER MILANO $199
ROCKHOPPER COMP S680
STUMPUI UPPER $775
J.D.'s Baseball Cards Buy-Sell-Trade
430 5499 5480
950 5679 5659
700 1299 1279
7000 5699 5599
9000 5100 5150
850 HXH 5129 5149
850 HXH 5129 5149
2100 1199 1199
2100 1199 1199
700 5799 5699
Minolta X79 x90 camera w/2 lenses &案 sara B64 864
4667 W) 1633 2687 (H)
Mini condition (J2K) 3-way speakers with stands.
Modern condition (J2K) 4-way speakers with track reel-to-reel tape recorders 200, 600, 1000. Call
Queen size futon, frame & cover. $235 N.J.裁
plastic or $19 each. Dish set; mountec
furniture Call 842-6550
Call 842-6551
Futons & Frames On Salel
where comfort and quality is assured.
937 Mass.
841-9443
Queen waterbed, complete setup. New heater & matting.
$100.00 + $83.99
Schwinn mountain bike 18 sp, 23" frame, 1 year old
$150.0 O Buit Call 84-92147
340 Auto Sales
R1 Yamaha 650ce 53K Midnite Black $750/OBO B32-
2354
Reliable transportation
800 Food Paint $690/Best offer 841.7746
Want to Build Motorcycle? 76 Kawasaki KZ600 Great Condition $159.00
Curtis 844 1392 1000
Curtis 844 1392 1000
---
400s Real Estate
Wanted: Sports Package Call 841-1102
405 For Rent
Naismith Halls services give students the competitive edge.
Over the Edge
Naismith Halls'
Renta
WASHER & DRYER
For Only $40 a month
Delta Corporation 842-8428
Delta Corporation
- Front door bus service
- Free Maintenance
• GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty,
Large Capacity
842-8428
DVD PLAYER
Fitness room
24 hr. computer center
3301 Clinton Parkway CT, Suite #5
KC 6607 A
3
Dine anytime meals
Holiday Apartments
Weekly maid service
4 Bedroom $800
NAISMITH Hall
---
Bedroom $650
-Recently constructed
- Nice quiet setting
Energy efficient
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
210 Mount Hope Court
843-0011
Advertise in the Kansan!
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
bedroom apartment for rent.Call 749-0445
Apartment-houses, 1 to 2 blocks KU, sorry no pets. 749-5805
Available immediately: 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath house with new cabinets and appliances.
2 M, NS looking for 3rd mrt for 3rd apr Rent
1 M, utilities Near camp C Ted-841
2 M, utilities Near camp C Ted-841
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIENDLY, grad-level modern bld. level duplex, clean air on a park, beautiful 4BR, spacey 21R, c/a, w/d etc., non-smoking! Responsible (female or male seniors) call graduate 641-246, keep哭
Female roommate to share beautiful new condo on bus! *No smoking. No Smokes. Year lease $250-$350*.
5bh yr pre-med student looking for clean room
cabins. 60w, Pool, laundry. Close to campus
Call 841-3891
*This listing has $130 - You*
*Looking for a roommate to share 4kdrm, furnished apt. on bus route 1$19 mon. + 1/4 utils and free*
**Roommate:**
MASSACHUSETTS CITY
By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
- by phone
Advise phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Calculating Rates:
Responsible, non-smoking female student to share
in very quiet computer $150 x 3% = uef. Ref
$300
White male seeking non-smoking male student to have to share big room for a low $15/month and/or monthly fee.
Stop by the Kasan 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.
- BY HUMANIST 11 SMITH STREET, Lawrence, A2 8060
You may print your classified order on the form and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it lobbied to your MasterCard or Vaccum 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 age loans 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 per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged to MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Failed to refunds are ads that were pre-paid by check with cash and are unavailable.
Drive out numbers!
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind bus at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.44
Rates
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
| Cost per mile per day | 1X | 2X | 4X | 8X | 15-29X | 30-X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2.05 | 1.55 | 1.05 | .85 | .75 | .55 | .45 |
| 1.90 | 1.15 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .55 | .45 |
| 1.85 | 1.05 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .40 |
| 1.75 | 1.00 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .50 | .35 |
105 personnel
11 associates personnel
12 associates personnel
12 associates personnel
12 associates personnel
23 professional services
24 professional services
24 professional services
24 professional services
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAKANS POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Total days in paper
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Received cost:___ Classification:___
Phone:___
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 charming your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature
The University of Daly Kilman, 119 Staffer FIll Hall, Larkeville, KS. 60045
**KCS**
www.kcs.edu
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
Floral Artist
"And here's the jewel of my collection, purchased for a king's ransom from a one-eyed man instanbul. . . . I give Zuzu's petals."
12
Tuesday, August 24, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ComputerLand 841-4611
90¢ Bowling
3:30 - 6:00 p.m.
Mon-Thur
Not just for bowling
anymore!
Jaybowl
SPORTS GROUP
864-3545
Mon-Thur
Jaybowl
MARBLE UNION
Not just for bowling
any more!
864-3545
Mon - Thur
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Not just for bowling any more!
DICKINSO
THEA
Dickinson 6
141-800
2339 South Iowa St.
Jason Goes To Hell $^{(4.45)}$ 7:10:9.45
Secret Garden $^{(4.30)}$ 7:09:3.08
Rising Sun $^{(4.15)}$ 7:10:9.50
Hard Target $^{(4.30)}$ 7:20:9.45
Jurassic Park $^{P013}$ (4:10) 7:15:10.00
The Fugitive $^{(4.10)}$ 7:05:9.55
Crown Cinema
63 Primetime Show (+) Hearing Dollar
Senior Citizen Anime Imprint Stars
BEFORE 8 PM, ADULTS $1.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Royal Bengal
The Firm R
Robin Hood PG-13
Surf Ninjas PG
Sleepless in Seattle PG
Heart and Soul PGs 1-13
5.90 8.20
5.15 7.16
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
5.10 7.45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 847-5191
CINEMA TWIN
3101 DOW 841-5197
ALL SALES
$1.25
Aladin** $5.00
Indecent Proposal* $7.25
Dave PG-13 $7.30
$9.40
For Unusual Jewelry & Imported gift items
5 E 7TH
842-1376
10-5:30 MON-SAT
In the Line of Fire $ ^{R} $ 5.00 7:15,9:30
5.00
7-20.
9-40.
5.00
7-30, 9-41
Tonight 25¢ Draws
Bottleneck
913-841-live
737 New Hampshire Lawrence. KS
ROLLERBLADE®
Rentals
Sales
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
841-PLAY(7529)
Wednesday August25 Motherwell and John Brown's Underground
Thursday August26 Ian Moore and Glen Patrick 18 and Over
Community Mercantile
KU's Neighborhood Grocery
the big yellow building at 9th & Mississippi
deli, groceries, bakery, dairy, organic produce, cheese,
bulk department, cosmetics & health and beauty aids.
monday-saturday 8am-9pm sunday 10am-7pm
Register to win a
FREE Mountain Bike!
Specialized Hardrock
offered in conjunction with
SUNFLOWER
BIKE SHOP
drawing held Saturday August 28,1993
Bring in this ad and get 10% off any deli, vitamin, or cosmetics purchase!
and the MaHoots
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
CLASS SESSIONS with
expert teachers
4-VOLUME SET of home
study books
THE TRAINING LIBRARY:
scores of LSAT - style practice
test s and released LSATs
with right and wrong answers
explained; topical tests,
make-up classes
THE LSAT Test Run
TOTAL TRANSFERABILITY
between centers
AFRICAN ADORNED
We teach you to think your way to the right answer
842-5442
SPECIALIZED
KAPLAN The answer to the test question
Specialized Hardrock offered in conjunction with SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP BROADWAY FAIRETTE BOSTON SPECIALIZED
AT&T can help you save money whether you live on campus, off campus or somewhere in between.
STATE
Choose AT&T and save.
No matter where you choose to live, you can save money on your long distance phone bill with AT&T. On campus, your administration offers AT&T ACUS" Service Long Distance savings. Off campus, choose AT&T as your long distance carrier and save with AT&T Savings Options. Either way, you'll save money no matter how your calling needs change. It's all part of The i Plan." The personalized plan designed to fit the way you call.
THE i PLAN™
To sign up, stop by our booth on campus or call 1800654-0471, Ext. 4119.
© 1993 AT&T
AT&T
SPORTS: Kansas tight end Dwayne Chandler says he is surprised by his success and popularity. P
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.4
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
New director wants stability for OAA
NEWS:864-4810
Maurice By Carlos Rejada
Bryan Kansen staff writer
Maurice By Carlos Telada
bring respect
Maurice Bryan, the new director of the Office of Affirmative Action, remembered when he was asked last week to lead a team to test a new facial recognition technology.
affirmative
action
"I said I plan to be a Jayhawk in whatever way I can," he said.
position that has been Bryan began his job Friday. Files and boxes still litter his desk. He said he had yet to unpack many of his boxes from his move to Lawrence.
Vacant for
years.
But Bryan also said he was ready to handle the responsibilities of an administrative office that has been marked by controversy.
The office, he said, was hurt by the 1981 resignation of former director James "Skip" Turner. Turner resigned after derogatory remarks that he made during an interview with two University Daily Kansan reporters were printed in the campus newspaper.
Recent attacks against multiculturalism and political correctness have taken their toll on affirmative action programs, he said. Bryan would like to change that.
"I certainly hope to stay long enough to bring some
but meyen, executive vice chancellor, said Bryan's experience with the Office of Affirmative Action at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash., made him the best person for the job. Bryan worked for seven years there, the last three as director.
sense of stability and establish its relationship with the community, "he said.
"I'm not coming with a preconceived agenda," he said. "Where I have talent and skills is talking with people and identifying what their issues are."
Bryan said he wanted to broaden the scope of the office here, which investigates claims of discriminatory hiring practices and racial or sexual harassment on the job. He said he wanted to expand efforts to accommodate cultural diversity, to help with minority recruitment and retention and to educate students and faculty about sexual harassment.
What remains unclear is the office's involvement in KU's new consensual relationship policy. Bryan, who worked under a similar policy at Western Washington University, said he would play an advisory role in the enforcement of the new policy.
Bryan said he also wanted to change the public's perception of affirmative action.
"Affirmative action has not always been applied fairly," he said. "That's doesn't mean affirmative action is bad."
Too many people think affirmative action helps minorities at the expense of white workers, he said. Employers who deny jobs to white workers because they fear investigation by affirmative action groups creates such negative feelings.
Bryan attended Ottawa University in Ottawa between 1967 and 1971, when racial tensions were at an all-time high. He said the turnout shaped many of his later views.
"The whole '60s period — and what was happening then — influences how I think about these things today." Bran said.
He said he did not mind the views of those who disagree with him and with affirmative action but was worried about the tone of recent criticism.
"What's interesting now is that the so-called conservative voice has much more presence than it had in the '60s," Bryan said. "That's not negative if they can engage in dialogue, but people get entrenched in their position and dialogue ceases."
P. R. C.
THEY WERE ALL ON TREADMILLS.
Robinson beefs up its exercise room
Maurice Bryan took over as head of the Office of Affirmative Action Friday. He was to KU from
Additions include treadmills, step machine $ ^{a c} $
Tricia Baltin, right, Memphis sophomore, and Hillary Mogue, left, Overland Park sophomore, use the treadmills in Robinson Gymnasium. The treadmills were a part of recent equipment acquisitions.
By Liz Klinger
kongen staffente
Kansan staff writer
If you ever wanted to run like Space Age cartoon character George Jetson and his dog Astro on a wild and crazy conveyor belt, your opportunity has arrived at the Robinson Fitness Center.
Three new commercial-grade,
Precon C964 treadmills are
among the $30,000 worth of new
equipment, repairs and improvements that the fitness center
received this summer.
The 220-volt treadmills replaced the center's lower-voltage treadmill, Allan Heinze, director of physical education and recreation facilities, said the new machines function on a 3 percent decline and incline. Another feature, a flex-bed, adjusts to the impact made by the user.
Because of last year's popularity of the center's ski climbers, two additional Universal footsteps were purchased. Heinze said the center bought Universal machines because they were better for the body as the
machines are designed to allow users to step in an anatomically correct manner, he said.
The older Universal equipment in the fitness area was upgraded with new padding and placards to use each piece of equipment.
The weight room area received two additional Nordic Track 900s, which provide a workout similar to cross-country skiing. The number and selection of dumbbells has been extended from one set of weights in increments of 5 to 85 pounds to two sets of weights in increments of 5 to 100 pounds. A decline bench for weight-lifters was also added. Black rubber tiling was installed in the weight-lifting area to protect the floor from dropped weights.
St. Louis sophomore Anna Hofftett said the new equipment in the gym was nicer than last year's aging weights.
"A lot of the dumbbell sets were missed." Hoffstetter said. "They were gross and old. The new weights are nicer."
Doug Hedrick,graduate teaching assistant in health physical
education and recreation, said the improvements had created a nicer atmosphere which would draw a larger number of visitors to the center.
Heinze said the changes in the center were made as a result of students' and physical conditioning instructors' suggestions.
He said the money to upgrade the 5200-square-foot area came from student funds the department receives and facility use
The center is for educational and recreational use.
Starting Oct. 4, Monday
through Thursday evening hours will be extended from 10:30 p.m. to midnight.
Heinze recommended that people work out around 9 p.m. to ensure a full workout.
"At 5:30 p.m. this place is really booming," he said.
KU police unit reorganizes
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
The KU police department has divided into three entities, but department officials said the University community will not notice the change.
"Our overall mission of trying to make this campus a safe environment in which education can occur has not changed," said Jim Denney, director of the KU police department. "This change should be transparent to the users of our services."
Another reason for the change is to combat budget cuts that have occurred in the past four years, Denney said. The KU police department has lost three dispatchers, two members of the clerical staff, one lieutenant and one detective because of the cuts, he said. The department also has reduced its marked patrol fleet by one car and cut back office hours.
The department has been divided into police operations, emergency communications and safety and security. The change is primarily a budgetary one, designed to define more clearly how money is spent and where needs are within the department. Denney said.
Major Ralph Oliver is in charge of police operations. He said the new organization allows him and his staff to concentrate on the daily street patrol and community needs.
"By putting the three on separate financial footing, we hope we can more easily absorb the cuts while not doing anything second rate," Denney said.
Liz Phillips, who is in charge of emergency communications, said designating dispatch as a separate entity from police operations was part of a national trend to make dispatch responsible to all the entities it serves.
what type of services they want ... We need community involvement to take the police department in the direction we want to go.
Denney said he expected to address many other areas of shared responsibility, as well as the specific duties of each department, as the new organizational structure evolved.
"We are reevaluating all of our services." Oliver said. "We are asking the community
"Whom we serve depends on what the situation is." she said.
John Mullens, in charge of safety and security, said he would share some responsibility for crime prevention and safety issues with Oliver.
A new structure
The KU police department has split its operations into three areas of service based on how it serves the University community:
Police operations-
Includes all commissioned police officers, including the bicycle patrol and detectives
Safety and security
Emergency
Corporate 911 emergency dispatch,
police records office, computer network
control and maintenance, and security
radio network
Emergencycommunications—
Comprises all campus security organiz-ations, fire and safety codes for campus buildings and emergency preparedness plans for the University
Spanish classes restructured to aid students Changes meant to help ease transition from high school By Kathleen Stolle
Kansas staff writer
Beginning this fall, s.
104 who had one-half
to one year of high
school Spanish were
placed in Spanish 105.
Those with two or
more years were
placed in Spanish 111.
Beginning this fall, students initially enrolled in Spanish 104 who had one half
TONGUE TWISTER: Students stumble through their first experience in a college foreign language class. Page 3.
Students who had never been exposed to the language remained in Spanish 104.
In the past, no distinction was made among students enrolled for the first level course, said Janice Wright, coordinator of first-var language classes.
But now, the Spanish department has opened eight sections of Spanish 105 and 15 sections of Spanish 111. The number of Spanish 104 sections was reduced from about 35 to 12 sections.
"They all get to start at the beginning and are placed with people on their level," she said. "Some kids are nervous, but we will prepare them to go on to the next level."
Research from last semester indicated that nearly a quarter of all Spanish 104 students had a half year to one year of high school Spanish and that 50 percent had taken at least two years.
The result of mixing the students with various skill levels was boredom and absenteeism for the experienced students. For the beginners, it meant heightened anxiety.
"They were having to compete with those who had more Spanish, and that created a difficult situation for everybody." Wright said.
Abbey Lerman, Buffalo Grove, III., freshman, is not so sure the change is for the better. Despite her two years of high school Spanish, Lerman said she was not ready for the accelerated Spanish 111 class.
"When I was in high school I thought when I got here I'd be able to all over again," she said.
Wright said that in special cases exceptions may be made.
Joe Van Zandt, director of the Advising Support Center, said that he was aware of the anxieties some students placed in the accelerated introductory classes were experiencing.
One such exception, Cara Crain, Tulsa, Okla, sophmore, said she was grateful that she was allowed into Spanish 104 although she had taken some Spanish before.
"It scares some of the students, but I don't suppose there's any need for them to be feeling nervous," he said. "I think in the long run Spanish has done a good thing."
INSIDE
POLICE DEFENSE
Students can 'Meet-A-Professor' at home
Some of Lawrence's most interesting creations can be found being driven on city streets. Those cars are mobile artworks that often reflect the owners' personalities.
Like car, like driver
Page 9.
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
That was only some of the advice Dalley offered as part of Meet-A-Professor night, a program facilitated by the Office of New Student Orientation to provide informal settings for students to meet faculty members.
"Don't do what other people want you to do, do what YOU want to do. Spend time with the people you care about. And be in touch with your sexuality." he said.
Milton Scott, assistant director of the department of student housing and head of the committee that planned Meet-a-Professor night, said that all residence and scholarship halls, Jayhawker Towers and 17 fraternity chapters participated in the annual program.
The main purpose for the special night, Scott said, was for new students to meet a faculty member in an informal setting and to see the professors as regular people.
Scott said 25 professors also were participating in a new Faculty Association Program, which is intended to extend contacts that were initiated on Meet-A-Professor night. Participants in the program are encouraged to have one activity each month, such as dinner, so students can interact again with the faculty.
"We're trying to get out of that' one night and you never see them again' thing," he said. "And we're trying to provide an opportunity for long-term interaction."
Faculty members who participated in Meet-A-Professor night said they believed the informal interaction with the students was valuable.
John Head, associate professor of law who spoke to residents of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity last night, said, "I think back 20 years ago when I started college I
was reluctant to walk cold into a professor's office and ask how to get through college.
"I think the residents get a lot out of it," McLean said. "She always has good stories and knows a lot about the University.
"If I show up in a prearranged way, maybe a student who would be reluctant to find help will be more comfortable approaching a faculty member."
"I think it especially helps the freshman because then they know at least one professor to go to if they need help with advising or anything else."
Janice McLean, Scammon junior and proctor of Miller Scholarship Hall, said she thought the residents gained from interaction with their adopted faculty members. McLean said Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, already had been participating in hall activities for years.
Ted Johnson, professor of French and Italian and Phi Kappa Theta's adopted professor, said student-faculty dialogue was
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.
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare,
discusses relationships with Hashinger
and the Internet.
very important for both the students and teachers.
"Whatever can be done to encourage one-on-one communication, I think it's great," he said. "It's beautiful. It's a sacred thing."
2
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday
MATEPIZZABOY... Special
THE ULTIM
357
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
Eat at Rudy's or I'll be back!
.357Special (DINE IN OR
CARRY OUT ONLY)
$3 Small One Topping
$3 Small One Topping
$5 Medium One Toning
$5 Medium One Topping
$7 Large One Topping
Tax not included
Great Pizza, Great Price
620 W. 12th
(behind the Crossing)
749-0055
FUTON
FUTON•SALE
Cheapy Sleepy frame & foam-core futon
starting at $119
People Sleeper
frame in twin size $170
Metro frame & foam-core futon
full size $280
Futon manufacturers since 1982
Our premium futon mattresses are on sale 15% off! Five styles and two thick-nesses to choose from.
generic futons
twin 95
full 120
queen 135
BLUE HERON
937 Mass. St.
841-9443
frame in twin size $170
COLLECTION
Futon manufacturers since 1902
Our premium futon
mattresses are on
sale 15% off! Five
styles and two thick
necesses to choose from.
---
STUDENT SEMESTER SALE
STARTS AUGUST 16th 1993
1-MONTH ...2500
1- SEMESTER...84 $ ^{80} $
6 - MONTH ... 116 $^{60}$*
1- SEMESTER (WOMEN) $ \dots 53^{00} $
- THIS OFFER ENDS OCTOBER 1st
TELL YOUR FRIENDS!
JUNKYARD'S JYM 1410 KASOLD·842-4966
ON THE RECORD
SOON TO BE
LAWRENCE ATHLETIC CLUB
A student's clothing, towels and miscellaneous items, valued together at $880, were taken Aug 16 in the 500 block of Grayson Drive. Lawrence police reported
Two bicycles and a lock, valued together at $390, were taken from the Ellsworth Hall bike rack between July 17 and Monday, KU police reported.
A student's cassette tapes and tape player, valued together at $250, were taken Saturday in the 900 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
A student's drivers license was taken between Friday and Sunday, KU police reported.
at $200. Cause of the damage is unknown.
A student's patio fence was damaged Sunday in the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated
Eighty one dollars was taken from a student in the 1400 block of Seventh Street on Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's compact disc, belt,
leggings and sweatshirt, valued
together at $120, were taken Monday
in the 1800 block of Naisthum
Drive. Lawrence police reported
Three windows on the east side of Lewis Hall were broken Monday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $150.
CORRECTION
include sophomores and juniors, not just freshman.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 73°/69°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 96°/73°
Chicago: 80°/61°
Houston: 100°/79°
Miami: 97°/60°
Minneapolis: 79°/64°
Phoenix: 105°/89°
Salt Lake City: 80°/59°
Seattle: 69°/55°
LAWRENCE: 87°/73°
Kansas City: 77°/73°
St. Louis: 83°/72°
Wichita: 101°/78°
Tulsa: 104°/79°
TODAY
Partly cloudy
: 87°
Low: 73°
Tomorrow
Sunny
High: 93°
Low: 72°
Wednesday
Sunny
High: 95°
Low: 74°
Source: Associated Press
John Paul Page: KANSAN
The sorority rush story on Page 1B in Monday's Kansan contained false information. The 656 pledges
Sun
Robert Minor, professor and head of religious studies, will present a program "The Men's Movement: Can Real Men Really Identify Themselves" at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call 843-4933.
The St. Lawrence Catholic Center will hold its annual St. Lawrence Center Fiesta at 5 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. The fiesta will
ON CAMPUS
include food, a Karaoke machine, a dunk tank and prizes from area businesses. For more information, call 864-4126.
**KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 5:30 tonight on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.**
KU Environics will hold its weekly meeting at 6 tonight in the International Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 844-7325.
mation, call Maggie Romens at 832-8223.
The KU Crew Team will hold an informational meeting at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. For more info-
Rock Chalk Revue will hold an informational meeting at 6 tonight in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Those interested can find out about Rock Chalk Revue and positions available on the advisory board and special committees. For more information, call Kristi Klepper at 865-4223.
The Society of Women Engineers will hold a picnic at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Potter Pavilion. For more information, call Charity Hastings at 832-8904
Jaylawker Campus Fellowship will hold a meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Pioneer Room of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-1115.
Welcome back to lecture halls, all-nighters, pizza breakfasts, and Kinko's.
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A
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Backpack 3.00 4.25
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IN THE JAYBOWL
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
3
Chalk murals liven wall
Colorful art grows each night
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The drab cement wall just south of Battenfeld Scholarship Hall that once greeted students on their walk to campus gradually is being replaced by colorful, psychedelic chalk murals.
Many KU students like the expressions of art that appear on the walls overnight, and they have two Battenfield residents to thank for starting what could become a new trend.
Aaron Killigge, Lawrence sophomore, and Garth Atchison, Manhattan sophomore, said they got the idea for the murals after they had seen a chalk mural done on another cement wall near the hall.
Although most of the mural is abstract shapes and designs, there are some distinguishable figures, including a man and a woman, an eye crying tears and a huge cigarette with the caption "Why can't I be content when life treats me so good."
"Garth had some chalk and he started with the eye. 'Killogree said,' I thought it was pretty cool so I bought some chalk and started drawing too."
The two friends began the drawings last Sunday night, with minimal lighting from the scholarship halls. Every night since, either Atchison or Killigree have added something to the mural.
Brit Laurent, Battenfeld resident,
said it was fun to watch people stop to
look at the mural. "People just come
up, stand there, read it and look at it trying to figure it out," he said.
Ron Tippie, former KU student, said that the mural brought back memories of the old art fraternity, the Acacia House.
Killgore said he was glad there were positive responses to the mural and that he hoped that others would come up and draw on the walls with them.
"Hopefully we'll get more than just those murals done — I think it would be totally cool to fill the whole wall up," he said.
"I'm not fond of the cigarette nural, but otherwise the color is nice, there's nothing obscene and it's an improvement over that ugly cement," he said.
Sgt. Chris Keary, KU police shift supervisor, said that chalk is not considered a form of vandalism because it washes off.
I will provide the text content from the image. Please provide the text, or type it if it's not available.
A mural just south of Battenfeld Scholarship Hall turns the concrete wall into a colorful picture. Two Battenfield residents add something to the mural each night.
Happy!
Holly McQueen/KANSAN
Shauna Aronson and Cindy Foreman, Shawnee freshmen, browse through the posters for sale in the Kansas Union. The sale runs through Friday in the Kansas Union Gallery.
Senators seek more student input
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Sara Swanson is not exactly sure what it is that the Student Senate does besides hand out flyers before elections each spring.
"I would like to see them more active, more vocal," said Swanson, an Iowa City, Iowa junior. "I want to see them and hear them."
Senate has many issues on its agenda this semester, and one of its goals is to make its presence known to the student body. The senate hopes that greater visibility will lead to more student involvement.
Student Senators are concerned that only a small number of students participate in the decision-making
Postersale
process of student government.
"It shouldn't be that decisions are made by 70 people" said Chad Browning, administrative assistant to the treasurer. "They should be made by 70 senators working with 100 students
on each committee "
Travis Harrod, head of the Student Senate Executive Committee, said he also wanted to see the formation of a student advocacy group this semester.
PETER BELLMAN
John Shoemaker
Harrod said the advocacy group
would match students who have grievances to other students who are familiar with University policies
The group would supplement Legal Services for Students, also a Senate program, which answers.
ALEXANDER BURKE
students' legal questions. Legal Services can't represent students against other students, students against KU administrators or faculty members or students in criminal cases.
Tim Dawson
The advocacy group would advise students of their options in cases not
handled by Legal Services
Senate also will work on enrollment procedures, increased funding for Safirde cab services and expansion of Watkins Memorial Health Center
Harrod said it was important students realize they have a say in where their money goes and that they can exercise that say by getting involved in Student Senate. Many Senate services, such as Saferee and Legal Services, are financed from student fees.
He said that making Senate more visible would help interest students in college.
“If we can promote ourselves as an actual, integral part of the university, more people will want to serve the student body as senators.” Harrod said.
Language classes challenge students
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Except for the sound of buses grinding past on Jayhawk Boulevard, Maksimo Proskuriakov's Spanish 104 classroom was silent.
"I'm Maksimo Proskuriakov and I'm going to teach you Spanish," the bespectacled teaching assistant said, breaking the silence with his Russian-laced accent.
"Como se llama?" he prodded his students.
This semester about 4,500 KU students are taking foreign language courses, many not without anxiety.
The 30 story faces didn't crack. El gato apparently had everybody's tongue.
Jennifer Badman, DeWitt, Neb. junior, doesn't mince words when describing her feelings about her Spanish class.
"I'm really scared," she said, rocking nervously on a bench outside her classroom in Wescoe Hall. "I have a bunch of friends who have taken it here before and say it's really hard."
Like Badman, students seeking a bachelor of arts degree from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences must prove proficiency through the fourth semester. Students with foreign language offered at KU, Some programs)
John Whetsine, Highland sophomore, said his anxiety was due to complete unfamiliarity with Spanish.
"I don't understand how they put the sentences together. It's all backwards," he said.
Proskurikov, who taught Russian to Americans and Spanish to Russians in St. Petersburg, said that language was the basis for application beyond conversation, such as in poetry.
*Language is not only the ability to understand or express youself to others, it's a material for build-*
*ing.
But learning to manage, or even master, a language is no mean feat, instructors say.
"The thing you need to know is to study the language every day," said Proskurikov.
William March, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literature. agreed.
"Memorization is the key to language learning," he said. "You have to set aside 10 minutes here, 15 minutes there, four-to-five times a day because our minds don't memorize in blocks, they memorize through repetition."
March, who teaches Croatian and Serbian, said that American students may feel anxious about learning a second language because they usually
have very little interaction with other languages and cultures. He added that students should realize that learning a language is actually a natural process.
"They've learned one language already," he said. But for Jason Nudson, Overland Park sophomore, the task was much harder.
But other students elect to take a foreign language
If I'm not going to pursue that as a career choice.
I don't want this language is enough.
As a business major, Paul Landberg, Vaxo, Sweden, senior, decided to take German. And when he went to Paderborn, Germany, through KU Study Abroad last semester, he applied what he learned
"When it came to tests, it was important," he said of his proficiency.
For students struggling with a new language, the Student Assistance Center, located in Strong Hall, will be sponsoring workshops in August and September to introduce its tutor resource catalog
Students who qualify may use the Supportive Education Services free tutor service. And the Ermal Garteren Academic Resource Center, also known as the language lab, has foreign language audio and video cassettes available to students.
Lied ticket rates reduced for faculty
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Taking in an opening night of a Broadway production, like the first performance of "The Secret Garden" at the Lied Center, has never had the reputation as a cheap night out.
But Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts, has made that show a lot less expensive.
Thompson offered the school's faculty $20 off the original cost of $50 for "The Secret Garden," showing Sept. 28. He said this was a long-standing
"Fine arts faculty has always got a discount for art events. At least it's something I've done since I've been here," said Thompson, dean of the school for eight years. "There's no conspiracy here against other faculty."
practice
The theater faculty also could purchase tickets for the reduced $30 rate, Thompson said.
The Sept. 28 performance will include hors d'oeuvres, which will raise the regular ticket prices of $30 to $35 by $15 to $20, said Jack Davis,
director of the center.
"We're not talking about a huge group of people getting a discount," Davis said in reference to the Tuesday night performance. "Dean Thompson did this as a gift to the School of Fine Arts."
Poor ticket sales for the performance had nothing to do with the faculty discount, Davis said.
KU students also look for a discount to "The Secret Garden" should consider buying the half-priced tickets for the Sept. 29 performance, Davis said.
"After then, we will open up sales to the public at the half-price rate," Davis said.
Until Sept. 7, only students can purchase reserved-seat tickets for this discounted show. The tickets cost $15 and $17.50 up to the night of the performance, Davis said. But she suggested that students buy their seats before Sept. 7.
"The Secret Garden" will be the first performance held at the new center. Completed in the spring, the 2,030-senat center on West Campus will serve as the main venue for many arts
"The Secret Garden"
Location: Lied Center, West Campus
Dates: Tuesday, Sept. 28 to Sunday, Oct. 3.
Costs:
$50 for "The Secret Garden" gala on Sept. 28
$30 for second balcony and second and third-tier box seats
$35 for orchestra, first balcony and first-tier box seats
Ticket Information: 864-ARTS
events once held at Hoch Auditorium, said Nancy Kaiser-Caplan, public relations director of the center.
FITNESS PROGRAMS
FREE DEMOS ON
THURSDAY 8/26 & FRIDAY 8/27
Hoch Auditorium was severely damaged by a fire caused by a lightning strike in 1991.
SERVICES
208ROBINSON 864-3546
FOR MORE INFORMATION: KU RECREATION SERVICES
208 ROBINSON 864 3546
CLASSES START
MONDAY,AUGUST 30
CLASS SCHEDULE
6:15 AM SUNRISE (MWF)
7:15 AM STEP (MWF)
4:30 PM HIGH IMPACT (M-R)
5:30 PM LOW IMPACT (M-R)
5:30 PM AQUACIZE (M-R)
6:30 PM TONING (M-R)
7:00 PM STEP (M-R)
4:00 PM HI-LO (FRIDAYS)
KU TRIATHLON & SWIM CLUB
MEETING- Monday, August 30,8 p.m. Walnut Room, Kansas Union
- Informational Meeting for those interested in Racing Team immediately following.
4
Wednesdav. August 25, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
On Aug. 10, President Clinton signed into law a program that will guarantee free immunizations to poor and uninsured children.
THE BACKGROUND
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the program will cost the federal government $585 million over the next five years. Under the terms of the plan, the federal government will buy vaccines at discounted prices from drug companies and distribute the vaccines to doctors who will immunize children for free. Opponents assert that parental negligence, not the cost of vaccines, is the root of the problem.
THE OPINION
Education important to immunize America
Every year, thousands of children do not receive the vaccinations necessary to fight off childhood diseases. To combat this problem, President Clinton included in his budget proposal a plan that will allow poor and uninsured children to receive free vaccinations.
Although providing free immunization seems an admirable solution, throwing government money at this problem is not the most effective way to ensure that all children are properly immunized.
Unquestionably, an appalling number of children do not receive the proper vaccinations. However, children often go without immunization not because their families are poor, but because their parents are uninformed or neglectful.
Many parents do not bother to have their children immunized or do not know when their children should be immunized. According to the New York Times, only 40 percent of children 2 and under have been properly immunized. However, 95 to 98 percent of school-age children have received the vaccines necessary to attend school. The vast majority of parents can afford the cost of vaccines, but many parents simply wait until immunizations for their children becomes imperative.
Health departments in numerous large cities already offer vaccinations at no cost. In Chicago, the health department offers free immunization to any resident yet an estimated 71 percent of 2-year-olds have not been vaccinated.
Vaccines are available to rich and poor alike. Instead of spending government money to offer free vaccines, the federal government should seek to inform and motivate parents so that children can be properly immunized at an early age.
Free and low-cost clinics exist in cities nationwide. Consequently, forcing private physicians to offer free services is repetitive and unnecessary. Parents must be educated as to what services are available to them and what their children's needs are.
In order to utilize existing programs, the government must embark upon a community outreach program. The government must air public service announcements, send reminders to parents and knock on doors. Parents must be informed of the necessity to immunize and encouraged to take action for the sake of their children.
Immunizing all children is essential, yet parents receive little or no information detailing the importance of immunization. President Clinton's program, though well-intentioned, wastes government money without attacking the true root of the problem. Only by informing and motivating parents will children be properly immunized.
COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSANSTAFF
Veteran gives more advice to greenhorns
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
AMY CASEY
KC TRAUER, Editor AMY CASEY
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Business manager
Managing editors AMY STUMBO
TOM EBLEN Retail sales manager
General manager, news adviser JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
I know that you aren't going to listen to me. You've had quite enough advice. On every conceivable subject, from every relative and older person in general since you graduated last May. You've had enough advice. After all, you're 18 years old, an adult. You don't need all these people telling you what to do. You're certainly not going to think about what I'm saying. But I think that I'll write it anyway.
So anyway, you're here. Probably planning to hang around for four or five years. Then after graduation, you'll get a job that pays a great deal of money, in a field that is both interesting and rewarding, and in the exact location you've always wanted to live. I'll deal with that fantasy sometime later, but for now perhaps you're wondering what you can expect while you're here.
So, here you are. Usually with a parent or two, and an occasional sibling helping you haul your stuff up the stairs. You weren't really sure you wanted them here. But since the elevators always break on move-in day, the help has been worth the potential for disaster. You're nervous. After all, you really don't know any of these people that your relatives are embarrassing you in front of. You're also excited, because this is what you've wanted for a really long time. But now that you have it, it isn't quite what you expected, is it?
According to statistics, less than half of you will graduate in four years. Barely more than that in five. Some will leave. Some will return later when they are ready. Everyone
Editors
Assistant to the editor J. R. Clairborne
News Stacey Friedman
Editorial Terrill McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Kripti Fogler
Photo Kip Chin, Renes Kneeer
Features Erra Wolfe
Graphics John Paul Foegel
There are opportunities throughout life. Many of us don't make the most of the one we face now. It's not a fatal flaw. But when we go to correct it later we often find that window a little smaller, a little harder to fit through.
looking back on my own experience and those of the people that I have known, I realized how wonderful and how difficult these years can be. In some ways going to class is the easy part. It's the living between classes that can be so hard. It can also be a whole lot of fun. So relax and enjoy the rid. You'll never get the same one again.
Jim Kimmel is a McLoughlin junior majoring in history and sociology.
MKAEELY ChicagoTribute
Health Care
Health Care Reform
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Professor remembers shining Lindley's nose
I have often heard older people say that youth is wasted on the young. I can begin to see why they might think so. That's the reason you have been receiving so much advice since last May. It's not that we think we're smarter than you. Well, actually we do think we're smarter than you. We understand that for us that window of maximum opportunity has passed. Whether or not we've made the most of it, we can't get it back.
You see, never again will you have this combination of so much opportunity and so little responsibility. It is because you are 18, and your opportunities and options, until now, have been limited by age, that it is nearly impossible for you to understand the uninness of your situation.
I don't mean to imply that there is anything wrong with you now. Being 18 when you are 18 is fine. The trick is not to be 18 when you're 25
Someone once said, "Sometimes we don't know how stupid we are until we get a little smarter." This line fits you pretty well right now. Actually it fits us all pretty well. We think that we have our lives figured out, then one day we wake up and realize that everything has changed. We don't know how or why, it just has. You won't be the same person at 22 or 23 that you are now. You won't know why, but you'll probably be glad for the change.
Business Star
Campus sales mgr Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr Blythe Fooch
Production mgrs Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director Shelli Blowey
Brian Fusco
Classified mgr Janice Davis
Business Staff
STAFF COLUMNIST
So look around. Many of the people you see now won't be with you when you walk down the Hill. Or will you be the missing face that someone else is looking for?
JIM
KIMME
Your article on the tradition of rubbing the nose on Chancellor Ernest Lindley's bronze bust brought back memories. The sculpture, although dated 1956, was not put into Lindley Hall until 1963 or put into Lindley Hall until 1963. At that time I was a graduate student in the Department of Geology. Another graduate student and I saw the potential to start a brand new, old tradition by shining the
**Letters should be type, 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 hometown, or faculty or staff position.**
**Guest columns should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. The writer will be mailed to the Kansas reservoirs the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Skinner Flint Hunt.**
will tell you that if you leave, you will probably never return. But you can if you're determined to get a degree. Some will be more successful here than ever before. Others will be less successful than they were in high school. Some of you will meet the love of your life, probably more than once. Many will marry before they leave. A few of you will have children. Fewer still will contract the AIDS virus. One or two will likely die. Usually by accident. Occasionally by disease. Sometimes by suicide.
nose. Before the sculpture had been in place a week, the nose had taken on its present shine. At that time, Professor Frank Foley was chairman of the Department of Geology. Foley, for whom Foley Hall on West Campus was later named, had a fine sense of humor. When asked by a University Daily Kansas reporter to comment on the shiny nose, he reported that "for decades" students had been rubbing Lindley's nose for good luck on exams. That was enough. The new, old tradition
"Poco" Frazier, the sculptor, had keen sense of perspective. When asked about the treatment the sculpture was receiving, he expressed delight that the bust had become so popular with students. Incidentally, Frazier's studio was in the old stone barn just west of Clinton Parkway, which is now occupied by the Lawrence Fire Department.
was firmly in place
Roger Kaesler Professor of geology
Roger Kaesler
STAFF COLUMNIST
VAL
HUBER
一
As I passed the summer months on intellectual sabbatical — in other words, lounging on a Nauyahde couch in front of my TV screen — I couldn't help but notice Coca-Cola's latest advertisements. Cool, cutting edge and computer-generated, Coke ads strive to reach our twenty-something generation. In one of the ads a group of computer-generated polar bears, bottles of Coke in hand, stares at the northern lights — sort of like how I stare at my television. It took me a while to put my finger on it, but finally I realized what was funny about the ads.
HUBER Coca-Cola conspiracy unearthed in Kansas
In each bear's paw was a bottle of Coca-Cola.
Not a plastic two-liter bottle or one of those glass 20-ounce bottles with the plastic twist-off lids that you buy at Kwik Shop, but one of the old, returnable 16-ounce bottles. The kind you used to find at the grocery store but have since disappeared.
I remember as a kid not having enough money to go to the swimming pool in the summer. That was when you offered to take back the Coke bottles for mom. One eight pack (yes, they came in eight packs) was enough to pay for a day at the pool for anyone 12 and under.
It's a Coca-Cola conspiracy.
At some point about five years ago, returnable bottles just disappeared. Now why, in an age when recycling is de riqueur, can we find no returnable bottles?
I asked a friend of mine whom I consider an expert. "I had to go to Iowa for mine," she said.
iowa? Why iowa? I smelled a conspiracy. So I thought I would start at the beginning. I called a local supermarket.
"Hi, remember those 16-ounce returnable Coke bottles? Why can't we buy them anymore?"
"We just can't get them any more," replied the store manager.
anxiety. I did hear that somewhere in the South you can still get a Pepsi for a nickel.
This sounded suspicious. I thought I'd go straight to the top. I called Coca-Cola USA in Atlanta. I was eventually transferred to someone in the media relations department. I asked them where I could get the 16-ounce bottles.
"Gosh, I don't know. I just finished having one myself," she said. "Let me see if I can find someone who can answer your question."
I wonder what Pepsico would have to say about that?
Coca-Cola USA didn't call me back by press time. So I guess the Case of the Missing Coke Bottles will remain a mystery.
I gave her all the information she had asked for. Could it be that she thought I was a Popsi biopi, and was asking me to crack my credentials with the FBI?
"So are you going to use this information in your story? Because if you are, I have to have another office answer your question. Can I take your name, number and zip code?"
"Well, I'm a columnist. This is for a column."
I was then transferred to another office. I recanted my question.
Val Huber is a Lawrence graduate student
marling in Journalism.
The woman on the other end of the line asked, "Is this for a story?"
For the Birds
by Jeff Fitzpatrick
HEY! THIS WILL LOOK GREAT RIGHT OVER THERE
GRRRR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
5
...
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
RPI
Man working
Mark Kopp, Topeka resident, rewires some of the light cables under meathaite Jayhawk Boulevard. Kopp, a facilities operations employee for four years, found it easy to stay in the shade while working yesterday afternoon.
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
As manager of the information counter at the Kansas Union for 11 years, Helen Harrell has seen her share of lost books, wallets and keys.
4. The information counter at the union is just one place KU students can go to look for a lost item or hand in a found one. Many buildings on campus have their own lost and found departments. The main lost and found department is at the KU police station in Carruth O'Leary.
"Besides commonly misplaced items, Harrell said, she has also seen her share of very honest people.
On Monday, someone turned in a container with cash inside but with no ID. Harrell said she was still looking for the owner.
Ten years ago, a KU student named Mary returned a coin押金 with $600 in it. Harrall said. The owner of the purse was identified a few days later.
"But about 3 months later, someone arrived in a rudy ring." she said. "Iwaswaaa." He did it.
iewelrvring."
It belonged to Mary.
"I said to her, 'I can't think of anyone else I'd rather have a lost and found item for.' " Harrell said. "She said to me, 'I guess I got paid back, didn't 1?" Harrell said she tried to track down the owner of any item turned in at the counter.
Scott Martin, KU police storekeeper and manager of the lost and found department, said police also try to contact owners of lost items.
"If no identification is available but the item would be valuable to someone, it stays here for quite a while," he said. "Something like a single shoe we keep for a couple days." Attached to each item are detailed descriptions of where the item was found and when it was handed in. Another copy of the card is kept in a file so Martin can find the item easily when possible owners make inquiries.
items or money not claimed after 6 months to a year go to charity or are thrown away. Harell sells unclaimed books to a bookstore. Unclaimed keys are given to a locksmith to be melted down.
Both Martin and Harrell said any
Martin said the staff at most campus buildings send valuable lost items to his department.
Workers for facilities operations turn in any items they find to the police, said Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations.
Melissa Irwin, iola senior, works at the circulation desk at Watson Library. She said students left behind many different things after nights of studying.
"Nothing weird, though," she said.
"Nobody's left behind their kid or anything."
"But the other day we were all trying on these John Lennon glasses with blue lenses somebody left behind," she said.
Martin said students who need to find or turn in an item should contact KU police.
Students move up Senate's ladder
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
About a year ago. Chad Browning joined the Student Senate finance committee.
Now he holds a position in the Student Senate as the administrative assistant to the treasurer.
About two years ago, Travis Harrod joined the Student Rights committee. He is now the Student Executive Committee chairperson.
Harrod said that many students start out on committees and move on to be senators or even executives in the Student Senate. Anyone can join some committees, even those who are not sure of what Student Senate is all about.
"I didn't understand what it was all about, but I was curious," Harrod said. "I developed a burning desire to understand the Student Senate process."
Browning said serving on a committee was an eye-opening experience.
"I turned around to find out Student Senate has more to do with what goes on than most people think," he said.
The Student Senate has five standing committees on which any student can serve. The committees are Arts and Events, Finance, Multicultural Affairs, Student Rights and University Affairs.
The committees discuss proposals before sending them to the Student Senate for consideration.
John Shoemaker, student body president, said there was a place for every student who wanted to get involved with student government.
"Any student who applies for one of the five standing committees will be placed on one of the five," he said.
Besides committees, students can also apply for positions on Student Senate boards. Board members are appointed by the student body president with approval of the Student Senate. Boards include the Transportation Board, which oversees programs such as KU on Wheels and Safe Ride, and the Recreation Services Advisory Board, which is responsible for administration of Recreation Services and all sports clubs.
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Wednesday, August 25, 1993
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Special troops to go to Somalia
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — An elite force of 400 army soldiers trained to strike sensitive targets with unconventional means will head for Somalia this week. But the Pentagon said the Rangers' mission is not to nab warlord Mohammed Farrah Aidid.
Even so, the Rangers' special training gives them the kinds of skills in unconventional warfare that would be required to flush out Aidin, who has been waging a hit-and-run战军 with United Nations forces for months. The U.N. called for Aidin's arrest in June after an ambush blamed on Aidin's miltia killed 24 Pakistani U.N. peace keepers, but the warlord has managed to elude capture.
"This is not an effort to go after one man," Kathleen deLaski, a Pentagon spokesperson, said. "It's overall situation in Mogadishu."
Somaliian attacks against troops also led to the injury of six Americans Sunday when their truck hit a remote-controlled bomb on one of the busiest roads in Mogadishu. Four Americans were killed in a similar attack Aug 8.
Dellasi sked the Rangers from Fort Benning, GA., will be equipped with personal weapons such as M-60 machine guns and M-16 rifles, as well as 60mm mortars and antitank rifles.
The decision to send the troops has drawn criticism from some Congress members.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said Tuesday that when Congress returns from its August recess, lawmakers would have questions about the deployment.
"What is our purpose? What is the cost? And how long do we stay?" Dole said at a Capitol Hill news conference. He said he wanted to be supportive of the humanitarian effort but had doubts about rebuilding Somalia.
House Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash., said he supported the deployment of the Rangers because they would help protect the U.N. and American troops from Somali attacks.
U. S. Marines landed in Mogadishu last December and now make up 4,000 members of a 25,000 person U.N. peacekeeping force. The U.N. assumed military command last May.
Bad loans may cause loss of aid
900 U.S. schools could lose loans
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The government identified more than 900 colleges and trade schools yesterday that stand to lose their participation in the federal student loan program because their students too frequently default.
Among states, Alaska had the worst repayment rate. The Department of Education said more than 40 percent of the student loans in that state on which payments came due in 1991 were in default, Vermont, with a 5.1 percent rate, had the best record, followed by North Dakota's 6.9 percent rate.
The national average was 17.5 percent.
A 1980 law designed to drive down the number of defaults has allowed the Education Department to drop schools with default rates of at least 30 percent for three consecutive years. The current figures represent defaults in 1980, 1990 and 1991.
Those with default rates greater than 40 percent can be cut off from all federal aid programs, including the Pell Grant program.
Under federal law, schools included on the list automatically will be barred from participating in the loan program unless they appeal either to
the department of Education or to the courts.
Coffeyville Community College is the only school in Kansas in danger of losing its federal financial aid. In 1901, the latest year for which figures are available, Coffeyville had a default rate of 31.3 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
The federal department said Coefville could lose its eligibility for the Federal Family Education Loan Program, formerly known as the guaranteed student loan program, because default rates were more than 30 percent for three straight years among its students who received federal loans.
In 1901, taxpayers lost an estimated $1.6 billion on bad student loans.
Default rates
Here's a list of Board of
Regents schools and their students' default rates on federal loans. The percentages represent defaults in 1989, 1990 and 1991.
Pittsburg State University: 10.4
Emporia State University: 7.6
Wichita State University: 7.3
Fort Hays State University: 6.6
University of Kansas: 4.6
Kansas State University: 4.3
Croats agree to let convoy into Mostar
Source: The Associated Press
The Associated Press
MEDUGORJIE, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Croats agreed yesterday after days of delaying to allow U.N. aid into Mostar to help 55,000 starving Muslims. The Croats also agreed to a truce in the besieged city U.N. officials said.
Cedric Thornberry, the United Nations civil affairs chief in former Yugoslavia, told reporters the U.N. convoy was to enter the city by today.
Muslims had rejected the cease-fire. But there was no such indication from the Muslims.
Gen. Slobodan Praljak, deputy head of the Bosniian Croat army, said that he "had information" the
Fierce fighting between Muslims and Croats was reported in Mostar earlier today. But there were no reports of clashes after the cease-fire took effect at 11:30 a.m. CDT.
The Croats have backtracked for days on promes es to let the convoy into Mostar, where 55,000 Muslims are trapped in the city's Muslim sector. Thornberry said the convoy carried 200 tons of food for the Muslims.
That would be the first substantial amount of aid to reach the Muslims since the Croat siege of the city began two months ago. Another 50 tons is earmarked for the Croat sector, across the river from the Muslims.
Also yesterday, the United States said it would include Mostar in its six-month-old program of air dropping food and supplies into besieged Bosnian areas.
The convoy had been stuck for most of the day in this Bosnian Croat stronghold, 12 miles south of Mostar.
U. N. peacekeepers said residents were on the verge of starvation and hospital conditions were desperate.
Some operations were being performed without anesthesia, more than two-thirds of the residents were displaced, and 60 percent of the buildings were uninhabitable, they said.
Croats and Muslims — each some 42 percent of Mosstar's pre-war population of 130,000 — saw their anti-Serb alliance disintegrate a few months ago as plans for an ethnic division of Bosnia emerged.
Released CIA documents reveal little new data on JFK assassination
The Associated Press
under a 1992 federal law.
WASHINGTON — The dog-eared, yellow manila envelope bearing a "Top Secret" stamp was tied with a faded string bow. Inside were newly released CIA documents on Lee Harvey Oswald, former President John F. Kennedy's assassin.
When it was opened to the public Monday, the envelope's contents turned out to be anything but secret. There were more than a dozen articles inside about Oswald — from magazines like The New Yorker to The Economist.
The envelope was part of approximately 90,000 CIA documents gathered on the assassination that the National Archives released
An initial review of the documents showed that anyone looking for proof of a conspiracy that led to the Nov. 22, 1963, shooting in Dallas — whether the CIA, FBI or organized crime were involved — would be disappointed.
But the CIA withheld about 10,000 other documents, citing national security concerns. Among the documents that were logged but not released:
—A March 6, 1967, three-page memo from then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach described only as "Re CA Mafia connections."
—Excerpts from the files of then-CIA Direc
A May 22, 1961, report in CIA files on "CIA Cuba, and Mafia."
tor John McCone covering a period from November 1961 through December 1964 that include "references to Cuba assassinations, Warren Commission matters," and
— A 28-page, 1975 internal CIA report prepared for "Review of Selected Items in the Lee Harvey Oswald File Regarding Allegations of the Castro Cuban Involvement in the John F. Kennedy Assassination."
The new Oswald materials include little that students of the assassination don't already know. Besides his repeated trips to the Soviet and Cuban embassies in search of a visa to Russia, one key point emerges:
— Although one station officer wrote that Oswald became "a person of great interest to us" in his quest for a visa, the CIA never passed
The files also detail efforts by the Warren Commission, which investigated the killing and found Oswald to be the lone assassin, as well as the follow-up Rockefeller Commission in 1975 and the FBI.
on its concerns to the FBI until the hours following Kennedy's assassination.
For instance, 15 years after the assassination, an FBI agent interviewed a Russian emigrant who recalled nearly verbatim a conversation with a friend, Pavel Golovachev, who had spoken with Oswald in Russia in 1962.
Oswald, a former Marine, defected to the Soviet Union for a period and then returned to Germany.
The Sept. 19, 1977, classified memo to then FBI Director Clarence Kelley said the emi-
grant's friend had worked with Oswald at a radio factory in Minsk and had heard Oswald boast "he would have lots of money in America."
"For example, I will kill the president," the memo quotes the emigrant as saying, recounting Golovachev's recollection of Oswald's words.
According to the memo, Golovachev, who assumed Oswald was joking, also pointed out that he would be arrested and asked what he expected to be paid.
The memo said, "Oswald responded. You don't know America. If I manage this, my wife will become rich." He said this quietly, but with an angry expression, and sounded serious."
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Wednesday, August 25, 1993
7
BRAZZAVILLE, Congo
U.N. workers arrive in Zaire to aid victims of bitter ethnic wars
The unrest in Zaire, one of Africa's largest countries, has forced thousands from their homes in the past year. A team from the United Nations arrived on Sunday and planned to visit the trouble areas.
Ethnic fighting in northern Zaire has killed at least 6,000 people, a British charity said, and thousands more may have died in clashes in the country's south.
Belgium, the former colonizer of Zaire, has accused military dictator Mobutu Sese Seko of stirring up tribal tensions in his effort to deflect growing pressure for democratic rule.
Belgium, France and the United States have cut off aid to Zaire because Mobutu, considered one of the continent's most ruthless and corrupt dictators, refuses to end his 28-year rule and cede power to a transitional government.
The crisis had dragged on since 1901, plunging the central African nation into economic and political chaos.
The strife in Kivu, which borders Rwanda, has pitied the indigenous Nyanga tribe against Hutu and Tutsis of Rwandan origin.
The British charity OXFAM said Monday that at least 6,000 people have been killed in ethnic fighting in the northeastern province of Kivu.
In the southern province of Shaba, the clashes are between native Shabants and Kasai tribespeople.
"It is impossible to say accurately how many people have been killed" in Shaba, said Peter Casaer of the Belgian branch of Doctors Without Borders.
THE NEWS in brief
---
PHILADELPHIA
Siamese twin beats the odds
PHILADELPHIA
The single heart that sustained Stimene twins for seven weeks grows stronger every day in the chest of the one girl who survived and her doctors say her long-term survival prospects are looking better.
"There is nothing about this child at the moment that makes us worry something could go 'clunk' six months from now," said Dr. William Norwood, chief of cardiothoracic surgery at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, yesterday.
He said that the heart would continue to grow like any other heart grows from infancy.
Angela, who weighs 81/2 pounds, was listed in critical but stable condition. Norwood said it "could be a matter of weeks" or days before she is disconnected from a ventilator and breathes unassisted. According to hospital officials, that is normal for the particular type of surgery.
PASADENA. Calif.
PASADENA, Calif.
NASA still looking for lost craft
NASA engineers maintained a vigil yesterday for their Mars Observer orbiter, which remained lost in space while it was supposed to be entering orbit around Mars.
"We're not giving up, and I need to emphasize that point strongly," said Glenn Cunningham, project manager for the nearly $1 billion mission run by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Mars Observer last communicated with controllers on Saturday, but engineers insisted they were confident the spacecraft would execute automatic computer commands yesterday, fire its maneuvering thrusters and start orbiting Mars despite the communication problem
Engineers said the earliest possible signal from the spacecraft would have passed at 2:44 p.m. yesterday, but the time passed and there was no signal.
Mars Observer started its 450-mile-mile trip last year when a Titan III rocket carried it from Cape Canaveral, Fla., into Earth orbit, where another rocket thrust the Observer toward Mars.
LOS ANGELES
King of pop's homes searched
Michael Jackson's ranch and another of his homes were searched by police investigating a child abuse allegation that the pop star's security consultant blamed Tuesday on an extortion attempt gone awry.
Police confirmed that a complaint has been under investigation since Aug. 17, but officials wouldn't elaborate.
Jackson's security consultant, Anthony Pellicano,
said people Jackson knew made a false child abuse
complaint against the entertainer after he refused to
pay them $20 million.
"We do not want to feed any wild speculation on this matter," Cmdr. David Gasson said.
Search warrants were served over the weekend at Jackson's condominium in Los Angeles and his Newland ranch north of the city. The warrants were sealed.
Pellicano, who has worked for the musician for four years, saidJackson gets 25 to 30 such extortion attempts a year.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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U N I V E R S I T V D A I L Y K A N S A N
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
U.S. asks Russia to pull troops
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration called again yesterday for the unconditional and complete withdrawal of Russian troops from Lithuania and a prompt resumption of negotiations between the two nations.
Lithuania and the two other Baltic states, Estonia and Latvia, have the sovereign right to insist the troops depart, and protecting the rights of minorities should be dealt with separately, a senior administration official said.
Under U.S. law, Russia could lose about $700 million in technical aid if its 2,000 to 2,600 troops remain in
Lithuania after Oct. 6, the official said.
But he said the administration had not warned Russia to that effect.
"They've known about it for months," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The Russian foreign ministry on Sunday announced a suspension of its troop withdrawal from Lithuania. This was followed by cancellation of a visit to Moscow on Monday by Lithuanian President Aligirdas Brazauskus to discuss the dispute with Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
Westerday, Thomas Pickering, the U.S. ambassador to Moscow, called on Russian ministers while an American diplomat in Vihnius had a parallel meeting there with Lithuanian
They encouraged the two sides to resume the negotiations and informed them the U.S. position is that the troops should be withdrawn quickly, said the senior official.
authorities
"We're disappointed the talks have stalled," he said. "Our position all along has been that it's in everybody's interest for the troops to be withdrawn expeditiously and the Russian government has committed itself to do so.
"These are sovereign countries. They no longer want Russian troops on their soil."
Lithuania is demanding compensation for damages caused by Soviet troops over the past 50 years. The
Russians maintain they are responsible only for damages over the past 20 months — after the Baltic states regained their independence and the Soviet Union collapsed.
But the senior U.S. official said the Clinton administration was hopeful the dispute would be resolved.
Yesterday, Vitaly Churkin, the Russian deputy foreign minister, scuffed at Lithuania's demand for $146 billion in compensation. He said the country's entire population could retire on that sum.
He said the civil rights of the small Russian minority in Lathuania and the larger minorities in Estonia and Latvia should be protected.
Brazil bars journalists from jungle
The Associated Press
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — Brazil has barred foreign journalists and American and Canadian diplomats from the Amazon jungle site where gold miners massacred 73 Yanomani Indians last week.
The government has been criticized by Indian activists in Brazil and around the world for failing to protect the Stone Age tribe from miners, who have prospected on the Yanomami reservation illegally since 1987.
By restricting access, the government may hope to mute further criticism.
On Monday, Diane Page, a human-rights observer sent by the U.S. Embassy in Brasília, and Canadian diplomat Alan Lattulli were told to return after their plane landed at a remote air force base on the Yanomami reservation.
The diplomats, who said they had received authorization to visit the area from the government's
National Indian Foundation, were told by federal police that they had not received the proper approval.
"We were expelled," Page told the independent news agency Jornaldo Brasil in Boa Vista, capital of the northern jungle state of Roraima. They were to return to Brasília this morning, the U.S. Embassy said.
Reporters from British and French news agencies and the Miami Herald said they were also barred from visiting the site, in remote northwestern Brazil.
The Indians were massacred Aug 17 in their Amazon jungle village of Homoi-Itu. Survivors said about 15 miners lured them from their communal huts with offers of rice and sugar. Then they shot the men and used machetes to kill and hack apart women and children.
Investigators with the National Indian Foundation said 73 Yanomamis were killed.
Lacerta Costa Junior, an agent of the federal police agency, said the Justice Ministry had ordered the police to bar observers from the region.
Federal forensic experts visited the site Monday and collected 12 sacks of body ashes and bones. But police expert Sidney Lemos said there was not enough evidence to prove a massacre took place.
Francisco Bezerra de Lima, a Yanomami expert with the Indian foundation, said the victims' bodies could have been buried along the banks of a nearby river or hidden in the dense jungle.
Violence and disease have killed 2,000 Yanomani since miners entered the region in 1987. Today, about 9,000 Yanomani survive in Brazil and 12,000 in Venezuela.
In Brasilia, President Itamar Franco met Monday with the National Defense Council, the nation's highest law-enforcement body. The council said it would set up a network of federal police and soldiers to protect the Indians.
Witnesses testify in English hearing
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Jose Fabla, the son of Mexican immigrants, is no fan of bilingual education. Learning English was integral to his success, he said, and "I do not want my children to be denied an education in English."
Fabla, the owner of a food company in California, testified yesterday before a panel headed by Rep. Toby Rory, R. Wis., in behalf of Roth's bill to declare English the nation's official language.
Testifying against the measure was Sara Melendez, a Puerto Rican native who spoke no English when she came to the United States. She eventually received a doctorate from Harvard University.
The legislation wouldn't rule out bilingual education programs or bilingual election ballots, but is designed to promote English in immigrant neighborhoods.
Making English the official language would do little to ensure that immigrants learn English, said Melendez, a proponent of bilingual programs.
Drawing upon their personal experiences, the witnesses tested before Roth's Congressional English Language Task Force. Roth was the only member present.
Melendez argued that after more than 200 years of custom, English
is the de facto official language, with Congress, state legislatures and many of U.S. businesses conducting their work in English.
She wondered what was wrong with programs in which students learn math, science and other sub-sciences while being taught English.
"I don't understand how declaim- ing English as the official language will teach everyone English." Meléndez said.
Roth questioned what would have happened if such programs had existed when Europeans emigrated to the United States.
"Could you imagine Yiddish in New York, German in Wisconsin, Scandinavian in Minnesota ... you wouldn't have a United States of America," he said.
Fabla said his parents came to the United States from Mexico in the 1940s and didn't have the help of government programs. They had to learn English to succeed, building a company that now employs 103 people, he said.
"I am proud of my Mexican heritage and my Spanish language. But I do not want my children to be denied an education in English," Fabla said.
He described English as the "language of opportunity" and said that when the government decides to grant special treatment to other languages "it is asking for trouble."
THE NEWS in brief
MIAMI
Floridians still suffering from Andrew
Three hundred-sixty five days later, Hurricane Andrew remains a painful wound slow to heal.
Eurasia
Agonizing memories dog Jaime Curet, who huddled with his wife in their crumbling home on Aug. 24, 1992, watching their daughter's trailer fly by their window in murderous 145 mph winds.
"I feel bad." Curet said. "I feel real bad remembering it, looking back."
The anniversary Tuesday of the nation's most destructive natural disaster was marked with a prayer service, ground breaking ceremonies and block parties. The hurricane left 41 dead and $80 billion in damages in Florida.
But like many of their neighbors, any comfort is tenuous.
Curet and wife, Blanca, are putting their lives back together, with help from the American Red Cross and an $11,500 loan from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. They have moved into a hurricane-damaged house they're fixing up.
Reminders of the devastation are everywhere. Hardly a single tall tree remains standing. Many businesses have closed forever, their empty hulks lining streets.
NEW DELHI, India Mother Teresa recovering
Homestead Air Force Base, where 8,000 people once worked, will stay open, but in a shrunken form, no longer an anchor for thousands of military retirees.
An estimated 100,000 people fed the area. Divorce is up 25 percent, domestic violence cases soared, schools reported suicide attempts and increased discipline problems.
Virtually every block has at least one rubble-strewn abandoned house.
Mother Teresa told her doctors today that she was feeling fine and would like to get out of the hospital to go back to work caring for the poor.
"But we had to tell her that she needs more rest," said Bjoy Kumar Dash, representative of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, where the Roman Catholic nun has been treated for malaria since Friday.
He said Mother Teresa's fever had subsided, and she had a restful night.
"She is definitely better today, but we need to observe her health conditions for a couple of days more," Dash said.
Despite her fragile health, Mother Teresa, who turns 83 on Friday, has continued travel to run the global network of her order, the Missionaries of Charity, which for 40 years has cared for the destitute. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.
WICHITA
WICHITA Clinic denied buffer zone
A federal judge denied a motion yesterday for a 100-foot buffer zone to keep protesters away from two abortion clinics
In a brief order, U.S. District Judge Patrick Kelly said he had returned jurisdiction for the protection of the clinics to the city and didn't plan to revisit the matter.
They cited the shooting last week of George Tiller, owner of Women's Health Care Services, and an incident at Wichita Family Planning in which a protester threw acid on a physician entering the clinic.
The motion also said death threats had been mailed to Wichita Family Planning.
OLATHE
Finney rethinks death penalty
Gov. Joan Finney wrote in a letter to a constituent that she would allow a bill that would reinstate the death penalty to become law despite her personal opposition to capital punishment.
The Johnson County resident wrote to Finney days after Pittsburgh State University student Stephanie Schmidt was found slain in southeast Kansas. The resident urged the governor to reconsider her opposition to capital punishment.
Finney replied that she was appalled by the gruesome murder but still personally opposed capital punishment.
"I believe that most Kansas citizens favor reinstatement of the death penalty. For this reason, should the Legislature pass a law to reinstate the death penalty, I would allow it to become law without my signature," the letter said.
Finley is not availance for comment monday. Her press secretary, Martha Walker, said the letter does not represent a shift in the governor's views.
The last executions in Kansas happened in 1965 when multiple-murderers James Latham and George York were hanged.
Scmunt, 19, of Leawood, was killed July 1 after she left a Pittsburgh restaurant with a coworker, Donald Gideon.
meenan, a convicted rapist, has been charged in Schmidt's death.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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Like car, like driver
'81 Chevy pickup
Many cars in Lawrence have bumper stickers. Many cars have too many.
Many cars in Lawrence have rust. Many, not surprisingly, also have wood paneling.
'59 Ford Fairlane
Then there are the weird cars. Not weird —
And there aren't too many of those.
distinct.
But they are the cars people look at twice. Most people either laugh, honk, stare or just plain avoid them.
And their drivers wouldn't want it any other way. Their cars are not this way by accident.
Many car owners in Lawrence can boast that their car has its own personality. These drivers have cars with attitudes.
Below are profiles of a few Lawrence car owners who know that when they sit behind the wheel, they drive something special. And they are proud that it is not because of excess rust or bumper stickers.
'76 Nissan pickup
'84 Mazda Hatchback
179 Volkswagen bus
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Brit Schiesser, former KU student, Lawrence
Design. Flames on front, spreading out to the side
What is the history behind the vehicle? "I just bought it last week from a friend of mine. He had painted it black, then suggested he put some flames on the front."
What reaction do people have of the truck? "They probably say, 'Wow, that's neat. Better not run into it, though.'"
Why? "I don't really know. I thought it would look cool. I have some more plans for this thing. I want to slap my band's logo, O.L.G. (One Leg Grusome), on the hood. Pretty soon I want to paint the back end a nice tartan plaid."
Why plaid? "In the winter I wear a lot of plaid. And I've never seen a car before, have you?"
What's the best part of the truck? "Our band can make one trip with all of our stuff now, instead of making three trips to play."
The worst part? 'It's more rusty than what I thought.' One word or phrase to describe it: "Yes, it does run."
■ Paul Horvath, Lawrence resident, and children, ages 9,7,5,2.
Car make and model:"76 Nissan pickup
Design: Originally royal blue. Spray-paint from 50 cans now covers it.
History of vehicle: 'The pain job's been on there for the last two months. Eight children helped paint the car.熊
Why did you let them paint your pickup? "Call it a Saturday afternoon project for them. It just shows what children's productive energy and 50 cans of paint can do when pushed in the right direction."
What was your reaction? "I said I didn't intend on leavening it on for very long, but Michael, my 5-year-old, said, 'What, don't you like our job?' I thought it was great what they did. I hope people get a smile or a laugh out of it."
Best part of the truck? "There's a shark on the fender
hat they did. Everything else is pretty nondescript."
One word or phrase describing the truck? "Awe
some. My 2-year-old, Alex, calls it that."
BANKS
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Samantha Steeves, Lawrence sophomore
Car make and model: 73 Volkswagen bus.
Design: White on top, orange on bottom. Painted-on flowers line the windows, and a mural of a rainbow with water trickling down decorates the driver's side. A few concert stickers appear on the back windows next to a "For Sale" sign.
History behind the car?" I had to choose a project to do for a high school art class final. So I chose to paint the bus. Over the four years I've had this, more stuff has gotten put on, like stickers from some dead concerts I've been to."
What reaction do people have of the bus? "I think people are happy when they see a car like this. It makes them laugh a little. My friends like it because I took out the back seats and put in a loft so everyone has more space."
Favorite comment you have gotten? "One police officer in Atlanta said this bus was some kind of a trap and that I'm setting myself up for trouble sometime."
What is your favorite part? "That people feel comfortable riding ground in it. I've never really had a bad time in this bus."
Then why the "For Sale" signs? "I have two cars, the bus and a Honda. As much as I've enjoyed the bus, I have to go with the Honda because it's more reliable."
See CARS. Page 10.
Surplus bowling balls from Kmart selling at Jaybowl at cut-rate prices
Sale gives bowlers an edge
Kansan staff writer
By Sara Bennett
Deep in the heart of the Kansas Union, a sale is taking place that may have KU bowlers measuring their hands and assessing their grIPS. Until this summer, many could not afford the luxury of owning their own bowling ball.
But now, the Jaybowl is rolling out bowling balls for as little as $10.
According to Mike Fine, recreation coordinator to the Kansas and Burge unions, the Jaybowl received about 65 Ebonite bowling balls from Kmart when the store switched to Brunswick wick balls. The Jaybowl is selling them for $10, with a $15 drilling charge. Fine said that after six months of the sale, only 20 balls remain unsold. Fine estimates it could take four months for all the balls to sell.
"We got a good deal," he said. "It's not real profitable, but it's allowed some people who previously couldn't afford a ball the chance to own one."
Bowling balls are serious business to those who love the sport in which people wear shoes worn by people they've never met. As any avid bowler will attest, there's more to
bowling balls than three holes and a shiny finish.
House balls, those balls provided by the lane to the general public, are made to standard specifications. A custom ball, on the other hand, is personalized to fit a bowler's grip, finger size and throwing style. Jaybowl makes balls to order and can also engrave them.
Contrary to popular belief, bowling balls are not solid. Weight blocks help the ball keep its shape, and the relation of the finger holes to the weight block influences the way the ball can be thrown.
But bowling balls have a whimsical side as well. Fine said physics students use bowling balls to test gravity, and last year architecture students used them to make a sculpture for a class project. Paint one a delicate shade of mauve, stick some dried flowers in the finger holes, and a bowling ball becomes a lovely vase. Amusing, if destructive, pastimes might be to roll a bowling ball down the stairs or set up a makeshift alley in your own home.
15
"It gives you a little better feel," said Shaun Tate, Lawrence sophomore. "It's a little easier to throw because it's built for you rather than for the masses. Plus, you're the only one who throws it."
Or, just bowl with it and enjoy that special pride and extra edge that comes with having a custom ball.
Don Glasscock, Overland Park graduate student and member of the KU bowling team, said he'll never go back
Loyce Smith, Junction city senior, prepares to drill new holes into a bowling bowl.
to house balls now that he has his own.
"I have several, actually," he said. "For different lane conditions, you need different weight blocks."
Fine said the Jaybowlsells an average of 100 balls a year, some for as much as $150. But now is the time to get a good bowling ball dirt cheap.
"People seem to enjoy bowling with their own equipment." he said.
And for the true enthusiast, the Jaybowl sells $5 pins,
too.
Spitting is appropriate at Klingon camp
RED LAKE FALLS, Minn. — A dozen or so fervent fans of "Star Trek" may truly have reached the final frontier of Trekkiedo: A two-week language camp devoted to the study of *thlngan*, the Klingon language.
Klingon camp
FROM THE KANSAN FILE
For Trekkies, little explanation is needed. Klingons are the warlike, alien adversaries of the crew of the starship Enterprise. Those in other orbits, however, might be tempted to ask how to say, in Kingon, "Get a life."
"That's not fair. We have a life," said camp organizer Glen Proechel. "It think a little bit more creative hobby than going bowling or going fishing for the weekend."
"It's absolutely astounding how many Mother's Day cards we get from folks who don't have the address of their mom," said Helen Grant, who has worked at the Philadelphia dead-letter office. "We open it, and it says: 'Happy Mother's Day, Cindy.' We have it to discard it."
The camp also captures the essence of the cruel Klingon race. As the inventor of Klingon, Marc Okrand, said on the audio cassette "Conversational Klingon," "Spitting is quite appropriate."
Mom?
Sowhat is it?
"Just because a painting has squiggy lines doesn't mean it's art. But it doesn't mean it isn't art either."
Guard at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington D.C.
Just breathe
"Thank God you're here, and I'd like to have a cigarette," said Harvey Weinstein, in New York, as he was being filthy, exhausted and shaken from a 14-foot deep pit where he'd been kept while kidnappers extorted $3 million from his family.
Elaine Slav
PEOPLE
Too clean Tommy
Cruise and Brad Pitt have been miscast to play the lead roles in the film version of her best-selling novel
Tom Cruise is too "Mom and apple pie" to be cast as a French-speaking, semi-androgynous vampire from the 19th century, says author Anne Rice.
A. R.
"Interview with the Vampire," she says.
interview with the Vampire," she says.
"It's like casting Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer in the movie," the author told the Los Angeles Times.
Cruise "is no more my Vampire Lestat than Edward G. Robinson is Rhetter Butler.
-Compiled from The Associated Press
"Batboy" nabbed by FBI
After a 29-state reign of terror, the "bat boy," a half-boy, half-bat beast, was reportedly captured by the FBI last month.
The FBI was able to apprehend the creature when he stranded himself on the roof of a Mississippi home caught in the Flood of '93. Troops reportedly down and plucked the beast directly from the roof, just before floodwaters overcame the structure.
The capture of the beast ended his escape from a research institute. He survived by eating small animals and digging through the trash.
Sightings were reported across 29 states from neighbors worried that the creature would eat their cats and dogs.
The World Weekly News
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
August 25, 1993 PAGE 9 KULIFE
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
The first of seven Hallmark Symposiums on visual communication will be at
LECTURES AND SEMINARS
EXHIBITIONS
the next generation symposiums on visual communication will be at 6 p.m. Monday in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium. Guest lecturers will be Barry Fitzgerald, assistant professor of graphic design and former illustrator and designer from The Detroit News; Patrick Dooley, assistant professor of graphic design and former owner of a design studio in Los Angeles, and Chris North, assistant professor and former owner of a design studio in Overland Park.
"Canyon Revisited: Rephotographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expeditions," will be on display until Sept. 26 in the Museum of Natural History.
Posters will be sold until Aug. 27 in Kansas Union Gallery.
CONCERTS
Melanie Moll, an organist, will present a Master Recital at 7:30 p.m. Friday at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd.
AUDITIONS
University Dance Company will hold auditions open to students and community dancers at 7 p.m. Sept.1 in 242 Robinson Center.
INFORMATION ON LISTINGS
The Kansan welcomes submissions to the calendar listing published on Wednesdays; however, listings are limited to University-affiliated events.
If you wish to list an event, please stop by the Kansan, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Listings may also be phoned in to Almee Estrada, features clerk, or Ezra Wolfe, features editor, at 864-4810.
Listings to appear Wednesday should be submitted no later than noon Monday.
I
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The worst part? "You can't maneuver a bus like that too easy in snow."
Angie Marks, Tommy's sonmare
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What made you decide on cow spots for the fooch? "I don't really know exactly. When I bought the car a few years ago, I knew I wanted to do something different."
What about the lyrics on the back? They're great when we pull up to an intersection. The person behind me will be trying to read the Skinny Puppy lyrics and I'll screw them up by constantly pulling ahead further and further."
What is the best part of this car?
"I'd have to say the plastic hand with torn fingers that's on the emergency brake. Or maybe the little plastic Jesus figure on the dash."
What is the general reaction to your car? "They probably think it's kind of odd. But I just bought a soldering iron, and I want to solder on something sharp to the hubcaps, like something out of 'Road Warrior.'"
What is one phrase that might describe the car? "This is one hardy car."
And the worst part? "The stereo
Aaron Strelow, former KU student, Lawrence resident.
sucks."
Car make and model: 59 Ford Fairlane.
Design. Its classic look makes this car distinct in a different sense than the others. Painted a Galaxy 500 Black
What is the history behind this car? "I bought it in Eudora last September for $2,000. When I saw it I just fell in love with it. I just think these cars are built much better than the ones today. They look really classy, too."
What was everybody's reaction when you brought it home? "They thought it looked good. One person named it the Batmobile, which I thought was pretty stupid. Another named it Christine, but I think in the movie, Christine was an Oldsmobile."
the best part of the car? "The three things. The front-end grill — it just looks mean. The dash at night — it glows. And the back-end at night lights up in an eerie red, li1ke afterburners."
The worst part? "The bottom side needs another coat of paint."
"There has never been a point where Popeye has faded and then come back. He's always been there," said Fred Grandinetti, founder of the Official Popeye Fanclub and owner of 1,000 pieces of Popeye memorabilia.
Now 31, he owns hundreds of Poppy items, including figurines, puppets, stickers, books, buttons, clothing, games, toys and posters.
He should know. He's been a Popeye devotee since he was 3.
Grandinetti said that in Boston alone you could watch him eight times a day.
The word that best describes the car? "Damn!"
Blow me down; Popeye turns 60
The 400-member club and King Features Syndicate, which owns the rights to Popeye, are marking the 60th anniversary of Popeye's first film appearance this summer.
The Associated Press
WATERTOWN, Mass. — Well blow me down. It has been 60 years since Popeye swaggered his way onto the silver screen. And his devoted fans say the spinach-slurping sailor man has weathered the years quite well.
"People think I'm nuts," said Grandinetti, who finances his fixation with his paycheck from an office job at a local vinyl company.
It was in July 1933 that Popeye, previously a character in E.C. Segar's long-running newspaper comic strip, muscled into the movies as a guest in a Betty Boop cartoon. He blustered his way through a long film and television career before sailing off to rerun land with Olive Olive, Bluto, Wimpy, Swee pea and the rest of the crew.
Even now, there seems to be a Popeye cartoon running somewhere in the world at every moment of the day, said Amanda Hass, a King Features representative who gives her title as "Popeye's personal
He estimates he's spent about $10,000 on memorabilia that, at current prices, is worth about three tIed Turner's Cartoon Network ran a week-long "Popumentary" series, while fans from throughout the country gathered in Chicago for a Popeye film festival. They'll note the milestone again in September, when they gather for their annual "Popeye Picnic" in Segar's home town of Chester, Ill.
publicist."
"He's just a genuine all-around good guy," Grandinetti said in explaining Popeye's perennial popularity. "He never asked for a reward, he just did the right thing."
but there's often a line in which Grandinetti and Popeye part ways. "I hate spinach, especially the canned stuff." Grandinetti said. "I can only take it with a lot of butter and salt."
But there's one area in which Grandinetti and Popeye part ways.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
11.
Chandler finds success
Player hopes to make it in the pros
Kansan sportswriter
By Matt Doyle Kansas sportswriter
In the last decade, a pair of quality tight ends have left Big Eight Conference schools and have attained success in the National Football League.
Keith Jackson was a four-time All-Big Eight selection, 1984-87, at Oklahoma, and has become the top tight end in the NFL, initially with the Philadelphia Eagles and currently with the Miami Dolphins.
Johnny Mitchell turned consecutive All-Big Eight performances in 1990-91 at Nebraska into a first-round draft draft by the New York Jets in 1992.
And now Kansas tight end Dwayne Chandler, 1992 All-Big Eight selection, hopes to follow in the footsteps of Jackson and Mitchell after catching 35 passes for 743 yards and eight touchdowns in the last two years.
When Chandler first arrived at Kansas, he was a running back who ran for 1,536 yards during his senior season at McPherson High School. Coach Glen Mason moved Chandler to tight end before the 1990 season.
"I thought it would be hard making the adjustment from tailback to tight end," Chandler said. "Now, I have been getting all this recognition and it's come as a total surprise to me because I didn't think I would do that well at tight end."
Strength, needed for blocking, is an area that tight ends' coach Tim Phillips stresses and was the one area Chandler said he had to improve when he made the switch to tight end.
Pro football scouts have said that they think Chandler had the possibility to go pro because he possessed outstanding speed, size and strength.
"I was a pretty good blocker in high school as a running back, but I didn't have the weight to block some of those defensive ends when I moved to tight end," he said.
14
Mason has said Chandler has been an integral part of the team's success.
"The only problem I have with Dwayne is that we haven't gotten him the ball nearly enough." Mason said. "That's my fault. When he gets his hands on the ball he has the potential to make a big play."
He was held without a reception in four games last season. Kansas lost three of those games. In the game against California, one of the games in which he did not catch a pass, Chandler spent most of the game blocking to keep Golden Bear defenders off quarterback Chip Hillary.
"Cal did a great job of anticipating the plays to the tight end and really took Dwayne out of the game completely," Pat Ruel, Kansas' offensive coordinator, said. "We can't let that happen this year because we need to get him the football more."
Senior tight and Dwayne Chandler led the Big Eight Conference last year in yards per reception with 23.4, the fourth best in Kansas history.
Expectations focused on senior
Runner-up role not good enough for Kansas diver
Bv Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Tim Davidson was eight years old when he took his first plunge off a diving board. He thought it was a fun summertime event, but by the age of 10 he was diving year-round and knew that he had more than a passing interest in the sport.
"Aslgof older I found that I had a talent for diving," the senior swimming and diving captain said.
That talent progressed in high school, where he was a two-time All-American. He was recruited by various universities, one of which was Kansas.
Davidson contributed during his freshman year by qualifying for the NCAA Championships in the one- and three-meter diving events.
"I'd taken other trips, but I really had a good time here and felt that I could contribute right away," Davidson said.
His early success has been tempered by the fact that he has failed to win a conference event and has not managed to return to the National Championships since his freshman year.
Davidson was the first alternate last year, which left him one spot away from returning to nationals. He was always within five points of winning a Big Eight event.
"He's been second and third more times than I can count," duing coach Don Fearon said.
Davidson is looked to as the leader of a team mainly composed of freshmen and sophomores. He is also considered the top diver going into the season.
"He leads by example," said Kris Hoffman, sophomore diver. "He gets things moving, and all the underclassmen look up to him."
Davidson said he did not think high expectations put any undue pressure on him or the team. Instead, they helped motivate the team. He said he thought the incoming freshman would make the team hard to beat.
"We finally have some depth on the diving board." Davidson said. "This should help us against teams like Nebraska and SMU."
Davidson said that being a senior did not affect the way he went into this season.
Seminoles hexed by the 'wide right'
By Matt Doyle
"I just try to focus on myself," Davidson said. "I want to improve each time I go out and strengthen each dive."
University of Miami football coach Dennis Erickson was asked what he thought of when he heard the term 'wide right.'
Kansan sportswrite
"Florida State," he said.
Wide right.
The words have haunted the Florida State football program the past two seasons against Erickson's Hurricanes and probably cost the Seminoles a chance at the national championship each year when Seminole kickers missed two field goals. Both sailed wide right.
Seminole coach Bobby Bowden tried to solve this problem last winter by signing the top high school kicker in the nation, Scott Bentley of Aurora, Colo., and naming him Florida State's starting kicker.
Bentley, a consensus high school All-American selection, will get his first chance to solve the team's kicking problems in Saturday's Kick-off Classic against Kansas at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. The game begins at 11 a.m.
"I knew there would be a lot of pressure on me and I don't mind dealing with it," Bentley said. "Everyone knows about the kicking legacy at Florida State."
The truth is that when people think of our program the last couple of seasons, they think 'wide'
The missed field goals against Miami have been the focal point of negative attention for the Seminole program. Gerry Thomas missed a possible game-winning 34-yard field goal in 1991, and Dan Mowery missed a possible game-tying 39-yard field goal in 1992.
right' and there is no way to hide from it. 'Bow'
den said. "Anyone who comes here as a place,
kicker will have to live with that until we do
something about it."
Sports Illustrated is making the Florida State kicking situation the cover story for its college football issue, which comes out this week.
The cover will have Bowden, Bentley and actor Burt Reynolds, a former Seminole running back, appearing on it. Reynolds serves as Bentley's holder in the photograph.
Bentley's parents talked him into doing the Sports Illustrated photo opportunity, something he was originally against.
"It is a chance of a lifetime to appear on the cover," he said. "Besides, the story is more oozing."
Bowden was asked in a press conference earlier this month if all of this attention on his kicking game could have been alleviated if he would have signed Kansas kicker Dane Eichloff out of high school in Fort Lauderdale.
"I don't remember if we recruited him or not," Bowden said. "All I know is that there are several college kickers from Florida winning games with field goals and that it scares me."
Bentley made 35 of 50 field goals in high school with most misses coming from beyond 50 yards. He did connect on seven field goals of more than 50 yards, including a 57 and a 58-yard field goal. The one thing he has not done is attempt a last-second winning kick.
"I don't know how I'll react when the situation comes up," he said. "I'll just try to do my best." And he hopes that the kick goes through the uplights, not pride with.
And he hopes that the kick goes through the uprights — not wide right.
Crew members strive for unity when rowing
Kansan sportswriter
By Anne Felstet
Coined on posters and from the mouths of crew members as the ultimate team sport, crew demands a unified symphony of motion from every team member.
Crew began its stand at Kansas 16 years ago under the direction of Don Rose. Today, both the men's and women's teams are coached by Rob Catloth, a former four-year oarsman with the Jayhawks.
Catloth said that crew was a technical sport. A perfect stroke is never achieved, yet members always strive to attain it, he said.
Junior oarsman Bryan Tylander has an advantage over most Kansas crew members. He came to Kansas with crew knowledge from high school. Most members are crew newcomers.
Approximately 130 to 150 people join the crew club in the fall, testing the waters to see if crew is the sport for them. During the spring season, only 60 to 80 members remain with the team.
Crew is a very physical sport, Catloth said. He said he told members that if they stayed with the sport all through the spring that they would be in the best shape of their lives. So far no one has falsified that statement, he said.
Crew treasurer Erin Cunningham, a second-ear owlersman, said that she returned to crew because of the good workouts. She also said that it was fun and that the people were great.
Cunningham said her biggest challenge in crew was the off-season. The team had its hardest workouts in the winter, and winter was the hardest to endure because the team was not on the river.
Luke Evans, junior oarsman, said that he had never been in crew before but that winning was a great thrill.
Evans was one of the many crew members helping to distribute crew flyers yesterday in front of Strong Hall. Catloth said he had set up a boat in front of Strong Hall every fall in hopes of attracting recruits.
The eight-man shell, like the one the team positioned in front of Strong Hall, as it passed out information, is 58 feet long and can range in weight from 190 to 225 pounds. Catloth said.
Catloth said the team usually practiced on the Kansas River, but because of the flooding, the team would be docking at the Clinton Lake Mariana. The varsity team begins its day with a 6 a.m.practice, and the novice members practice at either 3:30 or 5 p.m.
Catloth said he expected the crew team to compete in five regattas this fall but did not specify dates.
A Kansas crew team informational meeting will be held this week. For further information call Michael Amick, club president, at the boothhouse at 841-2927.
Kansas diver Tim Davidson hangs in the air above the waters of Robinson Pool during practice.
Tom Leininger/Kansan
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Wednesday, August 25,1993
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pitching will be the name of the game for the Kansas softball team next year, but for now they will hone their fundamental skills this fall, coach Kalum Haack said.
"In the fall the wins and losses don't affect me," Hack said.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Oct. 1-3 in independence, Mo., will be the highlight of the fall schedule.
With senior All-American pitcher Stephani Williams returning and sophomore Beth Robinson available after being academically ineligible last year, the Jayhawks have strong pitching. Haack said.
Haack said the purpose of fall practice was to give new players experience.
Softball team expects strong pitching
Two players who will benefit from the fall season are center fielder Keri Riggs, a Central Arizona Community College transfer, and freshman catcher Jacque Wenger who are replacing top players lost last year.
Williams pitched the most innings last year on the team. She ended the Spring season with a 0.96 ERA. She also had 29 victories and 18 shutouts. "It's helpful when you have any All-
For now, Haack said he was excited about the team after watching the first practice.
"There is so much athletic ability on this team," Haack said. "We have a good shot to go a long way."
"Stephan pitched all but six games last year, 'Haack said. "She was really tired, and it may have hurt her in some games."
The team started practices Monday and will begin a limited fall schedule Sept. 18 at home. The schedule is still tentative, as all games have not been confirmed. The Big Eight tournament
Robinson will lighten the load set on Williams last year. Haack said Robinson would also make Williams more effective.
American returning, especially if she is a pitcher, "Haack said." *Pitching* is a big part of the game, and with a good pitcher, your team is in every game.
Williams spent her summer playing for a national team in Europe.
Royals end Twins' road streak
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Brian McRae hit a two-trip triple in the seventh inning last night to boost Dane Cone and the Kansas City Royals past Minnesota, 5-3, ending the Twins' six-game winning streak on the road.
The Associated Press
McRae, who was 3-for-4 against Twins starter Eddie Guarda in the Royals victory last Thursday in Minnesota, tripled under the glove of diving center Shane Mack to give the Royals a 5-2 lead.
Cone, 10-11, pitched seven %
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innings, allowing eight hits, four walks and striking out four batters. He was relieved by Jeff Montgomery after Chip Hale hit his second season homer with the bases empty and one out in the eighth innight. Montgomery earned his league-leading. 30th save
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Okoye on injured reserve; Chiefs begin to trim team
"The family suggests that memorial contributions be made to the American Heart Association."
T
When people want to honor a loved one and fight heart disease.
The Chiefs also released 14 players yesterday, including former Kansas quarterback Chip Hilleary and wide receiver Matt Gay.
Okoye cannot play for the Chiefs this year, but could be released and picked up by another team if it was determined his knee had recovered
KANSAS CITY — Christian Okyo,
Kansas City Chief running back, was
put on injured reserve Tuesday and
will miss the season for Kansas City
THE AMERICAN HEART
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This space provided as a public service.
The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
13
Haskell receives arts award
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Stan Herd, local artist and Lawrence arts commissioner, has attended Haskell's Spring Pow Wow for four years.
And each year it is a new experience, he said.
Yesterday at the City Commission meeting, Haskell Indian Nations University received the Lawrence Arts Commission City Enhancement and Cultural Exchange Award for its 1993 Sring Pow Wow.
The commission has the opportunity to give out the award each month.
The Pow Wow, which features a parade and fireworks, is held during Haskell's graduation weekend. Last spring it drew a crowd of 7,000 to 9,000, said Barbara Stumblingbear, Haskell Food Service Director. She heads the Pow Wow with her husband, Henry Collins.
Herd said the Pow Wow, which lasts three days, attracts American Indians
from many different tribes. The first
Pow Wow was on May 21 and 22, 1922
"It's kind of a cultural homecoming." he said. "There's a lot of good cuisine, art and exchange of information about what's going on in the Indian community."
Each academic year, Haskell has three Pow Wows: one to welcome students back to school, another in November to recognize veterans and a final Pow Wow during graduation.
Stumblingbear said the community had become more involved in the Pow Wow in recent years.
Last spring, KU student housing rented 100 to 150 rooms in Ellsworth Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall to people who wanted to attend the Pow Wow, said Jon Long, an assistant director for student housing. KU's graduation weekend created a demand for lodging, Long said,
But the Spring Pow Wow is the biggest event
and the department had to find more rooms to meet that demand.
"That is the grand finale of them all," Stumblingbear said.
The Lawrence Jaycees, a local public organization that works to benefit Lawrence, also contributed to the Pow Wow by sponsoring the fireworks.
"This took a great effort from many people, not just Haskell." Stumbling
She said moving the Pow Wow from Haskell's west campus to Haskell's football stadium increased seating space. The move also made the community more willing to go to the event because other community events, like high school football games, are held at the stadium, she said.
"When we changed it to the stadium, I think it encouraged people to come out." Stumblingbear said.
Herd said he thought the community was becoming more interested in the Pow Wow.
"Alot of Lawrence people are seeing it as a community activity," he said.
KPL power line upgrade rerouted
By Traci Carl
By Traci Carl Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence Pinckney Neighborhood Association did not want 115 kilovolts of power in its front yards.
But the front vardes were the quickest and cheapest route for Kansas Power and Light to upgrade its line capacity from 69 kilovolts to 115 kilovolts and connect the Lawrence Energy Center with a substation at the corner of Sixth and Kentucky streets, said Jim Haines, executive vice president of Western Resources, Inc.
Last night, the City Commission decided on a siting permit for KPL that satisfied both groups.
The commission rejected KPL's original, preferred site, which would have run along Iowa and Fifth streets, through Pinckney neighborhood.
Instead, it approved a different siting researched and proposed by the association.
The approved siting follows the south side of the Kansas River, and it costs an estimated $355,441 more than the siting along Iowa and Fifth streets.
The commission voted to pay the surcharge by charging each KPL customer $3.33 a month for five years. It rejected charging customers per kilowatt hour, which would have cost industrial customers almost a thousand times more than a residential customer.
Steve Hamburg, president of the neighborhood association and associate professor and director of environmental studies at the University of Kansas, said the association did not support the original siting because it
was intrusive. The siting also would reduce property values in the neighborhood by 12 percent to 24 percent. Hamburg also said the association was concerned that living near power transmission lines could have negative health problems.
Haines said KPL wanted to move and upgrade the line because the existing 69 kilovolts was a weak link during peak usage times, putting the city at risk for brown or black outs.
a city blackout is a total loss of power and a brownout is a partial loss.
After a year and a half of debate, Hamburg said the association had come a long way in finding a solution with KPL.
"We were initially told it was virtually impossible to do," Hamburg said.
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Please Take The Time This Week To Pick Up An Application For The Committees And Boards Of The Student Senate.
Pick Up And Return Applications At The Student Senate Office At 410 Kansas Union By Friday, Aug.27
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MULTI-CULTURALAFFAIRS
14
Wednesday, August 25,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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AND COMPARE !!!$??$$!
100s
Announcement
Classified Directory
200s Entrance
1010 Personal
1101 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any admission for housing or employment that discriminates against person or group of persons based on nationality, citizenship or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
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, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, imitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
1
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Light mechanic work your home or mine also van
available for moving or hauling 542-2988
120 Announcements
BAPSTIST STUDENT UNION. First meeting of the semester will be on Thursday, August 26, 5:30 bpm. American Baptist Center (822) 198-5000, mwpbcp president, 863-382. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, intramural sports, mission projects. A Christian camp ministry open to everyone.
STUDYMARTER. NOT HARDER. Learn strategies to help you excel academically; techniques to increase concentration and improve retention Aug. Wed, 25 August. 330 STRONG FREE! Present
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer you inquiries to: You student Assistance Center.
TIME MANAGEMENT Workshop. Start the semester off, get control of your time and life. Thursday, August 26, 7:48pm 300 Strong, FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center
FUNDRAISERS FUNDRAISERS
FUNDRAISERS!
RAISE $150-$300
GUARANTEED in one
week PLUS BONUS
up to $500!
Manage promotions for top companies for one week on your campus. Call for information to qualify for a FREE TRIP to MTV GREAT BREEK TRIP to MTV
Call 1-800-950-1037, ext.25.
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WORKSHOP
300s
Merchand
FREE!
400s
Stone Exterior
Wednesday, August 25,
7-8 p.m.
330 Strong Hall
FREE!
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
TIME MANAGEMENT WORKSHOP
Thursday, August 26,
7-8 p.m.
330 Strong Hall
WORKSHOP learn how to make the most of the 24 hour day
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
350 Strong Hall offered by the Student Assistance Center
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strang Wanted, motorcycle crash witness. Anyone who witnessed accidents between car & motorcyc at 11th & Maas Sun, Aug 22nd at 4pm. Urgent Call: 845-333dmyday or 824-2147 evening.
130 Entertainment
John Brown's Underground with Lowlife Thursday, August 26th
BENCHWARMERS 25¢ Draws!
LOVE SQUAD
Friday, August 27th at BENCHWARMERS
2 For 1 Wells
L. A. Ramblers CD Release Party Saturday, August 28th at BENCHWARMERS 2 For 1 Wells
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
15
Jayhawk CAFE
25¢
DRAWS
-plus-
75¢ Monster Draws
&
75¢ Well Drinks
TONIGHT & EVERYWEDNESDAY
* 7 Beers on Tap
* 4 Pool Tables
* Darts & Air Hockey
It could only happen at...
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO+ 843-9273
A Campus Tradition Since 1919
男 女士
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
PUBLIC RELATIONS FALL '98 INTERN. Gain experience working with public relations teams promoting Kansas City metropolitan area job opportunities, research story ideas, filling information requests, etc. This position is non-salaried but can apply for course credit. It may be full or part-time. Required skills include scheduling Time Will pay for parking expenses. Please resume and write sample to Prime Time News Bureau, 911 Main Street, Suite 2600, Kansas City, Md 64019. Or contact Sheila Dressman at 816-357-4981.
Adams alumni center needs AM-PM Dishwasher.
Cook with pots and pans. Apply in
room with appropriate. Address 1256
Southern Ave., Jacksonville, FL 32704.
After-Hour Emergency Screening for the pre-admission screening for psychiatric hospitalization. Be available 5:30 p.m - 8:30 a.m and weekends only. Requires 2 years of nursing with 2 year's experience with clinical psychiatric services required. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Sharon Zerht, PhD. Send resume to Eugene Koch, Psychiatric Nursing Department, 60 West 14th Street, NY.
Bert Nasl HCM, 326 Missoura, Ste 202, Lawrence KS 65404. Open until filled EOE
Assistant Dean (full time)
Required qualifications. Master's degree, organizational and administrative ability, superior interpersonal skills, good writing skills. Good word knowledge. Preferred. Ph.D. and knowledge of KI.
10am, 2pm. Must enjoy children. SunAcres
Preschool 842-2233
Application Procedure. Contact the Graduate School at 913-864-3303 for as application form and position announcement. Send completed application form, current resume and three letters of recommendation to Virginia Stuart. The Graduate School at Yale University, Los Angeles, Lawrence, KS 66045.
Duties: Assisting Graduate School dean in day-to-day operations, keeping track of fellowship applications and awards, working with greavences and program reviews; carrying on correspondence duties; assisting the dean Complete job description and application form available upon request at 913) 644-3030.
Deadline September 1, 1990
Baby sister needed for 7yr old girl=3.000 5.30pm M-F:M-Force required 84256
Child care for 9 old girl. Non-smoker with car 3
or 4 m to 8 f or 5 m to 2 p.m. Days 5 wk;hr 32 h.
Days 6 wk;hr 30 p.m.
CITY OF LAWRENCE
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Requires good academic record in chemistry,
pharmacy and biology.
Must be available at 15/20 hr/wk. Submit application with names of references, and copies of transcripts to INTEKR
An equal Opportunity Employer. M/F/W/IV
Part-time Instructors for Shimlamma, Children's Art, and Aqua Slimmatai/ Water Walking. Prefer experience in instruction area. $7.00 per hour. More information and applications are available at Admin. Services, Room 210 City Hall, 6th & 8th Floor. KS 6644 Dead Aug. 30, 100 M/F EMP!
COMPUTER SYSTEM ENGINEER
Immediate opening for person with PC networking, LAN management, NOVEL experience, construction experience and Responsibility include installation/ support network and applications. Attractive salary, benefits Send resume by 09/7 to Director of Client Support, Connecting Point, #13, M33, Lawrence
Cottonwood Inc. A facility for adults with developmental disabilities, has full and part time positions available, in their residential department. Responsibilities include training individuals in computer skills and assisting in the daily management of a group home. Some positions may require sleep overs, evening and weekend hours. RS $100 of proof of income. 2001 W. 1st Lawrence. KS $6406 EOE
Desperately Seeking Students Assistant-Spencer Museum of Art (864-4710) Work Study Award required. Please come to the 5th floor to get and fill out an application.
DJ'S wanted for DJ service and Karaoke. Experi-
ent 414-8900. Michael Heers Entertainment
414-8900.
DRIVERIH for a firm-ad-hoc joinup from West JE-
hroughly for afferent technology at WEST JE-
hroughly. Take the phone number 704-295-6931.
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for $4 PRIDEHUB. Must be 21 years old and a native of the US. 2hr per wwr with a very flexible. $5/hr. Bath 84-054-4.
Evening delivery-driver wanted dependable, knowledgeable and at Peking restaurant, hard worker. Call 811-254-9673.
Faculty family in Lawrence require after school care for 10 year old and boy 7 year old, girl 10 to 12 years a week. Must have own car. Salary negotiable. Call 843-3394
CHILD CARE WANTED Occasional sitter for our two children age 6 and 12. In our home near cemetery.
Full time independent living skill training to assist individual with disability and learning skills to attain/maintain independent life style. High range of life skills demonstrated commitment to independent living required. Experience working with people with disability and creative teaching ability in accordance with the nature of ability are encouraged to apply. Complete job description available upon request. Send resume and cover letter to: Independence Incorporate EOEAA LAverce, Ave. Lawrence, KS 58210 by Sept. 3.
Children Learning Center is now hiring 1 am and
p teacher aides for infant and preschool children.
Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at
311 Maine, 841-2185.
Full-time live in nursery need for 3 active children (toddler, 4.7). Reliable, non-smoker, have own car. Housekeeping duties B/R + B/ salary + good benefits. Previous exp. res. Refs 74-0823
Hiring students to contact Alumini 5-45 48-49 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays $4.90 ror 1pm.
september 7 to November 18. Please call marie
Adams-Yong at 8642-4911, 2-14 and 2-4月day
Home Healthcare Aide
Like to work independently in a pleasant environment. Flexible scheduling for part-time hrs. Brandon Woods Retirement Community, 1501 Inversed Drive, Lawrence, KS E.O.E
Ideal part-time position for mature graduate students in HDPL or related field; design, build, and maintain a nursery (usually moms) and their children ages through five- 2 hours per week (1 morning): $15 to $30 per hour. For more info call 84321 or建友 lane. Lawrence KS 60499
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Now Taking Applications
CHIPDOLLAR
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth
Full & Part Time
Kansas and Burge Urges burglers bring part-time, hourly work to the job site. The job sites available. Must know fall class schedule to apply. See job board. Union Personnel Office, Level 5. Kansas University Building for job specifics.
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
KU GAME PARKING ATTENDANTS - 35 People needed at KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested please apply immediately.
LAN COORDINATION ASSISTANT. Student monthly deadline 9/1/10. Salary $50,500; 20 hour week. Duties include assisting with all client data requests; updating database updates, filing, and other duties as assigned by the Writing team. Send resume to Writer requested. Apply to submit a letter of application, current resume, and transcript to Angela Barnett, Personnel Office, Computer Information Services, Lawrence,KS 64505. EOAS EMployER
NEED A RIDER / RIDE! Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Needed warm responsible female to receive free meals for 18 months. Needed a 39 year old son. Transportation needed. Refs
Now accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time bauern service. Willing to train the right people. All Shirts are available. Apply at Adams Alumni Center, 1286
Office help needed 11:30-2:30 MWF & J 7:30-8:30 Office help needed 11:30-2:30 MWF & J 7:30-8:30 After the 12 hr at KU has KUA at GA 6 at 1.2 and be back to KU after 12 hr at KU has KUA at GA 6 at 1.2 and be back to KU after 12 hr at KU has KUA at GA 6 at 1.2 and be back to KU after
Omeia Factory Store sees part time sales clerk,
Tuesday and Thursdays, afternoons
Apply in person. Lawrence Riverfront Outlet Mall,
Suite 103-749-6126 EOE
Outgoing, friendly, dependable person needed at local club city, 1809 Crosgate
locational year 1994 Crosgate
Part-time Office Assistance needed 20 hrs/wk M/W
Part-time retail sales for Lawrence's premium computer store. Retail experience and basic computer skills required. Retail manager, Connecting Point, 813 Massachusetts, EOE/M/F/V/Hawkesville KS 60044
PART TIME SUPERVISOR Mast Mass Dell or Buffalo Bob Food Company. Previous food service and supervisory experience is required for performance up to $6/25, hr-20 hrs. a week, eve. and wkends. At Schumann Food Company. Business office at 719 Mount. (upstairs above Smokehouse). M-F 9-5
Sibir Siterations Inc. is in need of sisters. Must have knowledge and love children. Flexible boars. 842-7566
PRESCHOOL TEACHERS
**SOFTBALL UMPIRES:** Recreational Services is looking for students interested in officiating Intra-mural Sports. No experience necessary. # 47-800, 643-3546, 8:30, a.m. or 10:30 in Robinson. 864-3546.
Read Books for Pay. Earn $100 per title. Free details. Rush Self Admission. Stamp Envelopes to Sell at $5 each.
*refer 1 child development course and experience. Sunrise Ashleigh 842 2223.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a REQUIRED CALIFICATIONS: 1. Borrowal at the University of Kansas, academic year 1989-94; 2. excellent communication skills PREFERRED in the program; 3. Prior experience as a receptionist; 4. Computerrying skills SALARY $45.25 per hour MAY 17, 1994. DEADLINE: Adult persons are invited to submit an application by 5:00 p.m. on Friday, March 18, 1994, to Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Lawrence KS 6806-1983 (816) 864-3552 EOE/AA
Student Assistant Position
Full & Part-Time Openings.
DOUBLETREE
HOTEL - AT CORPORATE WOODS
**9.30 Starting**
No experience needed. For calls half and part time schedules. No canvassing or telephone sales.
Call 812-8035
For interview noten:
SCHEDULE UBBS
Apply in person, M-F, 9-4 p.m.
10100 College Blvd.
Overland Park, KS
E.O. E.
Varied hours prefer 3 courses in child development and experience. Sunshine Acres A184 82232
Terraveral Construction needs part-time help with site preparation, landscaping, mornings or afternoons. Call days 842-8829
9. On-call Security $6.00/hr
One meal provided per shift.
8. Phone Operator $5.50/hr
9. On call Security $6.00/hr
INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-quality graduate student for Graduate Assistant position TO START IMEDIATELY. Want individual with knowledge of community resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership experiences, organizational skills, sense of humor, creativity, and patience. KU Info, 420 Union, for an application. Must return in person to Susan Elkins, Coordinator, by 5pm.
Advance opportunity
Headquarter Counseling center Councilraining training provided, IPM Meeting, Sun, 6/10 or Wed, 9/1
225 Professional Services
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Ruth & Kids Floral
Rose
M-E 9 to 7 Sat 9 to 5 Sun 1 to 3
The law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
832-0704,935 E 23rd
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former edi-
tion. Written in order to accurate pages of letter
quality type #6-2063
WE ACCEPT VISA & MC
**WORD PROCESSING & IMAGINATION**
for all your typing needs
Call Me! www.melp.com
Call Me! www.melp.com
X
Merchandise
Compact Discs
305 For Sale
300s
1900 Marca GLZ 82,000 miles run very well.
1900 "runaround"车 $900/$414-841 leave.
1900 "runaround"车 $900/$414-841 leave.
16M Magma V-50 500 CC expel; cond. low mi160-1660
185 Toyota Prius V-44, 80.00 mln. hours,
runnsugs g150-150 offer 192 Nissan Sentra GXE 4
600-630 offer 192小对 growing for family
g150-830 offer 192小对
1984 Volkwagen Rabbit Wolfsburg, dependable,
low miles price negotiable. 432-3538
& flooded home, plumbing, fire alarm
Yard. & shed. Kitchen appliances, W/Z. D/Call 104-159
180 Mercury Cougar,驾 AT. PS,good shape
102.000 u/m³,w/agent,864-9053
1899 Chevy Cavalier Z24. 5 speed, good cond.
$600/offer, must sell M810/1092, leave message
FUTON SALE
$119
Cheapy Sleepy frame foam-core futon starting at
Lawrence Pawn
65 gal. aquarium with oak stand for $650 new.
Adding $500. Call 842-4135.
& foam-core futon starting at
BLUE HERON
---
5 or more, $4.95 each
$5 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave
message at 864-5269
Phone PN 841-4561
Like new 890 Fuji Turtle $200 28" frame, red call
- Futon Manufacturers -
937 Mass. St. 841-9443
Ft Sale: Pender Freless Jazz Bass Special, also
Pavey MWK.P.A Head 740-2248
$5.95 each
Mini console has a large spacer with white trim.
Mini console has CD slot and two track
track card 120x80 mm tape recorder, 200x80 mm
track card 320x80 mm tape recorder.
Dorm room size roll of carpet in good shape. Call
832-9020
2931. Dorm room size roll of carpet in good shape. Call
Minolta X79 900 camera w/2 lenses & case. Sara B64k-
4667 W1) . 1.863-2887 (H).
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 813-1434
Mon-Sat 9:5-30
CLASSICAL MUSIC
Liquidating estate of former professor. 100 albums
$300,000. $800 for the lot. Bid Fair $242.
2961
Futons & Frames On Sale!
**IBM PS/2** (60/60/71) *226 expanded to 1 megabyte**
*ii-demandi VM monitor VGA graphics*
*Excel
937 Mass.
841-9443
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
BLUE
HERON
where comfort and quality is assured.
Nearly new two 19 '12 arm Puji road bikes $195
Nearly new two 16 '12 arm Puji road bikes $195
workout箱 $130 I Ramble 842-922 weekdays
Queen size futon frame, & cover $25, N3 angel
$4 each Dishies, mic furniture $842
炉码 $842-922
BIKES ON SALE FOR THE ADVANCED
INTERMEDIATE AND BEGINNER.
COMPARE AND SAVE ON REDUCTIONS
FROM THE PRICE OF EVERYTHING
GONE AND YOUR LEFT WALKIN
七
7
ORIGINATED MILANO
ROCKHOPPER COMP
STUMPIUMPER
930
950
700
7000
9000
910 SHX
850 SHX
2200
520
Bianchi ALFANA 1869 1750
55 OFF BASIC TUNE-UP
BRING IN THIS COURSE TO HUMMER AND
RECEIVE ID AND OFF THE MOLLAR
WARNING. VALID WITH LOOKUP LABELS LEFT 60°
Water queenbed, complete setup. New heater &
massess $109.000, 843-2897
340 Auto Sales
Schwinn mountain bike 18, sp. 23" frame, 1 year
$150.0 lb O. Call 841-9974
STATE OF NEW YORK
81 Yamaha 650cc SJK Midnite Black $750/OBO 832-253
84 Yamaha 650cc SJK Midnite Black $750/OBO 832-253
85 IRGC All Power, T-Tops, TPI, new goodyear
79,000 - 510,700
85 IROC All Power T-Tops, TPI, new goodyears,
73.000 mL 749-938
Reliable transportation 80 Ford Pinto $500/Best
offer. Call Terry at 874-1746.
360 Miscellaneous
KU Women Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and makeover courses personalized select化妆 to purify your skin
THE LION
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues - Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
370 Want to Buy
$ for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5209
Wanted: Sports Package. Call 841-1102.
400s
Real Estate
405 For Rent
Available Immediately 3 Bedroom. 1 Bath house with new cabinets and appliances
Renta WASHER & DRYER For Only $40 a Month
Dishwasher
Over the Edge
No Deposit
- Free Maintenance
• GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty,
Large Capacity
Delta Corporation
842.8428
842-8428
Holiday Apartments
Naismith Halls'
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct., Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047
Holiday
services give students the competitive edge.
4 Bedroom $800
Fitness room
Bedroom $650
24 hr. computer center
PALM TREE CITY
-Recently constructed
Dine anytime meals
- Nice quiet setting
- 210 Mount Hope Court
843-0011
- Energy efficient
Weekly maid service
- On bus route
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
3 bbr 2 hrs apt for rent Campus Place. Very close to campus. Requestable rent. Smoker please. Call
1 bedroom apartment for, call 798-0445
Apartmenthouses for, it 3 blocks RU, sorry no
apartment for, it 2 blocks RU, sorry no
430 Roommate Wanted
2 M, NS looking for 3rd rmt for 3bd apt. Rent
15 M, NS looking for 3nd rmt. Near campus. Call Ted 841-
725 Lv message
2 male, NS roommates need share dr house
3 female, mo. utilities + cable call paul
vani, 841-6699
3 hdr 2 bath妒 for rent Campus Place. Close to
Campus Reasonable rent Smoker please 842
Bath妒
Female non-smoket to share 2BR house off-cam-
plex. Room furnished in addition for
roommate. Room furnished in addition for
How to schedule an ad:
5b yr. pre-med student looking for clean room equipment water pdt, pool, laundry. close to camelia
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY
KANSAN
Female roommate to share beautiful new condo on
tran rd. with no pets. Year lease: $250 ($15 + $10)
FRIENDLY, grad-level modern bi-layer duplex, clean on a park, beautiful. 4B, plur. 2LR, c/a, w/d etc., non-smoking! Responsible (female or male) seek call. Grad 84-246, keep tryout.
Looking for a roommate to share 4bdrm. furnished
240 sq ft. 82m2 mom. + utilite and free
cell. Call 831-559-6788
Roommate to share house $250/mo + 1/3 utilities
Furniture: hard wood floor
LEASE: 422-289-4000
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom at 4th & 11th
Complete kitchen, W/D hookup, mostly furnished,
$190/month + util. Smokers welcome. Call 841-610,
leave message.
Responsible, non-smoking female student to share
complex complex $120 + \upharpoonright; Use
4643 - 847 195
Ads shipped in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
190 shutterstock
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Stop by the Kansan 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.
Refunds:
You may print your classified order form below and mail it with payment to the Kanaka office. Or you may choose to have your order filled out by Vita or Makra-C质 quality for a canned on a unused date when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of aggregate 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 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 Kasan office for a fee of $4.00
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8-12 lines
13-16 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.
Rates at per line per day
when cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancled ads that were pre-paid by cash or with cash are available.
Cost per mile per hour
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.65 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .45 .40
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 1.05 .65 .60 .60 .35
Please print your ad one word per box
Classifications
165 personal
118 business personals
120 announcements
128 entertainment
148 lost a friend
209 high valued
225 professional services
235 invoices
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone: -
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:
_Expiration Date:
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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
© 1983 Dennis Petit Syndicate
Alert, but far from pnicked, the herbivores studied the sudden arrival of two cheetah speedwalkers.
16
Wednesday, August 25, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
1993CALENDAR OF EVENTS
KU
CANOEING DARE TO EXPERIENCE THE CHALLENGE OF THE NIANGUA RIVER!
Friday, September 3
Only $49.00 for Students and $54.00 for non-Students For more info call 864-3477
Sunday, September 5
Sign Up: Aug 16 - Sept 2
Info Meeting: Aug 26
ug: Aug 26
PATRICK DOWDEN
E Largo G II, Acorn and M. Malone Furniture, Inc.
WINNER
GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATION
BEST ACTOR - Denzel Washington...
Malcolm X
PG-13
Warner Bros.
A TAKE WATCH BUTTER JACKSON COMPANY
THE 20th EDITION
Warner Bros. All Rights Reserved
SHOWING IN WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM,
KANSAS UNION
Friday, Aug. 27 7:00pm & 9:00pm
Saturday, Aug. 28 7:00pm & 9:00pm
Sunday, Aug. 29 2:00pm
Tickets are $2.50
Sunday, Aug. 29 2:00pm
No Charge for SUA Movie Card Holders
COMING IN OCTOBER
- 10/2 FAMILY WEEKEND SHOW featuring JEFF CESARIO
- The October Calendar of Events
- 10/3 Chiefs vs. Raiders Trip
- 10/4 Time Capsule Exhibit in the Kansas Union
- 10/16 George Winston in Concert at the Lied Center
- Plus other exciting events - stay in touch with SUA!!!
AUGUST
16 MON. •SUA Movie: Blue Velvet 8 pm •Union Gallery Exhibit: Jack O'Neal •Family Weekend Show Tix on Sale
17 TUES. •SUA Movie: Blue Velvet 8pm
18 WED. •SUA Movie: Blue Velvet 8 pm •Beach -n- Boulevard 7pm •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
19 THUR. •SUA Movie: Blue Velvet 8 pm •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
20 FRI. •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
21 SAT. •Jaybowl Party •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
22 SUN. •Movie on the Hill: Naked Gun •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
23 MON. •Chiefs Tickets go on sale for every home game. •Canoe Trip Tickets on Sale
24 TUES. •SUA Movie: The Unbelievable Truth •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
25 WED. •SUA Movie: The Unbelievable Truth •SUA Movie: The Cook, The Thief,... •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
26 THUR. •SUA Movie: The Unbelievable Truth •SUA Movie: The Cook, The Thief,... •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
27 FRI. •SUA Movie: Malcolm X •SUA Movie: Blade Runner •Poster Sale in KS Union Gallery
28 SAT. •SUA Movie: Malcolm X •SUA Movie: Blade Runner •KU Football vs. Florida State (away)
29 SUN. •SUA Movie: Malcolm X
30 MON. •George Winston Tickets go on sale •KS Union Gallery Exhibit of NCAA
31 TUES. •SUA Movie: El Mariachi
1 WED.
• SUA Movie: El Mariachi
• SUA Movie: Roadside Prophets
2 THUR.
• SUA Movie: El Mariachi
• SUA Movie: Roadside Prophets
3 FRI.
• SUA Movie: Clasablanca
• SUA Travel: Canoe Trip begins
4 SAT.
• KU Football vs. Western Carolina State
5 SUN.
Kansas and Burge Unions Closed for Labor Day
6 MON.
Kansas and Burge Unions Closed for Labor Day
7 TUES.
• SUA Movie: The Killer
8 WED.
• SUA Movie: The Killer
• SUA Movie: Raise The Red Lantern
9 THUR.
• SUA Movie: The Killer
• SUA Movie: Raise The Red Lantern
10 FRI.
• SUA Movie: Indecent Proposal
• SUA Movie: Sid and Nancy
11 SAT.
• SUA Movie: Indecent Proposal
• SUA Movie: Sid and Nancy
• NCAA Exhibit closes
12 SUN.
• SUA Movie: Indecent Proposal
13 MON.
• KS Union Gallery Exhibit Of Helen Lea opens
14 TUES.
• SUA Movie: Henry and June
• SUA Committee Info Meeting 7:30pm, Frontier Rm. Burge Union
15 WED.
• SUA Movie: Jean Cocteau's Orpheus
• SUA Movie: Henry and June
• SUA Committee Info Meeting 7:30pm
16 THUR.
• SUA Movie: Jean Cocteau's Orpheus
• SUA Movie: Henry and June
17 FRI.
• SUA Movie: A Few Good Men
• SUA Movie: Monty Python's The Meaning of Life
18 SAT.
• SUA Movie: A Few Good Men
• SUA Movie: Monty Python's The Meaning of Life
19 SUN.
• SUA Movie: A Few Good Men
20 MON.
• SUA Travel: Chiefs vs. Broncos Bus Trip
21 TUES.
• SUA Movie: Rosencrantz and Gildenstern Are Dead
22 WED.
• SUA Movie: Rosencrantz and Gildenstern are Dead
• SUA Movie: Lynch's Elephant Man
23 THUR.
• SUA Movie: Rosencrantz and Gildenstern are Dead
• SUA Movie: Lynch's Elephant Man
24 FRI.
• SUA Movie: Indian Summer
• SUA Movie: The Serpent and the Rainbow
25 SAT.
• SUA Movie: Indian Summer
• SUA Movie: The Serpent and the Rainbow
• Gallery Exhibit of Helen Lea closes
26 SUN.
• SUA Movie: Indian Summer
27 MON.
• SUA Movie Poster Sale in the KS Union Gallery
28 TUES.
• SUA Movie: Slacker
29 WED.
• SUA Movie: Slacker
• SUA Movie: Rebel Without a Cause
30 FRI.
• SUA Movie: Slacker
• SUA Movie: Rebel Without a Cause
SEPTEMBER
4
5
6
10 FRL.
11
12
13
14 TUES.
15
17 FRL.
18
19
26 SUN.
27
28
29
30
THUR.
864-SHOW
864-SHOW SUA EVENT HOTLINE
CLIP AND SAVE
KU LIFE: KU's Dead Playwrights Society breathes life into old plays. Page 10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.5
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
HURSDAY AUGUST 26,1993
(USPS650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
KU multicultural center waiting for space
Center's proposed site
Military Science Building Supportive Educational Services Building Summerfield Hall Haworth Hall Sunnyside Ave.
John Paul Fogel: KANSAN
It could move into SES office by Spring 1994
Bv Carlos Telada
Kansan staff writer
Sherwool Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said he never expected KU's multicultural center to be completed on time.
"I've been doing this kind of work for 20 years, so I know how a university works," he said.
The University had planned to open the center this fall.
After 15 months of negotiations and delays, the multicultural planning committee this summer approved plans to put the center inside the Supportive Educational Services building, just south of the Military Science building on campus. SES will move to the bottom floor of Strong Hall's east wing, which is currently being renovated.
mompson said the new completion date for the center would be late spring or early fall of 1944, depending on when SES vacates the building.
When the administration announced plans in April 1992 to establish the center, the proposed location was a house at 1400 Louisiana St. Currently, the house is being used as office space for Western Civilization teaching assistants.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the new location was more convenient in terms of proximity and accessibility for disabled students.
The SES building is one story tall. The house on Louisiana Street has two stories, is connected to the sidewalk by a staircase and sits at the top of a steep slope on the east side of Mount Oread.
"I sometimes wonder how we're going to get this done, but there's such a consensus from the groups that asked for it," he said.
Thompson said the long delay had been frustrating.
The center would be similar to multicultural centers at other universities. Thompson said. It would include
reference materials, reading areas, secluded study rooms and offices for the services it would provide.
He said the multicultural planning committee, which is made up of representatives from minority student groups and various University departments, had yet to define which services the center would provide.
Other multicultural centers have not made the effort to include white students and non-ethnic minorities in their activities, Thompson said. Excluding students is one thing that Thompson, who heads the committee, said he wanted to prevent.
It will be the only kind with the agenda we hope to maintain, which means a center for all cultures," he said.
Tim Dawson, Topeka senior and vice president of the student body, said he also wanted the center to be open to all students.
"I would like to see that they follow through with being all-inclusive," said Dawson, former head of Student Senate's cultural affairs committee.
Although the Senate approved a resolution in November 1991 calling for a multicultural center, Dawson said it had not approved a proposal to match the $10,000 the University will contribute each year. Ambler called upon the Senate to match the $10,000 after the University acted upon its resolution.
Additional money for the center will need to be raised through private and corporate donations. Thompson said.
Master plan to diagram KU's future
Task force to chart growth of campus for next 2 decades
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff write
University officials have long touted the beauty of KU's campus, and they are not taking any chances with the future.
The University is in the early stages of a two-year development that will chart the future physical and aesthetic growth of the campus. The end result will allow University officials to get an idea of what the campus will look like during the next 10 to 15 years.
"I think everyone is committed to keeping KU a beautiful place," said Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design.
Lucas heads the planning task force and steering committee for the long range physical development plan. The task force and committee were appointed by Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor.
Meyen said the plan would help maintain campus beauty in addition to any renovation or expansion.
The plan, expected to be completed in July 1995 includes examining building space, parking, housing and also electrical, lighting and water services.
Not only will the plan focus on improving the physical part of the University but also academic aspects.
During the two year development plan the task force will meet with deans of different schools to determine their respective academic needs.
The steering committee will coordinate information from the deans and other departments about the needs and desires of the University and students to the task force, Lucas said.
The timing of the development plan is beneficial to the academic programs, Meyen said. KU has just completed a program review of all academic departments and the needs and desires of each program can be used in the development plan, he said.
The task force and committee held meetings during the spring before the semester ended. During the summer the task force divided into three-person teams that reviewed documents and other information about possible plan decisions.
once program review began in April, there has been a personnel addition. Wan Tawecher, an architect in Facilities Planning, has joined the task force to help oversee the program review, said Allen Wiechert, University director.
"Twenty years is a long time for a plan to be viable," Lucas said.
The last long-range development plan KU had was in 1973
OP TEEN PHASIS ON TO BE AAPRESENT
"Dunk Father Jerry" was one of the activities of yesterday's fiesta at the Saint Lawrence Catholic Center. The annual event included karaoke, a taco feed and volleyball games on the center's lawn.
Enrollment figures
While freshman enrollment increased, the total university enrollment, including Lawrence campus, Medical school, and off campus, decreased.
freshman enrollment
6400
6300 6.313
6200
6100 9.164
6000 5.964
5900
5800
5700
5600 5.673 5.659
5500 5.590
5400
'88 '89 '90 '91 '92 '93
total university enrolment
27,800 27,704
27,600
27,400
27,200
27,000
27,007 27,297
27,026
26,800 26,719
26,600 26,596
26,400
'88 '89 '90 '91 '92 '93
Fall enrollment drop is the first in six years
By David Stewart
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
The opening day enrollment report for Fall 1983 showed that while freshman enrollment increased for the first time in five years, overall enrollment for the University has gone down after a six-year climb.
The opening day enrollment counts are preliminary numbers and are not considered the official Fall 1993 enrollment figures, said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor.
The University of Kansas Medical Center and Lawrence campus enrollment dropped from 27,704 students last Fall to 27,297 students — a difference of 407 students. That represents a 1.5 percent decrease, according to the report issued by the department of educational services.
*Our loss comes from the ranks of
continuing students, where I believe the fragile economy is having an impact," said Cancellor Gene Budig.
The report also indicated that freshman enrollment went up from Fall 1992's count of 5,500 students, a five-yearlow, to 5,659 in Fall 1993.
"Freshman enrollment is very strong." Meyen said. "It's the quality of our program that attracts good, young, quality people."
Among the schools with significant decreases in opening day enrollment were the School of Engineering, with a 12 percent decrease from last year's total; the School of Journalism, with a 10 percent decrease; and the School of Business, with a 9 percent decrease, according to the report.
Croatian women slow U.N. aid convoy for Muslims
The Associated Press
The 20-day counts which will be taken on Sept. 20 will be the official figures the University will use for Fall 1993 enrollment.
MEDIUGORIE, Bosnia-Herzegovina — U.N. trucks piled high with food and medicine entered the embattled city of Mostar today, a U.N. representative said. They faced human roadblocks of Croat women trying to keep the convoy out.
Alemka Lisinski, a representative for the U.N. High Commission for Refugees in the Croatian capital of Zagreb, said the convoy entered the Croat-held western section of Mostar near nightfall.
ANALYSIS: Fouryoung State
Department officials have resigned in protest in the last year over the United States' weak response in Bosnia. Par5.
She said part of it was poised to move on into the eastern sector, where 55,000 Muslims have been trapped for more than two months without substantial aid reaching them.
No further information was immediately
available on the progress of the relief convoy, which took hours to negotiate the 12-mile journey from Medjugorje because of enraged Croatian women opposed to aid reaching rival Muslims.
"They are feeding the Muslims who are then killing us," sobbed Anica Golamac, 59, a refugee from Bijelo Polje, now under Muslim control.
Overnight, the U.S. Air Force had airdropped 25 tons of food and medical supplies into the southern city, which has been cut off from aid deliveries since Croats
began besieging it in May.
British Broadcasting Corp. radio said many of Mostar's Muslims didn't know the food was coming because they have no batteries for radios and have been cut off from the outside world.
Scooping up the most ration packs were people who were outside around midnight to escape the stifling basements where they had been holed up in 90-degree heat during a day of heavy shelling, the BBC report said.
INSIDE
On the movie set
Page 3.
Phi Kappa Tau buvs vacant Acacia house
A group of KU students, graduates and former students help a Lawrence man finish his movie, which stars Isaac Hayes and Martin Sheen.
TAYLAH MURRAY
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
The former Acacia fraternity house, its windows broken and boarded up, and its lot overgrown with weeds, will begin to find new life this fall.
Phil Harrison, member of the Board of Directors of the Phi Kappa Tau House Corporation, said Thursday that the corporation had entered into a contract to buy the site at 1100 Indiana, which would be renovated this year to allow members to move in next August.
The property was vacant since December 1992, when Acacia's international fraternity suspended the chapter because of a poor campground and housing problems and destruction to the building.
Harrison would not disclose the amount of building sale, but he said that basic renovation along with electrical and plumbing systems would cost at least $200,000. He said the renovation also would include a modernized kitchen, security systems, a sophisticated fire alarm and
sprinkler system, without significantly chang ing the building's exterior.
"When the project is completed," he said, "the house will be on par with any of the newer or older homes."
Money for the project, Harrison said, would come from the sale of the chapter's existing house at 1232 Ohio and from alumni donations.
Jeff Shaw, Roeland Park senior and Phi Kappa Tau president, said that the members were excited about the prospects of the new house.
Shaw said that the new building could house up to 75 members as opposed to the current house capacity of 24 members.
The larger house also would allow for membership growth. Shaw said that the chapter had about 45 members, but that he expected about 60 to move into the building next fall.
"We've been searching for a new structure for a long time," Shaw said, "but when the Acacia nationals closed their chapter here, it became our obvious top choice.
"It's a good location, close to campus, and it has a lot of potential to become a great house."
10
Renovations may begin a month on the former Acacia house, and Phi Kappa Tau members hope to move in next fall.
2
Thursday. August 26.1993
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Prototypes are being tested at two Amoco stations, in the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook and in Indianapolis, said Self Cleaning Environments of Santa Monica, Calif., which makes the $23,000 product.
Here's an idea sure to make many long-distance travelers flush with excitement: a self cleaning restroom that promises to take the revulsion out of gas station pit stops.
Employees and customers have, literally, breathed a sigh of relief when they stepped into the 3-by-7-foot facilities.
All Test Kits
The KU Crew Team will hold an informational meeting at 5:30 tonight in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Maggie Romers at 822-8223.
Josie Pippins, a 39-year-old customer from Columbus, said she
The Society of Women Engineers will hold a ceremony at 6tonight at the Potter Pavilion. For more information, call Charity Hastings at 832-8994.
ON CAMPUS
Lesbian, Bisexual Gay Services of Kansas will hold its weekly meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Frontier Room at the Burge Union.
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Jayhawk Campus Fellowship will hold a meeting at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the
Chicago-based Amoco will evaluate tests of the self-cleaning toilets, which customers can use free of charge, before deciding whether to install them at stations nationwide, said company spokesman Jim Fair.
Self-cleaning restrooms guarantee tidy pit stops
- Ask about our preferred customer water card & JTF cash-back bucks on aquarium purchases
The Associated Press
CORRECTIONS
KU Libertarians will hold an informational/welcome-back meeting at 8 tonight at the Regional Room in the Kansas Union. A short movie will be shown and refreshments will be served. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
Burge Union. For more information call 864-1115
The department of communication studies has scheduled the Oral Communication Exemption Examination for Sept. 15. Registration, with a $10 fee, is due by Sept. 10 in 9009 Wescoe. For more information, call 864-3633.
The City Commission story on Page 13 in yesterday's Kansan misidentified Steve Hamburg. Hamburg is a representative of the Pinkney Neighborhood Association.
The story about the Lied Center's ticket rates on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansan included incorrect information. Students may purchase half-price tickets to "The Secret Garden" for the performance on Sept. 29 until the night of the show, based on availability. Only students may purchase those tickets before Sept. 7 for this performance. After that date, tickets at the regular prices of $35 and $30 will be available to the public.
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WEATHER
Omaha: 91/71
Weather around the country:
LAWRENCE: 87'/60'
Kansas City: 91'/71'
St. Louis: 90'/75'
Atlanta: 91'/74'
Chicago: 87'/70'
Houston: 100'/75'
Miami: 89'/81
Minneapolis: 89'/68'
Phoenix: 102'/72
Salt Lake City: 95'/55
Seattle: 68'/51
Wichita: 93'/68'
Tulsa: 88'/72'
TODAY
Partly cloudy
High: 87'
Low: 60'
Tomorrow
Partly cloudy
High: 80'
Low: 67'
Saturday
Sunny
High: 83'
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TODAY Tomorrow Saturday
Partly cloudy Partly cloudy Sunny
John Paul Foget; KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
A KU employee's car was damaged in the 1500 block of Tennessee Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $600.
A student's KUID and buspass,
valued together at $60, were taken
Thursday or Friday from the
Kansas Union, KU police reported.
A student's credit cards, drivers license and Security Card card were taken Aug 4 from Parker Hall on West Campus, KU police reported.
A student's shirts, valued at $87, were taken Saturday or Sunday from the laundry room in Battelfield Scholarship Hall, KU police reported.
Fifty dollars was taken from a student in the 1000 block of Emery Road on Sunday or Monday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's car windsheild and bumper were damaged in the 1100 block of Tennessee Street on Monday. Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $300.
A student's bicycle tire and
rim, valued together at $10, were taken from the Art and Design building's bike rack Monday, KU police reported.
A student's parking permit, valued at $53, was taken Monday from parking lot 91, KU police reported.
A student's wallet with credit cards, drivers license, KUID and cash was taken from Snow Hall on Monday, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle and locks, valued together at $607, were taken Monday or Tuesday from the Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall bicycle rack, KU police reported.
A student's car window was broken in the 900 block of Arkansas Street on Tuesday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $200.
The convertible top of a student's car was damaged in the 800 block of New Hampshire Street on Tuesday or Wednesday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $1,500.
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Thursday. August 26,1993
3
SANDWICH
Smoke-free bar opens in theater
Denise O Sullivan, Denver senior, arranges desserts to the display case at the Granada, a new smoke-free café.
Plans to include comedy, music
By Traci Carl Kansan Staff Writer
Mike Elwell and his daughter, Stacy, wanted to open a bar that was unique to Lawrence in a building that has been providing entertainment for decades.
After two years of work, they did.
On Friday, they opened the Granada,
1020 Massachusetts st., a nonsmoking bar and cafe that serves as the theater name. Without an opening night publicity, the bar and cafe drew about 175 people on Friday and 375 on Saturday, said Stacy ELKW, manager of the Granada and a 1983 KU graduate.
Her father Mike, owner of the Granada, said he didn't want to change the historic feel of the theater, which opened in 1934 and closed several years ago.
"We've tried to keep as much as possible the original flavor of the theater." Ellwell St.
Most patrons didn't mind when they were asked not to smoke, she said.
But John Neal, Overland Park senior, said he went to the bar Friday and Saturday. He isn't a smoker, but his friends are, he said.
Before it was a theater, the building was an ice-skating rink and then a Ford garage. Stacy Elwell said the design on the wall inside the bar was painted in 1940. As a result, the Granada doesn't allow smoking to protect the painting.
"It's kind of a stupid rule to have a bar or a club you can't smoke in." he said
The smoke-free environment isn't the
only thing that is unique about the bar. The lobby of the Granada has been turned into a cafe that serves coffee and desserts.
"We have every kind of coffee drink you could want," Stacy Elwell said.
Dan Ray, Lawrence resident, said he liked the spaciousness of the bar.
The bar also features a dance floor, movie screens for sports events and a maximum capacity of 595 people without seats.
"It's just a different atmosphere from other bars in town, 'Rav said.' I think it will be a good place in Lawrence where a lot of bands that are too big for the Bottleneck but not big enough for Memorial Hall can play."
Stacy Elwell said she wants to play a variety of music. Her tentative plan is to have live music on Fridays and Saturdays, comedy on Mondays, piano on Tuesdays, bass
ketball competitions on Wednesdays and jazz on Thursday.
The Granada is open from 4 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Minors will not be allowed in after 8 p.m. Stacy Elwell said.
Elwell said the building was available to rent on Sundays and during the day.
Tomorrow, Jim Boyd will play piano from 6 to 10 p.m. River City Six jazz band will also play Thursday and Sept. 23 and the Stringers will be playing Sept. 17 and 24. Coming bands include Marquee Jordan Quinet and Soul Shakers.
Generally, from 4 to 5 p.m. the Granada plays soft music, such as jazz or classical, Stacy Elwell said. After 9 p.m. the bar plays more dance music.
"We want to have our own style," she said. "We don't want to compete with the people who have been here a long time."
KU students finish local man's movie
Vietnam Era Junction City is the setting
By J.R. Clairborne Kansan staff writer
The year is 1968.
Love, the new pimp in town, stands on the corner of Ninth and Washington streets in Junction City running down his rules of the business to one of his ladies of the night.
Despite his desire for respect from the older members of the established order, Love and his "colleagues" aim to take over the street, the heart of Junction City's night life, from the old blood that runs it.
Love — played by Byron Myrick, a former student at the University of Kansas — and other past and present KU students yesterday finished filming the movie "Ninth Street," a film by Kevin Willmott, Lawrence resident.
The film will not be released until producers sign with a national distributor.
The movie centers on Junction City's hot spot for soldiers from Fort Riley at the time of the Vietnam War. Fort Riley is the army base just north of Junction City, which closed down the nightclubs in 1976, Willmott said.
Today, the area is a parking lot.
"There were a lot of soldiers with money in their pockets and a lot of women came down after them," said Sean Saffold, Cleveland, Ohio, graduate student. "It was a wild town, very wild."
Saffold, known to KU students for his in-progress movie "Birdland," was the film's associate producer. Both he and Willmott also made brief appearances in the film.
Willmott, who is originally from Junction City, said he modeled the movie after recollections from his days in his hometown.
Before 1968, the street was known as the city's blues spot and attracted many musicians from the Kansas City and St. Louis areas.
"But in '68, the street saw a lot of drugs and violent crimes," Willnott said. "A different set of values came upon the street, which led to its decline."
Also assisting Willmott and Saffold from the University were director Tim Rebman, a former student, and co-producer Dave Yonelly, a KU graduate.
Other students in the film include Sean Holland, Kismet senior; Robert Tucker, former Jayhawk defensive tackle; Megan Group and Jerdel Taylor.
The movie features award-winners Martin Sheen and Isaac Hayes; KC Moore of "Daughters of the Dust"; and Kansas City's Queen Bev.
Willmott said Hayes and Sheen's involvement with the movie came through mutual friends and the actors' desire to help new projects. However, Myrick and Stroup were among those able to work directly with Hayes.
"This was a team project, and Isaac knows that," Stroup said. "He works as one of the team, and there's no one prima dona among us."
Myrick, whose character, Love, becomes a young thorn in the side of Isaac's character, Tipple Toe, said that he was intimidated initially by the thought of working with Hayes. He was so intimidated by Hayes' presence that he asked Willmott for a separate rehearsal before filming his first scene.
"It was fun though," he said. "He's so down to earth that I was comfortable."
"He's cooler than a fan."
BETTIE MAYER AND ELLEN PERRY
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
University of Kansas graduate Megan Stroup and former KU student Byron Myrick laugh as they try to go over a scene for the movie "Ninth Street," which was written and produced by Lawrence resident Kevin Willmott. The movie is being filmed in Junction City.
Students everywhere fall into the stereotyping trap
By Chesley Dohl
Kansas staff writer
Shelly Falehits, Chicago junior, once met a guy who she pegged as "a total ultra hippy."
"He was really wild looking but he turned out to be just the opposite - very well read and intellectual," she said.
A recent study with German university students found that many students judge people's intelligence by their appearance.
Chris Crandall, associate professor of social psychology, said stereotyping is an automatic process.
In the German study, students judged the intelligence of strangers on videoat as they watched and listened to them read a 90-second script.
"Stereotyping is inevitable," Crandall said. "When we stereotype, we naturally process certain characteristics that lead us to come to conclusion about people."
"When I think of someone intelligent I usually picture the nerd type."
Peter Borkenau, a psychology professor at Bielefeld University in Germany, who conducted the study, had students judge strangers after viewing the videotape.
The result showed that the students made intelligence judgments based on the appearance of strangers.
Ed Murphy Kansas Citysophomor
"Stereotyping is inadvertently learned as we grow up, through our parents, peers, media, and experiences," Crandall said.
Attractive, self-assured individuals with stylish hair and well-proportioned bodies ranked higher, while the unrefined with round faces and stout bodies scored lower.
Students at KU shamefully admit they often stereotype, but they agree that stereotyping usually proves wrong in the end.
"When I think of someone intelligent I usually picture the nerd-type," said Ed Murphy, Kansas City sophomore. "I think of a slide rule, glasses and lots of books."
Melissa Terlip, Lawrence senior, said that she tries not to place people in categories, but that everyone does it whether intentionally or unintentionally.
"At a diverse school like KU it's really hard to tell about people," she said. "A lot of people are different and some people look way out there—but a lot of the time they're the extremely intelligent ones."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Fraternity named by KU student in assault and battery
A KU student has filed a lawsuit against the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity for damages suffered in a case alleging a 1992 assault and battery case.
Matthew Davis is seeking more than $10,000 in damages from the fraternity, its corporate officers and unknown members of the chapter.
Davis said in the lawsuit that members of Phi Kappa Psi beat him and knocked him unconscious during a fight Aug. 19, 1992. The suit said fraternity members then carried Davis to the Alpha Tau Omega house and called Douglas County Ambulance Service from there.
Davis was cut and bruised in the fight and unable to attend class until he recovered, according to the lawsuit.
Davis' attorney, Lawrence Seaman, would not comment on the lawsuit.
Student injured in traffic accident near Robinson Gym
A KU student was injured when she was struck by a car yesterday morning near Summerfield Hall.
Sgt. Rose Rozmiarke, KU police, said Nichole Euson, 24, was crossing Sunnyside Drive about 10:15 a.m. yesterday. Brian C. King, Broken Arrow, Okla, sophomore, was eastbound on Sunnyside when he hit her. Euson was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for head injuries and was listed in fair condition last night.
No citations have been issued, Rozmiarek said, and police are continuing to investigate.
Meyen to discuss new policy on consensual relationships
University Council will meet at 3:30 p.m. today in 108 Blake Hall. Ed Meyden, executive vice chancellor, will make a presentation on what led the University to develop a consensual relationship policy.
Victoria's College of Embryology
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and Sandra Kirk, assistant director of the college honors program, also will speak. Wick headed a task force last year on sexual harassment. The meeting will be open to the public.
Police investigate shooting of teenager at apartments
Lawrence police are investigating a shooting that occurred yesterday afternoon in an apartment in the 200 block of Michigan Street.
Officers originally responded to a fight and were told on arrival that a shooting had occurred.
According to Li. Ed Brunt, a 15-year-old girl had gone to the apartment to pick up her brother. A 15-year-old boy was in the apartment handling a small-caliber pistol. Witnesses said the gun fired, hitting the girl in the neck.
The girl walked to her apartment in the same building, and her mother took her to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Her condition was unavailable last night.
P
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
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Thursday, August 26, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Michigan recently enacted a new law forbidding doctors from performing assisted suicides.
THE BACKGROUND
Jack Kevorkian, Michigan physician, was indicted Aug. 17 on a charge of murder for his Aug. 4 performance of an assisted suicide.
THE OPINION
Personal freedom falls victim to Michigan law
The new Michigan law which prohibits assisted suicides needs to be overturned immediately to restore to Michigan constituents the personal freedom they should be guaranteed by the Constitution.
The law concerning assisted suicides should be similar to other laws concerning violations of individual freedom, such as theft. If an individual gives consent to another person to take possession of an object, it is not theft.
Likewise, if a person asks the doctor, while sound of mind and intent, to take his life, it is not murder; it is the pursuit of a higher quality of life.
To enact a law allowing assisted suicides, the federal government would need to regulate the methods, counseling and waiting period necessary for each assisted suicide.
The federal government needs to overturn the Michigan law and allow doctors to continue their original mission of maintaining a higher quality of life, not simply maintaining life.
DAVE BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Brighter lights provide KU a safer atmosphere
"But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?" Romeo was referring to Juliet, but students who will walk on the University of Kansas campus at night may ask the same question this semester. Thanks to a $2 increase in student fees and matching funds from the repair and rehabilitation fund, KU can now boast more than 100 taller and brighter streetlamps. Kudos go out to the administration and facilities operations, as well as the student body who together made this possible.
The first phase of this five-year plan to improve campus lighting is going well. Jayhawk Boulevard has better lighting than ever, and plans have been made to improve lighting in other dark areas such as around Watson Library and Marvin Grove. Improved lighting is a main concern of the safety-conscious. Glancing behind shrubbery for a possible assailant is not easy under the veil of darkness.
In an ideal world, there would be no reason to beat back the darkness by such expensive means. Students could walk any path with only the light of the moon and stars bathing the way. Alas, the world is not ideal, and these lights will be well worth the wait and expense even if only one rape or assault is averted.
MICHELLE SMITH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:
TRACY BEDELL, DAVID BURGETT, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MATT HOOD, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN McCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEER, MATT O'CONNER, KIRR REDMOND, CHRS REEDY, KC TRAUER, BRIAN THOMPSON, MARK SLAMIN, MICHELLE SMITH, MIKE SILVERMAN, EISHA TEIRNEY, DAVID WANEK
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING...
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING...
WH... WHAT'S GOING ON?
I SAW YOU TAKING INDECENT LIBERTIES WITH A STUDENT...
I JUST PUT MY HAND ON HER SHOULDER!
TELL IT TO THE JUDGE, SICKO...
KU
SEX
POLICE
BRIAN THUMPSON
Nerds, math important to future of human race
Summer vacation is almost over, so today Uncle Dave has a special back-to-school "pep talk" for you young people, starting with these heartfelt words of encouragement: HA HA HA YOU HAVE TO GO BACK TO SCHOOL AND UNCLE DAVE DOESN'T NEERER NEERER NEENER NEENER
Seriously, young people, I have some important back to school advice for you, and I can boil it down to four simple words: "Study Your Mathematics."
I say this because of a recent Associated Press story, which stated that three out of every four high-school students left school without an adequate understanding of mathematics. Frankly, I am not surprised. "How, I constantly ask myself, "can we expect today's young people to understand mathematics when so many of them can't even point their baseball caps in the right direction?"
STAFF COLUMNIST
I constantly see young people with the bills of their baseball caps pointed BACKWARDS. This makes no sense, young people! If you examine your cap closely, you will note that it has a piece sticking out of the FRONT, called a "bill." The purpose of the bill is to keep the sun off your face, which, unless your parents did a great many drugs in the '60s (Ask them about it), is located on the FRONT of your head. So to summarize what we learned: "FRONT of cap goes on FRONT of头." Got it, young people? Let's all strive to do better in the coming school year!
But also we need to think about getting those math scores up. A shocking number of you young people are unable to solve basic math problems.
DAVE BARRY
You young people must learn to handle the basic mathematical concepts such as this if you hope to ever become a smug and complacent older person such as myself. I studied math under Mr. Solon, who, in my senior year, attempted to teach us calculus (from the ancient Greek words "calc" meaning the "study of" and "ulus," meaning "something that only Mr. Solon could understand").
But during those brief periods when we were facing Mr. Solon, we received a solid foundation in mathematics, learning many important mathematical concepts that we still use in our professional lives as employees of top U.S. corporations. A good example is the mathematical concept of "9", which we use almost daily to obtain an outside line on our corporation telephones so that we can order Chinese food, place bets, call 1-900-BOSOMS.
Mr. Solon was an excellent teacher, and although the subject matter was dry, he was able to keep the class attention riveted on him from the moment the bell rang until the moment, minutes later, when a large girls' gym class walked past the classroom windows, every single day.
You young people deserve to have
the same advantages, which is why I was so pleased to note in the Associated Press story that some university professors have received a $6 million federal grant to develop new ways to teach math to high school students. The professors know this will be a challenge. One of them is quoted as saying. "There is a mentality in this country that mathematics is something a few nerds out there do and if you don't understand mathematics, it's OK - you don't need it."
This is a bad mentality, young people. There is nothing "nerdy" about mathematics. Contrary to their image as a bunch of out-of-fit, huge-butted Far-Side-professor dweebs who spend all day staring at incomprehensible symbols on a blackboard while piles of dandruff form around their ankles, today's top mathematicians are in fact a group of exciting, dynamic and glamorous individuals who are working to solve some of the most fascinating and challenging problems facing the human race today. ("Let's see, at $2.98 apiece, with a $6 million federal grant, we could buy ... WHOA! THAT'S 2,031,422.82 POCKET PROTECTORS!")
So come on, young people! Get in on the action! Work hard in math this year, and remember this; if some muscle-bound Neanderthal bullies corner you in the bathroom and call you a "nerd," you just look them straight in the eye and say, "Oh, YEAH? Why don't you big jerks. .LET GO! HEY! DON'T PUT MY HEAD IN THE TOI-LET! HEY!" And tell them that goes double for your Uncle Dave.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Recent violence as method of protest condemned by Pro-Choice supporters
The guerrilla warfare tactics utilized by anti-abortion zealots is reprehensible and should be condemned by all law-abiding citizens. The shooting of Dr. Tiller in Wichita reaffirms our belief that the anti-abortion movement has no respect for personal rights and no longer chooses to obey the law.
their constitutional right to privacy and choice.
We call on Congress and the President of the United States to expedite the enactment of laws that would allow federal protection not only for doctors who perform abortions but also for women who are exercising
While the debate on abortion rights continues, the KU Pro-Choice Coalition believes that discussion and education will lead to answers that will help the majority of the people in America. Violence is no way to solve any problem, no matter where you stand on the issue. The KU Pro-Choice Coalition opposes all acts of vio-
Royal Bombers The KU Pro-Choice Coalition opposes all acts of violence.
Andy Nolan
Stephanie Gabriel
Co-chairs of the KU Pro-Choice Coalition
STAFF COLUMNIST
LANCE HAMBY Presidential promises are doing little for Bosnians
LANCE
HAMBY
Promises, promises, promises. Mr. Bill has made plenty of these hollow statements since his inaugural day in January, but his "foreign policy lie" concerning the besieged former Republic of Yugoslavia has turned out to be the worst.
Mr. Bill promised American voters and war-ravaged Bosnian Muslims that he would take actions to alleviate the atrocities occurring in this ongoing '90s Holocaust. Since that promise was made, no new action has been taken. Regrettably, Mr. Bill's regarding Bosnia has been complicated further by his constantly changing intended policies for Yugoslavia. Now the militant Serb leader, Milošovic, links U.S. words with inaction, and because of that, future U.S. and United Nations efforts of bargaining through military threats are all but gone. This evident lack of decisiveness led one Bosnian expert, Patrick Glynn, to compare Mr. Bill's befuddled foreign policy to "Carter without the coherence." It is too bad that the stability of Europe is at stake instead of the Panama Canal.
The problem in Bosnia today is rare because it is capable of transcending the political game in the United States. Whether to save little Erma is neither a Republican or a democratic issue. It is simply a humanitarian necessity. Mr. Bill hasn't yet grasped this point. To Mr. Bell, Bosnia is still a fence and he remains content to sit on both sides as long as his constituents continue to show at least a 51-percent approval rating in the latest poll.
This blastant use of politicking becomes even more appalling as one reflects back on the senseless tragedies occurring daily in Bosnia. Young girls lose their virginity daily to prostitution just to pay for scraps of prostitution "Rape camps" are being set up by the Serbs as a means of destroying the Bosnian-Muslim gene pool. "Work camps" terrifyingly similar to Nazi Germany's are already in operation. In some parts of the country, funerals no longer can be attended by loved ones because of Serb shelling. The fortunate residents of Bosnia who are only wounded also face a bleak future because medical care is almost nonexistent due to the scant medical supplies. These atrocities are not just a nightmare to a few Bosnians but instead they are a reality to the masses. Are these brutal injustices not worthy of increased U.S. action?
Mr. Bill, Hitler taught the world a very painful lesson in World War II, and now it seems apparent that Miosevic is determined to teach us all the horrors of genocide once. Or do I mean "ethnic cleansing"? One word may have a better connotation than the other, but the savage elimination of a race of people is still the intended result. With the hourglass almost empty for the Bosnian-Muslim people and winter rapidly approaching, Mr. Bill's inability to act in any way has taken, by default, a deadly tone in Bosnia. It is hard to believe that this is the same Mr. Bill who just last November scathingly criticized the George Bush administration for inaction in Bosnia. It is tragic for Bosnia that Mr. Bill's rhetoric doesn't translate into action.
Lance Hamby is a Wichita junior liberal arts and science major.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET
Technology coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
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Media ... Klip Chin, Renee Knober
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Graphics ... John Paul Pogel
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Copy Chiefs
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Scott Anderson
Mark Button
Matt Doyle
Gerry Fay
Donella Heame
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reporters
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William
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Ursula
Ellizabeth Barry ... Copy Editors
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Jack Fischer ... Kevin Grace
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 26, 1993
5
State officials resign from posts
Weak U.S. response to Bosnian conflict leads to departures
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The cable was sickening: a 9-year-old Muslim girl raped by Serb militiamen in Bosnia, left lying in a pool of blood. Her parents, forced to watch from behind a fence, restrained from going to her. They kept watch for two days, until she died.
Jon Western, a young intelligence analyst at the State Department, read the account in disbelief. Then it came to his desk again,
This month he became one of four young State Department officials who, over the past year, have abandoned promising careers to protest the United States' hands-off policy in Bosnia, which in their view is tantamount to sanctioning a Serb genocide of Muslims. Two other State Department Bosnia specialists have asked to be reassured.
told to U.S. investigators separately by other refugees, and he was forced to believe
Not since a u.s. spirit of resignations 20 years ago over a U.S. policy in Southeast Asia has the State Department known such rebellion.
Several days earlier, his colleague Marshall Freeman Harris, 32, had also quit his fast-moving, eight-year, $50,000-a-year diplomatic career and went to work for Rep. Frank McCloskey, D-Ind, a proponent of more U.S. leadership on Bosnia.
"I found myself going home every night extraordinarily bitter and angry," Western said. He said that his regular accounts and
"I just couldn't stomach the policy any more," Harris said. "I lost all respect for the people who had come up with the policy.
ANALYSIS
analyses to Secretary of State Warren Christopher received weak responses.
Harris and Western point to July 21 as a rock-bottom day when Christopher, asked whether the United States would act to prevent the fall of Sarajevo besieging
Serb forces, said: "The United States is doing all that it can consistent with its national interests."
"It was excruciating to watch," said Harris, whose job was to monitor the suffering of Sarajevo's Muslims and who did not think the United States is doing anywhere near what it could.
Harris drafted a letter to Christopher in April that was signed by 11 colleagues, urging the administration to follow through with two initiatives it had proposed: help the Muslims get weapons to defend themselves and bomb the Serb artillery bombing them.
Of the 12 signatories on the Christopher letter, only four are still at their jobs. The others have either quit or been rotated to other jobs, Harris said.
World Trade Center bomb plotters charged
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A radical Muslim cleric whose followers have been charged in the World Trade Center bombing and a plot to blow other towers and tunnels in New York City was indicted in the case for the first time yesterday.
Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and three others — including the man accused of organizing militant Rabbi Meir Kahane
— also were charged in the federal indictment with conspiring to murder Egyptian police.
Kahane's alleged assassin, El Sayid A. Nosair, was indicted on new charges in
that killing. Nosair was acquitted of state murder charges but is in state prison on a related weapons conviction.
The new indictment alleges that 11 men previously charged with a failed plot to bomb the Lincoln and Holland tunnels, the George Washington Bridge and a building housing FBI offices also were involved in the Feb. 26 World Trade Center blast. That attack killed six people, injured more than 1,000 and displaced hundreds of businesses for weeks.
Many of the defendants were followers of Abdel-Rahman, 55, who preached at the police academy.
The Egyptian cleric has been in federal
custody in Otisville, N.Y., since July 2, after an immigration judge ordered him deported.
Named with Abdel-Rahman and Nosair in the alleged plot to assassinate Mubarak were Mohammed Aboulalima, the brother of a defendant in the Trade Center bombing, and Abdo Mohammed Haggag, who was arrested on a similar charge last month.
The federal indictment charges Nosair with racketeering for having murdered Kahane by shooting him to death at a Manhattan hotel. It said that he also attempted to kill a U.S. postal officer as he fled.
radicals and many of those charged earlier in the two cases were known to have supported him during his trial.
The new indictment had been promised a month ago by prosecutors who were transcribing hundreds of hours of tape recordings captured by a government informant who had become a close confidant of Abdel-Rahman.
Based on information from the informant, authorities arrested 11 men who allegedly plotted to bomb the United Nations, the building housing the FBI and two tunnels connecting New York City and New Jersey. All of them have pleaded innocent.
Nosar is seen as a hero to young Muslim
Former Contra rebels release some hostages after talks
MANAGUA — Former Contra rebels freed some of their hostages Wednesday after talks with a Roman Catholic cardinal, but rival Sandinista hostage-takers in the capital, residence and four others canvassed.
Jose Angel "The Jack" Talavare, a leader of the former Contra rebels, freed 11 of his 16 hostages after more than six hours of negotiations with Cardinal Miguel Obando y Benoît.
1. The Associated Press
quick end to the dual hostage crisis, which began here Thursday with the kidnapping of Congressional deputies and other officials, many of them Sandinistas.
Talavera off the talks when he said he saw government troops in the area but later resumed them, said Antonio Lacayo, the chief aide to President Violeta Chamorro. Still, Cromoamor and other officials said they hoped for a
"The situation in Nicaragua is improving..." President Chamorro said on arrival in Mexico City for a brief visit. "At the moment Heft there were no more than 10 hostages, five in Managua and five in the north."
"We are optimistic," Lacaya told reporters in Managua. Interior Ministry representative Maria Cristina Arguello said yesterday that the "simultaneous liberation" of hostages at both sites could occur soon.
The crisis is an explosive outgrowth of divisions remaining from the civil war between U.S.-backed Contra rebels and a Sandinista government.
The former Contras and Sandinistas accuse the government of failing to deliver promised land and aid when they disarmed. The government made the promises in hopes of receiving massive U.S. aid that never materialized.
Two congressional deputies who were among the five hostages still held by Talavera's men near Quilali threatened to go on a hunger strike if they were not freed soon.
Talavera's former Contras also are outraged that Chamorro has left the army and police in Sandinista hands despite defeating them in a 1990 election. They are demanding the resignations of top Sandinista officials.
The Managua hostages were seized on Friday by Sandinistas in response to the Quilah hostage-taking. Each group has released most of the hostages originally seized.
U.S. places China under sanctions
The Associated Press
The move constituted another setback to U.S. Chinese relations, plagued by differences over human rights and other issues relating to China's weapons export program.
WASHINGTON — The United States applied limited sanctions against China and Pakistan yesterday after concluding that China had sold missile technology to Pakistan, violating an international arms control agreement.
China denies selling the weapons to Pakistan. In Pakistan, a foreign Ministry spokesman Munir Akram said Pakistan purchased short-range missiles from China, but not the M-11s. He did not address the question of whether Pakistan had purchased M-11 missile technology.
The sanction bans the sale of sensitive high technology equipment to the Chinese entities responsible for the sale, said State Department representative Mike McCurry.
At issue is U.S. evidence suggesting that China transferred to Pakistan technology related to the M-11 surface-to-surface missile its export violates the Missile Technology Control Regime.
"It's our estimate that somewhere between $400 million and $500 million a year of commercial activity will be affected by the sanctions that are imposed today," he said. Those figures are less than 10 percent of U.S. exports to China last year. The impact on trade with Pakistan is expected to be minimal.
Officials said part of the U.S. case against the two countries was based on satellite photographs taken of a Chinese shipment that arrived last year at the Pakistan port of Karachi.
Pakistan already is prohibited from receiving most U.S. aid because of legislation barring assistance to countries developing a nuclear weapons capability.
Lym Davis, the under secretary of state for international security affairs, informed the Chinese and Pakistani ambassadors of the U.S. decision.
U. S. law requires that sanctions be applied when the Missile Technology Control Regime is violated. It bars the transfer of missiles with a range of more than 186 miles or a payload of more than 1,100 pounds.
Richard Brecher, of the U.S. China Business Council, said China had an $18 billion trade surplus with the United States last year. The net effect, he said, was to worsen the trade imbalance.
He said the U.S. company most affected probably would be Hughes Aircraft, which exports to China satellites that are launched on Chinese rockets.
.
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Thursday, August 26, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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THE KANSAS UNION
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Sign-Up for Fall Leagues
Monday Mixer 7 p.m.
Tuesday Tri-Mixer 7 p.m.
Wednesday Mixer 7 p.m.
Thursday Guys'n'Dolls 7 p.m.
Leagues begin September 7
Sign-Up at the Kansas Union Jaybowl
Level One - 964-3545
KU Men's and Women's Bowling Team
sing up for tryouts now Team meeting Aug. 31
Represent KU in intercollegiate competition. For more information contact Coach Michael Fine or Tim DeMars.
The Kansas Union Jaybow Level One · 864-3545
THE NEWS in brief
NAPOLEAN. Ind
Five members of a family were found shot to death on a farm located about 40 miles west of Cincinnati, and authorities yesterday were searching for a relative who is considered the prime suspect.
Family shooting deaths lead police to search for relative as suspect
around the rural farmhouse, police said. Three of the victims were found about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday by a daughter of the Powerses who was concerned when they did not return from visiting the Hardebecks, police said. Further searching found the other two bodies on the farm yesterday morning.
The bodies of Martha Hardebek, 73, her sons Jimmy and Martin, her daughter Bettie Powers, and Mrs. Powers' husband, Virgil, were found Tuesday and yesterday in and around the rural farmhouse, police said.
State police Sgt. Bob Gray identified the missing relative as George Harddebeck, 31, another son of Mrs. Harddebeck's. He was considered the prime suspect, Gray said.
"We think he has to know something. There is no indication of robbery or forced entry." Gray said. "He's the only left and we are considering this a case of a domestic dispute at this time."
The body of Mrs. Powers was found in her car on the Hardeebekes' property. She apparently tried to flee when she was shot but her vehicle struck a tree, police said.
ECONOMIC REVOLUTION IN THE WORLD
Twins' father could face jail time
PHILADELPHIA
Kenneth Lakeberg, the father of the Siamese twins who were separated so that one might live, could wind up in jail for violating the probation he got for a stabbing last year.
Lakeberg, 26. pleaded guilty in May to a reduced charge of battery for stabbing a cousin during an argument last Christmas at his home in Wheatfield, Ind.
At the time, Lakeborg told the judge the argument erupted after he disclosed that his wife, Reitha, was pregnant with Siamese twins and that the couple were considering an abortion.
His probation officer filed a petition in June to have one year probation revoked, saying a random drug test had detected traces of cocaine. A hearing has been scheduled for Sept. 3.
KU TRIATHLON & SWIM CLUB
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Major has proposed putting Britain on the same time as western Europe, mainly in the belief that this will help British businesses, which now open and close an hour later than their continental counterparts. The government also hopes that delaying darkness will mean fewer road accidents.
Rodney King was ordered to spend at least two months in an alcohol rehabilitation center for drunken driving in his fourth brush with the law since his 1992 beating.
But pushing the clocks ahead by one hour would make sunrise come as late as 10 a.m. in the westernmost parts of the United Kingdom.
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the United Kingdom.
"Children would be going to school in the dark," protested Calum Smith, representative for the Scottish National Party. "There may be benefits to London and the southeast of England, but because of Scotland's geographical location, it wouldn't be right for us."
witnesses told police that King was driving the car, which crashed into a wall near a nightclub early Saturday. He and his two passengers were not hurt.
British times may be changing in other ways as well. The European Community's governing body is expected to propose next month that all EC countries make their summer-to-winter time changes simultaneously. Britain and the Republic of Ireland do it in October, a month after other EC nations.
Cold, wet, gloomy — Britons love to gripe about their winter mornings. And now Prime Minister John Major wants to make the darkness last an hour longer.
King, 28, had a blood alcohol level twice the legal limit of 98 percent, said David Gascon, police commander.
Authorities never pressed charges in other run-ins with the law including when King was arrested and accused of trying to run over an officer and also in an arrest after his wife told police she had been injured in a dispute.
He could get up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine on each of two counts.
"It just seems that he can't keep himself contained," said Jerome Di Maggi of the state Corrections Department, which is supervising King's parole.
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LOST...CONFUSED...WITHOUTFUNDS???
then don't miss the
Treasurer's Workshop
STUDENT SENATE and The University Comptroller's Office
Saturday, August 28 9:30-11:00 a.m. Walnut Room, Kansas Union
Tuesday, August 31 7:00-8:30 p.m.
Pioneer Room, Burge Union
Topics will include:
* How to receive Student Senate funding *
* How to spend state funds *
* How to keep accurate records *
* Creating University accounts *
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, August 26, 1993
I'll try to be as accurate as possible, but the image is too blurry to read clearly. There are no discernible text elements. If you can provide more context or a clearer image, I would be happy to help with transcription.
William Alix / KANSAN
Chris Coy, Columbus, Ohio, senior, braved yesterday's heat and played frisbee in front of Fraser Hall.
Watkins testing herpes drugs
Student volunteers infected with virus can aid center trial By Liz Klinger
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
About 30 million people between the ages of 15 and 74 carry the virus that typically causes genital herpes, according to the American Social Health Association.
Watkins needs the students to participate in a clinical trial that will test the safety and efficacy of a new antihyperthemic drug called valacyclovir.
The health center is one of 30 public health clinics and university health centers in the United States participating in the trial.
Watkins Memorial Health Center is looking for just 30 students with recurrent outbreaks of the virus.
"We started this study using a new experimental drug for initial onset herpes," said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
On Sept. 9, 1992, Watkins began a trial for patients that enrolled within 72 hours of their first outbreak. Patients were given nine unmarked pills each day for 10 days that either contained a dosage of valacyclovir or acyclovir.
Yockey said that acyclovir, which has been on the market for eight years, has to be taken many times a day to be effective. Yockey said the study may show that valacyclovir can be taken less often.
Participants in the second part of the trial, which began last week, will be given medication to be taken at the start of their next outbreak. They will
"We started this study using a new experimental drug for initial onset herpes."
Charles Yockey Chief of staff at Watkins
be given unmarked doses of valacyclovir, valacyclovir and sugar pills, or just sugar pills. A participant will have a one in four chance of receiving sugar pills.
Patients will receive examinations, culture tests and two blood tests to chart results.
Yockey said an initial genital herpes outbreak can last from seven to 14 days. Although a mild outbreak may be difficult to detect, a severe outbreak will include red blister-like bumps that fill with water and appear around the genitalia. The lesions will then become crusty and eventually disappear, with or without medication.
After the initial outbreak, the outbreaks will appear about every three months. The outbreaks will become less frequent and shorter in length. With the exception of victims under a lot of stress, Yockey said, most sufferers will stop experiencing breakouts in five years.
About 90 percent of the herpes victims that Watkins' physicians see are women.
How you can participate
Qualifications to be a recurrent genital herpes clinical trial participant:
- **Must be at least 18 years old**
- **Must have recurring episodes of genital herpes in the 12 months prior to entering the study.**
- ■ Must undergo an examination
■ If accepted for the study, the participant must sign a consent form.
- Must have a history of herpes simplex infections at the genitalia or closely surrounding areas.
What study participants will face:
The study will also determine whether the participant has HSV-1 or HSV-2
Participants who complete the trial will receive a stipend of $100.
Participants will receive all medication, examinations and tests at no charge.
Anyone who believes they have recurrent genital herpes and is interested in participating in the trial should visit a clinical unit for treatment. Information is confidential.
Source: Burroughs Wellcome Co. KANSAN
"It really screws up their lives for up to a week," Yockey said.
Yockey said the pain of an initial genital herpes outbreak is excruciating.
"It feels like a razor blade is stuck in your skin," Yockey said.
He said that there were 250 herpes-related visits in the last year, making it the third highest sexually transmitted disease seen at Watkins.
Chlamydia and human papillomavirus are ranked first and second.
Mock Student Senate meeting focuses on being prepared
By Donella Hearne
Kansas staff writer
"Personal attacks are uncalled for," John Shoemaker. Student Body President, warned the student senators.
Kansan staff writer
"It is infinitely more persuasive to say in a word what others may butcher in a sentence," Shoemaker said. "Efficiency does not mean
quick and sloppy. We can accomplish much but only if we are prepared."
"Every time we meet together we get to feel out each other's personalities more." Perry said. Debating a mock bill to fund a KU Amatur Fly-
Fishing Club exposed the real fishermen in the club. There was some snickering during the discussion on what kind of bait should be used.
Travis Harrod, who heads the Student Executive Committee, addressed the Senate with humor and optimism for the coming year.
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After discussing the community value of the club, the senators voted on financing.
The Anateur Fly-Fishing Club would receive $329 for postage and advertising costs.
The big debate last night at the first Student Senate meeting of the semester focused on whether a speech by Kernit the Frog would be worth $3,000.
It was when Jim Henson's little green Muppet was referred to as a "stuffed animal," that the debate really got serious.
The process used to pass the mock bill is the same that will be used to determine the fate of all the bills presented to the Senate this year.
Ann Perry, Topeka senior and Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said preparation activities, such as the mock meeting, helped senators develop a good working relationship.
Student Senate meetings are held at 6:30 pm every other Wednesday night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Regular meetings will begin Sept. 8 and are open to the public.
The mock Senate meeting gave new senators a chance to experience the legislative procedures before they begin debating on actual issues next week. It also gave Shoemaker a chance to emphasize his goal of cutting down meeting times without stalling progress.
"I feel a lot of energy from you guys," Harrod said. "There's a lot of love in this room."
"We do have a dedication this year to making meetings more efficient." Shoemaker said.
meetings more efficient, Shoemaker said. In his first presidential report to the senators last night, Shoemaker stressed the importance of being prepared.
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ARTS & EVENTS FINANCE
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
Opportunities For Involvement In The
K. U. Student Senate.
Please Take The Time This Week To Pick Up An Application For The Committees And Boards Of The Student Senate.
Pick Up And Return Applications At The Student Senate Office At 410 Kansas Union By Friday,Aug.27
Call 864-3710 For Questions
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Last 2 Days Thursday, Aug.26 & Friday, Aug.27
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---
8
Thursday, August 26, 1993
story idea? 864-4810
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Love 'em, don't leave 'em
ALEXANDRA PLEY
His big brown eyes begged you to keep him. You couldn't say
Cary Sanders, Lawrence senior, gets a big wet "doggy kiss" from her dog Ben.
"no. Now he's yours — for life."
Kansan staff writer
By JL Watson
Kansas staff writer
Students return to campen en masse at the end of the summer. They are not the only population to increase. Many students cannot bear to part with beloved pets, so they bring them along $ ^{—}$ for the educational experience.
"We have to screen prospective owners because we want them to be responsible and to really think about the amount of commitment involved in owning a pet," House said.
Other students adopt pets after they arrive in Lawrence. Pets can be obtained at pet stores, through giveaways, advertisements and at the Lawrence Humane Society, 1805 E. 19th St. Renee Harris, humane society manager, said she is choosy when deciding whether a student will be allowed to adopt a shelter animal.
The worst times
Spring and summer are the worst times for aban
doned pets, she said.
"Two hundred sixty-seven dogs were brought in last month, and when we get that many, we can't keep them for any length of time. With so many, we usually keep them about a week, which doesn't give them much exposure to the public. This gives them less chance of being adopted."
During the fall and winter months, more pets are adopted, which leaves more kennel space for new arrivals. During that time, the animals are kept for three to six weeks and have a better chance of finding homes.
One of the most common reasons pets are left at the shelter is that owners can no longer afford to care for them. Harris said students should take this into consideration when adopting pets.
It costs $60 to adopt a dog from the Lawrence Humane Society. Fifty dollars of the fee is applied toward spaying or neutering the pet. In addition, there are the costs of vaccinations, food and treatment for other health complications a pet may have.
Final costs vary
Veterinarian W.W. Wemp, 219E Ninth St., said apet owner can expect to spend at least $200 during the first year after adopting a pet. "Of course, the final costs will vary from pet to pet," he said. "Generally, the smaller dogs are less expensive, especially when it comes to feeding costs."
Wempe said owners can cut costs in the long run by giving their pets a healthy start. "Give the proper vaccinations, give them a good diet and spend time training them," he said.
Cary Sanders. Lawrence senior, gets a big wet "oowee"
such as puppies "because they are cute." They do not
consider the fact that pets need care for a lifetime.
Wempe said that students are usually conscientious pet owners. The ones who do not often adopt animals
"Sometimes the students leave at the end of the school year and leave the dogs running loose." Wempe said. When that happens, the animals either are picked up by an animal control officer or are left to roam the streets looking for food.
Situation has improved
Wenpe said the most common injuries he treats are in dogs that have been hit by cars. The situation has improved since the city passed an ordinance banning loose animals, he said.
Jonathan Wilke, Still well senior, has owned a black Labrador German shepherd mix named Syd for seven years. He trained her to avoid streets, but he said the process took a long time.
"I think she was brushed by the wheels of a car once or twice, and that made her more aware." Wilke said. He
said he trusts Syd to avoid traffic and does not chain her to a leash
Energy and time
Patience is a requirement for owning a pet, particularly a dog. Most puppies go through a chewing phase
It took Syd eight months to grasp the idea of house training, Wilke said.
Owning a dog requires energy and time. "If you're not going to spend time with a pet then you shouldn't own one." Wilke said.
Despite the extra efforts required of pet owners, Harris said that most do a good job and find the experience rewarding.
"Of the animals that are picked up and brought to the shelter, 30 percent are returned to their owner," she said. "That's a fairly high number."
100
John Gamble / KANSAN
Jonathan Wilke, Stillwell senior, and his dog Syd, a black Labrador and Gen man shepherd mix, play catch outside Wilde's home.
Ben's paradise:
3 cats and a big yard
Sara Bennett
Cary Sanders has a soft spot for animals. Sanders, Lawrence senior, has adopted four pets since becoming a KU student. Her first three pets were cats. Last year she adopted a puppy, Benjamin, from Wayside Waffa, a human shelter, in Grandview, MO.
"I wanted a dog so that I could have more interaction than I get with my cats," Sanders said. "I feel like there's a real connection, a bond between us."
Cats are more independent and need less supervision, Sanders said. When she began adopting pets, Sanders lived in the country. Since then he has moved to a the city.
"Initially, Beu had to make an adjustment," Sanders said. "For awhile I lived in an apartment, and that was kind of difficult because he
couldn't go outside whenever he wanted."
Sanders and her menagerie now live in a house with a fenced yard so Ben has more freedom to play outside.
"It works out great because I don't have to be with him every second." Sanders said.
"Ben has taught me a lot about patience," Sanders said. "I've had to learn to understand his behavior and try to modify it in a constructive way so that we can live together."
The best way to achieve good behavior is time and consistency. Sanders said, "We repeat commands until Ben understands them." Rewards such as dog bones are effective motivational tools for getting a dog's attention, Sanders said. Ben is now a year old and has outgrown most
But how is a year out of his chipping phase.
"It has been frustrating at times," Sanders said,
"but I'd do it again."
Dead Playwrights breathe life into plays
In the tradition of the Dead Poets Society, KU graduate students in the theater meet to read plays.
Sara Rennett
Robert Findlay, professor of theater and film, isn't Robin Williams, and his graduate students aren't rich and repressed prep-school boys. But they do have a few things in common with the Peter Wewer film "Dead Poets Society." They're members of KU's Dead Playwrights Society, and Rick Mundy, Lawrence graduate student, said there were many similarities.
Since its founding last year, the group has read over 42 plays and drank an estimated 25 gallons of coffee.
Like Robin Williams' charismatic English class in "Dead Poets Society," Findlay's graduate-level modern drama courses inspired the formation of the Dead Plavwrights Society.
"In the film, a group of students (like us) meet secretly at night (like we do) to read aloud (like we do) the works of dead poets (like we do)," said Mundy in one of the group's fiers. "Their hunger for life and art is summed up in their motto, "Carpe Diem" — Seize the Day. Our motto is "Carpe Noctem" — Seize the Night. They met in a cave. We don't Yet."
Instead, the Dead Playwright Society meets weekly at a member's
meeting at Perkins at night at night to read assigned plays aloud together.
Stacey MacFarlane, Lawrence graduate student, said the group was born when she and her classmates began
Findlay said the study group had improved class discussion and understanding of the ___.
"I must say that the chance to hear the plays brought to bear a much better discussion than I'd ever had in a class," he said. "It been a very significant addition to what normally went on in my classes."
"That became the seed of DFS," she said. "It was just a fun way to get the plays read. But it's really sort of blossomed."
MacFarlane said the Dead Playwrights Society brought plays to life.
The society is dedicated to exposing students to works they might not otherwise read.
"When you're a theater student, you'll get into beginning theater and read "A Doll's House" by Ibsen," he said. "Then you get into Theater in
In theater, it is something that's alive, and this brings the written word to life," she said. "When you can hear how a play sounds, it's much different than reading it silently."
"Theater is
"Their hunger for life and art is summed up in their motto, 'Carpe Diem'— Seize the Day." Robert Findlay professor of theater and film
Mundy said the Dead Playwrights Society had grown from a study group to an organization with a charter and
Western Civilization and you read "A Doll's House" by Ibsen. Then you go to the theater and you see "A Doll's House" by Ibsen. There's a lot of other stuff out there.
To expose students to that other stuff, the society focuses on lesser-known works by featured playwrights, plays from selected periods or genres, or a related
series of plays.
And no, the playwrights don't have to be dead. The society holds that all authors are dead because meaning is created in the minds of the audience and that the authors themselves are irrelevant to the work.
Mundy said the popularity of the
Dead Playwright Society was growing. Local playwrights have approached the group to hear them read their works, and staged readings are held periodically.
Saturday, the group is hosting a Texas Trilogy barbecue, where three plays by Preston Jones will be read.
Mundy said the group ranged from five to 20 members and always was looking for new members.
Roles are assigned without regard to the training, experience, age, nationality, race or gender of the readers, and plays are chosen to be read by group consensus.
MacFarlane said the Dead Playwrights Society hoped to become an official University organization soon.
Both MacFarlane and Mundy said the most valuable aspect of belonging to the Dead Playwrights Society was the sense of long friendships with their colleagues.
"We're able to see each other in a different venue that’s a little more relaxed," said MacFarlane. "It’s just a good way to be together."
Mundy said, "You make professional contacts in class, you make artistic contacts in rehearsals, but we build friendships in Dead Playwrights Society."
Anyone interested in becoming a member can seize the night by calling the Dead Playwrights Society at 865-5704.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AUGUST 26,1993 PAGE 9 KULIFE
Issues and trends at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHT LIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W. 23rd St.
John Brown Underground, formerly Fuzzbox with Lowlife, 9:30-10.pm. Thursday Love Squad, 9:30-10.pm. Friday L.A. Rammers, 9:30-10.pm. Saturday
12th and Oread
The Crossing
Dos Hombres
Arkansas White Trash, 9 p.m. Thursday
Die Waiting, 9 p.m. Friday
Sedition, 9 p.m. Saturday
815 New Hampshire St.
Don Coons, 9 p.m. Friday
Eight Men Out, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Milwaukee Nixons, 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Month of Sundays, 9:30 p.m. Friday
Joanna Connor, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
Good time Radio Review, 8 p.m. Saturday,
$7.00
1993 Flood Relief Concert: Saity Iguanas,
Love Squad, Mahoots, Turquoise Sol, 8 p.m.
Monday, $5
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
Jim Boyd, 6 to 10 p.m. Friday, $2
Rick's Neighborhood Bar and Grill 623 Vermont St.
Soulshaker, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, $3
The Brass Apple
3300 W. 15th St.
So What Band, 9 p.m. to midnight Tuesday, $2
Movies
Movies Friday thru Sunday, except SUA films.
Cinema Twin
31st and Iowa streets
Aladdin (G), 5 p.m., with a 2:45 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
Dave (PG-13), 7:30, 9:40 p.m., no show Saturday or Sunday.
Last Action Hero (PG-13), 5, 7:20 and 9:40 p.m. with a 2:45 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
See CALENDAR. Page 10.
Thursday, August 26, 1999
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Men's movement divided by branches
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
As an outgrowth of the women's movement, the modern men's movement has moved apart in three different branches, said Robert Minor, chairman of KU's department of religious studies.
Minor said the three different branches of the men's movement, begun in 1970, each has different views on defining the identity of males and their role in society.
In a speech yesterday, Minor expressed his views on each branch of the movement and explained their relationship to gender issues in the United States today, such as sexism.
The speech, titled "The Men's Movement: Can Real Men Really Identify Themselves?" was the first in a series of University Forums to be held weekly at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. About 40 people attended the forum.
Minor said the first branch, the mytho-poetic branch, had received national publicity and some ridicule
"They've been associated in the media with the beating of drums and wild men retreats," he said. "The main goal of this group is for men to get back in touch with their real emotions."
The second branch of the movement, the Evangelical Christian Response branch, recognizes the
need for men's revival of leadership in conservative churches across the United States. At the forefront of this movement is a national group called Promise Keepers, led by Colorado head football coach Bill McCartney
The third branch of the modern men's movement is the Liberation branch.
"There's a strong emphasis in this movement on being 'manly', in terms of 20th century American, conservatism, vast images of maleness," Minor said.
"That is to say, men would not be, for example, sexist if given the choice." Minorsaid.
system in a society that has forced them to have an unnatural role as a male, often as an oppressor.
This branch emphasizes that men should be free to define their role as men in society, he said. But the branch recognizes that in the past men have been "conditioned" by a
The branch thinks men also have been conditioned to respond in different ways when expressing their feelings to other men or even to wives.
"When women express themselves, they're allowed to be emotional about it and tell all the details," he said. "Men will do the Archie Bunker thing and say, 'Get to the point.'
"Well, one of the ways you get in touch with your feelings is to go through the details, and men often don't."
CALENDAR: A listing of goings on this weekend
Continued from Page 1.
Hillcrest Theater
Ninth and Iowa streets
Heart and Souls (PG-13), 5, 7:15
and 9:30 p.m., with a 2:15 on
Saturday, Sunday.
Son of the Pink Panther (PG),
5:15, 7:30 and 9:40 p.m., with a
2:15 on Saturday, Sunday.
In the Line of Fire (R), 5, 7:20 and
9:40, with a 2 p.m. on Saturday,
Sunday.
Sleepless in Seattle (PG), 5:15,
7:15 and 9:45 p.m., with a 2:15
on Saturday, Sunday.
7:20 and 9:45 p.m., with a 2 p.m.
on Saturday, Sunday.
A Thing Called Love (PG-13), 5.
Varsity Theatre
Needful Things (R), 5, 7:20 and
9:45 p.m., with a 2:30 p.m. on
Saturday, Sunday.
1015 Massachusetts St.
Dickinson Theaters
2339 Iowa St.
Rising Sun (R), 4:15, 7:10 and
9:50 p.m., with a 1:20 p.m. on
Saturday. Sunday.
Hard Target (R), 4:30, 7:20 and
9:45 p.m., with a 2 p.m. on Saturday,
Sunday.
Jurassic Park (PG-13), 4:20, 7:15 and 10 p.m., with a 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
The Fugitive (PG-13), 4:10, 7:05 and 9:55 p.m., with a 1:15 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
Man Without a Face (PG-13), 4:20, 7 and 9:30 p.m., time for Saturday, Sunday show unavailable.
Liberty Hall Cinema
642 Massachusetts St.
Much Ado About Nothing (PG-13),
4:45, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m., with
shows at 2:15, 4:45 and 7:15
p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
Hard Boiled (R), no show Thursday,
4:30, 7:20, 9:45 p.m., with a
4:55 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
Student Union Activities movies
Student Union Activities movies
All the movies will be in the
Woodruff Auditorium of the
Kansas Union.
Kansas Union.
"The Unbelievable Truth" 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Thursday.
The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover " 7 p.m. Thursday.
Malcolm X" 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
Friday, Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday.
"Blade Runner" midnight Friday
"Blade Runner" midnight Friday and Saturday.
Pink Panther's 'Son' is welcome summer sequel
By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
Aside from record-setting grosses, the remarkable thing about the 1993 movie summer is the absence of blockbuster sequels. Follow-ups to "Star Wars," "Indiana Jones," "Batman" and others always had their premiers in hot weather months.
This year "Hot Shots Part Deux" had a fair run ($38 million), but "Weekend at Bernie's II" died. "Another Stakeout" and the umpletht "Friday the 13th" appear destined for a brief shelf life.
Now comes "Son of the Pink Panther."
And there may be life in the old franchise yet.
Following the 1960s hits "The Pink Panther" and "A Shot in the Dark," Blake Edwards directed and cowrote sequels in 1975, 1976 and 1978. Peter Sellers, the series' chief asset as the clumsy, odd-talk Inspector Clouseau, died in 1980.
Edwards' subsequent efforts were released in 1982 and '83 to unanimous boredom.
In his latest sequel, "Son of the Pink Panther" (actually Pink Panther was the name of a jewel in the first film), Italian comic Roberto Benigni stars
as Jacques Clouseau's illegitimate son, who is as accident-prone and almost as funny as his predecessor.
The new Clousseau resulted from his father's dalliance with an Italian beauty. He pursues his career as a French policeman on the Riviera at a time when an Arab princess is kid-aped by terrorists.
"Pink Panther" veterans make welcome returns: Claudia Cardinale, who was the princess in the original,
The long-suffering Commissioner Dreyfus (Herbert Lom) is dispatched from Paris to take over the case. To his horror, he is subjected to the blunders of the second-generation Clouseau.
"Son of the Pink Panther" suffers from overplotting. Edwards and co-writers Madeline and Steve Sunshine try to cover too much territory, and the comedy suffers.
as Jacques' mother; Burt Kwouk as the athletic manservant Cato, and Lom, his old twitchy self. Robert Davi the former James Bond nemesis, provides excellent menace.
Still, Benign is a wise choice to carry on the Clouseau banner, and his return (next summer?) would be welcome.
The MGM-United Artists release was produced by Tony Adams. Rated PG for suggestiveness.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11
Thursday, August 26, 1993
Montana a leader for Chiefs
The Associated Press
Not even Marcus Allen is immune to Montana mania.
"Joe has a presence, a character. I don't know what it is," said Allen, whose Heisman Trophy and Super Bowl ring hardly make him prone to hero worship. "I don't know if you can call it savvy or what. He just wills himself to win."
KC
There's scarcely a bar or a barbershop in Kansas City where Allen would draw an argument. Not since 1980, when the Royals' George Bretch chased a 400 average into September, has any athlete put the Midwest in such a dither.
The NFL's highest-rated passer ever signed in April after gaining his freedom from San Francisco, and before he threw his first exhibition pass, virtually every ticket to every home game was sold.
When Allen bolted from the Raiders and signed a free agent contract a few weeks later, he gave the Chiefs the most honored backfield in the league. The two men have five Super Bowl championships and four Super Bowl MVP awards between them.
Allen, No. 11 on the NFL, rushing charts.
also gave them a pair of stars whose combined age is 70 — 33 for Allen, 37 for Montana, who gave no hint in his first two exhibition outings that elbow surgery and two years of inactivity had eroded his skills.
In his first outing, he hit 6 of 11 passes for 97 yards on three possessions. Then a 27-20 victory Saturday over Minnesota, Montana was even more effective, hitting 11 of his first 14 passes for 93 yards, including a short touchdown strike to tight end Mike Dval.
"I feel a lot more comfortable," said Manton, who's been helping offensive coordinator Paul Hackett tutor his new team in Hackett's old 49ers-style offense. "I can tell that my mind is working. My expectations are high for myself."
Does this mean the Chiefs, who have seemed on the verge of big things the past three seasons, are poised to reach that next level? That will depend on how healthy Montana remains and whether acid-tongued critics, who sneer the Chiefs won't be able to support their new quarterback in the manner he is accustomed, are right.
The biggest worry is the offensive line, which gave up 48 sacks last year in Dave Krieg's first season. Left tackle John Alt, who seemed to be blossoming into stardom, slumped in 1982. Center Tim Grim hard appears to be solid, however, and the Chiefs have free agent Danny Villa and third-round draft choice Will Shields to build on.
As a backup, Krieg seems perfect. He comes into the season with the 100-highest passing rating in NFL history. But Krieg, who willingly accepted his role and became good friends with Montana, has
played poorly in the exhibition season. One pass was intercepted for a touchdown against Buffalo, and he made a couple of poor passes that were intercepted by the Vikings.
Those contributed to 11 turnovers in the two exhibition games at Arrowhead Stadium, which is anathema to any Marty Schottenheimer-coached team. While advancing to the playoffs the past three years, the Chefs have led the league with a plus-55 turnover ratio.
"It's awful. It makes it a little easier on the other guy." Schottenheer said. "There is no excuse. None. And we're not going to tolerate it."
Defensively, if holdout end Neil Smith ever signs, the Chiefs could be dominating. Outside linebacker Derrick Thomas has 58 sacks in 63 games and makes people forget he does not play the run particularly well.
Former Pro Bowl cornerbacks Albert Lewis, who re-injured his arm in the first week of training camp, and Kevin Ross may be showing a little angle. But the Chiefs believe second-year man Dale Carter could soon be another All-Pro cornerback.
I'll just use a simple text representation.
A coach is kneeling on the grass, facing a group of players. They are seated in a semi-circle and appear to be discussing a strategy or gameplay. The player in the center looks slightly more interested than the others.
Doud Hesse/KANSAN
Preparing to throw out the first pitch
Kalum Haack, KU softball coach, prepares his team for batting practice. The team , which started fall season practices earlier this week, was practicing yesterday at the softball field behind Oliver Hall.
Soccer players give their best to favorite game
Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
As a registered club sport, men's soccer receives minimal financial assistance from the University, but it is not enough. Each player pays dues plus his own travel expenses including food, lodging, and gasoline. The team travels to Texas, Iowa, Oklahoma, and around Kansas.
It all comes down to dedication, time commitments and love. The sweating players, sprinting around the field and passing the soccer ball from one player to another, are out there purely for the love of the game.
The travel was one of the perks of the game for club vice president, junior Brian Robey.
"I have met a lot of people through playing. Now when I go to other towns, I can call up some old friends from the other teams," he said.
Club president, Kipper Hesse, said he could identify only about five returning players. He said most players did not have the time to come back year after year.
Paul Schaffer, a newly recruited freshman, said the biggest challenge of playing would be to work soccer into his schedule. The team practices Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday for about an hour and a half.
Four-year veteran player, Matthew Jones, said he had stayed with soccer because of its fun, laid-back atmosphere. He also said he liked coming out and seeing his friends.
Hesse and Robey, five and four years with the team respectively, moved up from playing to coaching the team. This year the club has found a new coach to help them, at least for a little while.
Mark Salisberry, graduate student, inquired about coaching the team and will commit himself as long as time permits.
Hesse and Robey, observing Tuesday's practice, said they were impressed with Salisberry's coaching and they hoped to keep him for the season. They said peer leadership was hard to do and achieving peer respect was even harder.
Jones said it was easier to listen to Salisberry as an authority figure because no one really knew him. Hesse said he could tell, just by watching the way the players reacted to Salisberry's instructions, how well the performed under his direction.
Even under the direction of its peers the soccer team has had a good record. It had a 19-6-2 record last year and competed in the National Regional Championship. It is also the defending champions of the Ed Chartrand Memorial Tournament which is held annually at Kansas State, Hesse said.
Due to scheduling complications, the team only has two scheduled games this fall against Southwest Missouri State and Rockhurst's junior varsity队. Both games will be played at Shenk Complex, the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Jones said he encouraged people to come out and watch the games because it helped build enthusiasm for the team.
Men's golf plans for success, Japan
"The team appreciates the fans," he said. "Just as the football or basketball teams does."
Team to build on last year's No.15 best finish in history
Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's golf team's toughest challenge this year may come from the ghosts of golf teams past.
Last year, Kansas golfers played their best season in team history, finishing 15th in the nation and second in the Big Eight behind Oklahoma State.
"We lost to Oklahoma State by one stroke when they were ranked No. 1 in the nation," said Ross Randall, men's golf coach.
"We're good and we're deep." Randall said. "We
Last year team feature three All-Americans, Brad Bruno, Matt Gogel and Jim Young, and one of only 21 Academic All-Americans in the nation, Jeff Moeller.
Because of the success of these Jayhawks, the team has been invited to better tournaments this year. Randall said. He said it was the best schedule Kansas had ever had.
The Jayhawks will begin the fall season with the Jack Nicklaus College Invitational followed by the Topy Cup International Collegiate tournament the next week in Japan.
Kansas will be one of only four American teams competing against 11 Japanese universities in the tournament.
Randall shares his players' optimism about the season. He said that a top-10 finish was a possibility for this team.
"We might be a little awe struck at first in Janan. John Hess said.
"This is our last shot," Hess said. "This season is what most of us have been looking forward to."
Hess said he thought that having five seniors on the team would help it with confidence, maturity and motivation.
He said he expected Gogel to be the top golfer this season. Gogel has been invited to the John Hancock Bowl Invitational, which features the top 24 college golfers in the nation. He will be a strong candidate for preseason All-American honors, Randall said. Gogel is also the two-time Kansas amateur champion.
have a good idea of who our top two golfers are but after that it's less certain."
"Losing Bruno and Young is going to hurt," said Gogel. "We have to get some other people to step up."
Gogal said he believed the team had the potential to be better than last year's team, and that it had the ability to win any tournament it played in, including competing for the Big Eight title.
"Td like to win at least three or four more tournaments this year," Gogel said.
Randall said he thought that success this year would help with recruiting players in the future.
"It's hard to break into the top 20." Randall said.
"It's important for us to continue to climb."
Injury may keep center from kicking off in Classic
Kansas senior center Dan Schmidt may not play in Saturday's Kickoff Classic against Florida State because of a sprained left ankle. If he does play, Schmidt will go up against a Seminole player whose career appeared to be over six months ago.
Senior nose guard John Nance spent most of the spring undergoing radiation treatments in Gainesville, Fla., after a benign tumor was removed from his left shoulder. Doctors had feared that they might have to remove Nance's collarbone to completely extract the growth in his shoulder.
"If they would have removed my collarbone, my career was over," Nance said. "It made me realize how quickly things can end. I'm not glad it happened, but I feel I've been blessed."
For the last five seasons, Kansas coach Glen Mason has spent part of
preseason practice living in the Jayhawer Towers with his players. This year, Mason and his son, Patrick, moved into the coaches' portion of the new football locker room in the Parrot Athletic Facility. Mason slept on an air mattress.
The Kickoff Classic will be Florida State's only game this season on artificial turf. With Bobby Bowden as coach, the Seminoles are 27-11 on artificial turf and have won 13 consecutive games on grass.
■ Florida State leads the all-time series against Kansas 4-2. In the last meeting between the schools in 1985, the Seminoles rallied for two fourth quarter touchdowns to beat the Jayhawks 24-20 in Tallahassee, Fla.
Kansan sportswriter Matt Doyle compiled this report
Richard Devinne / KANSAN
ANDALE FOOTBALL
Sophomore running back L.T. Levine runs through practice drills Tuesday at the football practice field next to Allen Field House.
Running back strives to set standard
Coaches impressed by Levine's ability to step up in position
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas' all-time leading rusher Tony Sands set the standard in which all future Jayhawk running backs are to be judged, said coach Glen Mason.
"Tony set the tone for running backs around here," Mason said. "He was a strong, tough runner and he was able to come out of the backfield and catch the football. That's what we look for in our running backs today."
Sophomore running back L.T. Levine hopes he can set a new standard for Kauasus running backs before his career comes to a
conclusion as a Jayhawk.
Mason and the coaching staff was excited by Levine's strong running back and catching abilities.
"He is a better player than I thought he was," Mason said. "He has excellent hands, good moves with the ability to make people miss, and he is very durable."
Levine saw spot duty in his freshman season a year ago behind running backs senior Maurice Douglas and junior running back George White, rushing for 62 yards on 15 carries. He showed the potential that he brought to the Jayhawk offense with a 26-yard performance on six carries in the Aloha Bowl victory against Brigham Young last December.
"Last year I sat back and learned a lot from Monte (Cozzens), Maurice and the rest of the seniors, "Levine said. "This year, I'm expected to contribute a lot."
There was no concern about Levine's ability to run the football when he came out
L. T. Levine
of high school in Colonia, N.J. Levine ran for 1,580 vards his senior season despite a nagging groin injury. The injury scared some schools off, but not Kansas.
A. WILLIAMS
in New Jersey," said Mason, who grew up in Levine's hometown of Colonia as well. "He didn't play well his senior year because of some injury problems, but I was sold on him by his performance early in his career."
"I knew about him for a number of years through some friends of mine back
Catching the football was an adjustment Levine had to make when he arrived at Kansas because he did not catch many passes in high school.
I have confidence in my hands, but I was
never used to having the ball thrown to me much," Levine said. "During spring ball, I improved in that category a lot and it gave me another dimension as a running back, which is good."
Levine said he was excited about the possibilities for this season. He said that he raised his number during spring practice from 27 to 22. He said he made the switch not because the Dallas Cowboys' Emmitt Smith, leading rusher in the National Football League for the last two seasons, wears that number, but because he just wanted a change.
However, Levine would not mind having Smith-type statistics this season.
"I hope to become an All-Big Eight player this season and challenge (Nebraska's) Calvin Jones for the conference rushing title," he said.
If Levine were able to accomplish that this season, then he would establish a new standard for future Kansas running backs to reach.
12
Thursday, August 26, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Twins defense puts KC into tie for third with Texas Rangers
The Associated Press
The Kansas City Royals showed yesterday why they have scored the third-fewest runs in the American League.
The Royals hit into four double plays and had two runners thrown out from the outfield in a 4-2 loss to the Minnesota Twins, only the second victory in eight games by the Twins, one of the two teams trailing the Royals in rues scored.
25th Anniversary Season
Royals
"I guess we got some double plays tonight," Twins manager Tom Kelly said after starter Scott Erickson (8-15), the losing pitcher
in the majors, went seven-plus innings
"We made the plays tonight. We got some nice throws from the outfield." Kelly said. "I guess we needed to make the plays because we only scored four runs. If you only get four runs, you need to make the plays."
Erickson has lost five of his last six games.
Eckerson has positively hit the mark with "Erickson had one crimson innip, but he got himself together," Kelly said. "Sometimes he gets underneath the ball and then everything is up in the strike zone. When he stays behind it, the ball is down."
The Royals have scored 542 runs, leading only Minnesota and Boston. The loss coupled with the Texas Rangers' victory over Boston dropped the Royals into third place in the AL West. Texas is $3^{th}$ back and the Royals are four games behind first-place Chicago, which lost to the New York Yankees yesterday.
"The inability to get the big hit is what beat us." Kansas City manager Hai McRae said. "It's a concern any time that you lose late in the year. But there's got to be some balance. Sometimes you are outraged and sometimes you take it. Tought is a time you have to face the music. One swing of the bat would have put us in position to win the ballgame."
Kansas City starter Tom Gordon (8-5) went seven innings, giving up all four runs, three earned, in four strikeouts and two walks.
Store clerk: Jordan's father was with accused days after his death
The Associated Press
A store clerk said she would "bet my life" she saw Michael Jordan's father and the two men accused of his murder more than three days after James Jordan was believed to have been shot and killed.
The Wilmington Morning Star reported that Helen Norris, 52, a clerk at the DJ Mini Mart on U.S. 17, told her account at a Brunswick County detective.
Detective Mark Locklear of the Robeson County Sheriff's Department, which is handling the case, said he planned to interview Norris. He said authorities still believe Jordan, 56, was shot in his Lexus early 213 near Lumberton after he had pulled off U.S. 74 to rest.
Larry Demery of Rowland and Daniel Green of Lumberton are charged with first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit armed robbery and armed robbery. The 18-year-olds could face the death penalty.
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370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
130 Entertainment
Tonight John Brown's Underground with Lowlife
at
BENCHWARMERS
25¢ Draws
LOVE SQUAD
Friday, August 27th at BENCHWARMERS
2 For 1 Wells
L.A. Ramblers
CD Release Party
Saturday,
August 28th
at
BENCHWARMERS
2 For 1 Wells
140 Lost & Found
LOST! Tiny skin blue racebitstain w raised white stripe & circoncles on cheeks
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE FORD. EOI 20; call 81-936-9866
Male Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
After-Hours Emergency Screenser for the pre-admission screening for psychiatric hospitalization, including referral to the child's endo. Master's in psychology, social work or nursing with 2 years' experience with clinical psychology and cover letter in care of Sharon Zedr. Bart NECM Marsh MI Missouri; She BRE Lawrence. Req. Bachelor's degree in Nursing.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. August 26. 1993
13
Aavibos instructor needed for 6a. m class. $10.00
hr- experienced instructors only 804-3546.
Aerobics instructor needed for 6a.m. class $18.90
Aerobics instructor only 4m.34k Ask for Shannon
ASSISTANT COOK
10am-2pm, Kindergarten, Sunshine Acres
Preschool 842 2231
Assistant Dean (full time)
Required qualifications. Master's degree, organizational and administrative ability, superior interpersonal skills, good writing skills. Good word power. Preferred. Ph. 3. and a knowledge of KU.
Duties: Assisting Graduate School dean in day-to-day operations, keeping track of fellowship applications and awards, working with grievances and program reviews, carrying on correspondence with staff members, and the dean Complete job description and application form available upon request at usl (913) 643-3001.
Application Procedure. Contact the Graduate School at (913) 864-3301 for an application form and position announcement. Send completed application form, current resume and three letters of recommendation to: Virginia Sayer. The Graduation Committee, Hau University, Hall of Kames Lawrence, SK 65045.
Deadline: September 1, 1993
Baby sitters need for 7.yr. old 3:00 to 5:30 mF.
M-F. Transportation required: 842-5960
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person box 104M or email bucky@buckysave.com
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Requires good academic record in chemistry,
pharmacy or related science, laboratory exp
and 5 yrs of post-bach training w/ hs/wk
subl. Applicant application with names of 3'references, and copies of transcripts to INTEKR
Research, 200w west st. Incl. Neal Oppt
Bldg.
CHILDCARE WANTED: Occasional sitter for our
weekend camp and 4 & 12. In our home near camp
Call 855-302-6967
Children Learning Center is now hiring 1 am and 2 pm teacher assistants for infant and preschool children. Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 931 Mason 841-2185
Christian daycare needs reliable/enthusiastic
aftermothers. Experience preferred
Part-time 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 printed and then applied to the KU Printing Station $68 each. Apply at the KU Printing Station, 2425 W, 15th st. 4 EOE.
Adamia chihuahua Center needs AM-PM Dishwasher.
Dessert & Deskpartner. Flickrizable. Phone:
(212) 530-6740. www.adamichihuahua.com
PUBLIC RELATIONS FALL 30 '19 INTERNET. Gain experience working with public relations team promoting Kansas City metropolitan area. Job requires writing stories, researching story ideas, filling information requests, etc. This position is non-salaried but can apply for course credit. It may be full or part-time. Send resume to Office of Student Services. Time will pay for parking expenses. Please resume and write sample to Prime Time News Bureau. 911 Main Street, Suite 2600, Kansas City, KS 64116. Or, contact Laura Dressman at (816) 276-2655.
Full-time live in nanny needed for 3 active childen (toddler 4, 7) Reliable. have children, have own car Housekeeping duties incl R/B + salary preschoolers. Previores exp. ref.卡48-1423 after 5pm
Full time independent living skill trainer to assist individual with disability and learning skills to attain maintenance independent life style. High range of life skills, demonstrated commitment to independent living required. Experience working with people with disability and creative teaching skills. Excellent communication ability are encouraged to apply. Complete job description available upon request. Send resume and cover letter to: Independence Incorporate Inc., 243 East Ave. Lawrence, KS 65018, by Sept. 1. EOEAAA
Like to work independently in a pleasant environment? Flexible scheduling for part-time jobs available. Must be a certified teacher apply at 100 University Drive, Lawrence, KS E.O.R.
KU GAME PARKING ATTENDANTS > 35 People needed at KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested please apply immediately.
Ideal part-time position for mature graduate student in HDFL or related field design, facility management or quality of program delivery, usually mornings and evenings, before birth through five 2 hours per week (1 morning) to $20 per hour. For more info call 843-8212 or send to "The Family Center" c/o 8629 Orchard Drive.
Kansas and Burge Unit hiring part-time, hourly
workers. Must have a Bachelor's degree or
available. Must know fall class schedule to
apply. See job board. Union Personnel Office,
5. Kansas University Building for job specifiey.
www.kansas.edu/jobsearch
LANG COORDINATION ASSISTANT. Student monthly Deadline 9/11. Salary $259,500/month, 20 hours week. Duties include assisting with all LAN database updates, filing and other duties as assigned. Writing database reports using RAKR for application of application, current resume, and transcript to Angel Barnett, Personnel Officer. Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
NEEDS A RIDER/ RIDER Use the Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Needed warm responsible female to receive free room and board in exchange for part time care of my 3'9" year old boy. Transportation needed. Refs Cork Striate 822-0030.
Now accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time barque service. Willing to train the right people. All Shirts are available. Apply at Adams Alumni Center, 1864 S. Broadway
Office help needed 11-38-2 50 WMF & 11-39-2 46 WMF
at KU, at KU have GPA at 4.7 and 8 beaten
less 12 brs at KU have GPA at 4.7 and 8 beaten
Oneida Factory Store seeks part time sales clerk,
Tuesday and thursdays, afternoon
Apply in person. Lawrence Riverfront Outlet Mall,
Suite 103, 749-642-1OE
PYRAMID
PIZZA
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Now
Taking
Applications
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people Good opportunity for growth
Part-time Instructors for Skimachines, Children's
Art, and Aqua Skimachines/ Water Walking. Prefer
experience in instruction area. $7.00 per hour.
More information and applications are available at
Adm. Services. Room 216, Room 410,
Floor 3. EOS 6044. Headline: Aug. 30,
10:00 EOF FK / FD 740.
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
COMPUTER SYSTEM ENGINEER
Full & Part Time
Immediate opening for person with PC networking, LAN management, NOVELL experience, good customer skills, benefit in benefits management, installs installations and work applications. Attractive salary, benefits. Send resume by 09/7 to Director of Client Support, Connecting Point, #13, Mass, Lawrence.
Cottonwood Inc. A facility for adults with de-velopment disabilities, has full and part time positions available. Occupational therapy and occupational therapy include training individuals in self help, community awareness, socialization and group home. Some positions may require sleep over, evening and weekend hours. Proof of good credit is required. Office电话 800-281-9000. Office ID 2801 W 31 Lawrence RS 66407 EOE Desperately Seeking Student Assistance-Spencer
Desperately Seeking Student Assistants-Spencer Museum of Art (864-4710) Work Study Award required. Please come to the 5th floor to get and fill out an application.
JD's wanted for TJ service and Karaoke. Experience pre-production. Meets Michael Beers Entertainment
DRIVER for after-school pick-up from West Wich. High, 5 days a week to take home or to activity. Flexible hours.
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Rush Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a good driving record of 22 hrs per week in the city.
EARN EXTRA CASH on weekends. Friendly people provide for prescriptions in the KC area. Email info@kcpl.org
Evening delivery-driver wanted Dependable,
2nd Iowa. Call 49-1000.
2nd Iowa. Call 49-1000.
Faculty family in Lawrence require after school care for 8 yr old boy and 7 yr old girl, 10 to 12 brs. a week. Must have own car. Salary negotiable. Call 843-3394
FEMALE SINGER WANTED
Established Lauren windade seeks female skills. Must have desire, creativity, and group. We have the resources we need to develop the vocal needs we need. If you always want to be on that bar stage and not just watching it then call for a casual audition. 842-9658
DOUBLETREE
HOTEL & CORPORATE WOODS
Full & Part-Time Openings.
3. Housekeeping $5.25/hr
4. Banquet Server $6.85/hr
5. Engineer $9.00/hr
6. Dishwasher $5.25/hr
7. Laundry Attend. $5.25/hr
8. Phone Operator $5.30/hr
9. On-call Security $6.00/hr
PART TIME SUPERVISOR-Maas Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smoketown. Preview food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start up to $2,500-2,950 a week, a week and wends. Apply at Schumann Food Company Business office at 719, mass stands above Smoketown F-W-9.
PHILIP 56 seeks cashiers to work the following
ages, 6am, 12pm, 12am, 12am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with public. Apply in person to PHILIP 56 - 900 louns.
PRESCHOOL TEACHERS
Everyday Mon-Fri 7-11, 10:50-3:30 or 8:30-
Principle 1 child development course and expert
training
Read Books for $ earn 100 per title. Free details. Rush Self Address Stamp Envelope to address.
Sitter Solutions Inc. is in need of sisters. Must have own, be responsible and love children. Flexible to work with children.
SOPTAIL UMPIRES. Recreational Services is looking for students interested in offering Intra-mural Sports. No experience necessary # 47-09. Application to Monday, May 31 at a8.00pm in Robinson. 844-354-366
KU Students
management profession and make money doing it! Flexible hours, start at $5/hour + bonuses. Office work, we provide full training. Day and evening positions available, 100 Riverfront Rd. at Riverfront Square in North Lawrence. Apply between 9am and 8pm.
Learn the records
MICRO SOURCE
Laborers position available. Must be able to work mornings or afternoons. Call days 842-8298 UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER - one-organized graduate student for Graduate Assistant position TO START IMMEDIATELY Wear individual with backpacks, community resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership skills, interpersonal skills, empathy, interested in helping others. Come by KU Info. #400 for an application. Must return in person to Susan Elkins. Coordinator, by phone.
Varied hours prior 3 courses in child development and experience. Sunshine Acres 842-2232
VOLUNTEER NEEDLEM
Headquarters for the
needs assessment and teacher
training.
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周 18
No experience needed. Flexible full and part-time schedules. No canvassing or telephone sales
Student Assistant Position
MICRO SOURCE MARKETING INC.
ment and experience. Sunshine Acres 842-2232
Teravest Construction needs part-time help.
Labors position available. Must be able to work
on a callout. Call 842-8229
STUDENT WORK
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the School of Business, Professor Yvette and other departmental faculty.
For interview now!
SUR TEACHERS
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a position available *REQUIRED QUALIFICATION* for the University of Kansas, academic year 1983-94. Req. Master's degree in communication skills *PREFERRED* QUALIFICATION. Study program. 2. Prior experience as a receptionist; 3. Computer-Victim skills *SAYING* 84.25 per hour. May 17, 1994. DEADLINE. Eligible persons are students who have completed summer day, August 27 to Barbara W. Ballard, Director. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is located at 606-6680 (913) 863-5452 EOE/AA Lawrence. K606-6680 (913) 863-5452 EOE/AA
Parttime Office Assistant need 20 hrs wk M/W am/
T/T/H/ S/F call. Please key 749-138
Outgoing, friendly, dependable person needed at beacal club ctry, 1809 Crosgate
225 Professional Services
am, T/T/F/S / pm Please call 749-620-5153. local trade retails for Lawrence's premium leather goods. Call us at 8730 or comment knowledge helpful. Send resume by 8/30 to retail manager. Connecting Point, 815 Maxwell Drive, Suite 235, San Diego, CA 92108.
Ruth & Kids Floral
832-0704.935E23rd
WE ACCEPT VISA & MC
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses divorce, criminals & civilians The law of offices
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
235 Typing Services
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
CRIMINAL DEFENSE
Security personnel
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
quality type. 80% of entries into accurate pages of
letter quality. 50%
Are you Makin' the Grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
for all your typing needs
call Makin' the ats 86-2855
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
X
192.868 Mercury, Coagar,灼安, AT.PS, good shape
102.000 micron, $115.004; 864-8853
1984 Magena 500 v.390 Excel cond. low mi$165 o-
merail. 1985 Toyota pick-up #4, 84.00 million i owner.
runs great work. 1992 Nissan Sentra Same 600
offer. 1994 Honda fit for small growing Fam-
ly $900 ooffer. 823-0271
1984 Volkswagen Rabbit Wolfsburg, dependable
low miles, need nepalate. 423-3538
1846 170 mobile home b lrs. 2 bths. CA, canned
& shed. kitchen appliances. D call 8414
8414
1989 Chevy Cavalier 254. 5 speed, good cond,
offer must sell 842 1092; leave message
65 for your HP46 box flap with bar code. Leave
message at 842 3269
Compact Discs $5.95 each
5 or more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-14344
Mon-Sat 9:5-30
Apple IIGS computer with 9.2" in. and 3.2" in. disc drives, color monitor image writer Printer and printer.
65 gal. aquarium with oak stand for $450.00 new
Dorm room size roll of carpet in good shape. Call
832-0920
CLASS II AIRCRAFT MFG.
Liquidating stock in new condition 100 albums in new condition 800 ea for the lot Bair 842 R6
FULLY EQUIPPED
Don't miss this one!
Trinity Episcopal Church Yard Sale
like new 89-90 Fuji tzilll $200 28" frame. red call
641-785-7981
**FOR SALE:** Used school desk, office desks, files,
drawing tables, etc. Aug 8, 29 at 5am-10pm. 2021 WEST
STREET AVE. BOSTON, MA 02216
Garage sale FT & Tail, Bedroom suite, Serra mattress like new, 2 matching chairs, chest of drawers, matching coffee table and end table, TV stand, floor lamp, women's clothing & $6.15 - $8.35
Funky sale-cheep stuff, corner 23rd and Mass. Sat.
Aug 28, 9-3
Minolta X-790 camera w/ 2 lenses &案札. Busa 864-
4676 (W) . 1:863-2867 (H).
29th behind SACS/Food & Less.
For Sale: Fender 50" Bass Bass Special, also
IMB PS2 / 36 (80/1) x 266 expanded to 8 megabytes
HI-density 64-bit monitor VGA graphics. Excel
Futons & Frames On Sale!
BLUE
HERON
where comfort and quality is assured.
Mud condition 7-01A day-walkers with stands.
$400/pr. Rotek 85 CD-player. $250 Teach 2008 two-track reel-to-reel tape recorder. $200.00. Call Vance 843-4530 days. $424-916 plex.
SUNFLOWER
BIKE SHOP
BAY GARDEN HUTTETTE
341 W. 70TH ST., BAY GARDEN HUTTETTE
BIKES ON SALE FOR THE ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE, AND BEGINNER COMPARE AND SAVE ON REDUCTIONS OF MONEY. WANT TO BUILD GONE AND YOUR LEFT WALKING
Nearer new two 10" i2p SpeedFord road bike like $196 easier than 50 miles of race. One Tanzania equestrian team has trained her.
937 Mass.
841-9443
*net w rads rw net, int std & acc $800 Q*
*Water 100 watt, aquarium + acc*
*SolarCargo 70 watt WP-9143-81*
*SolarCargo 70 watt WP-9143-81*
Queen size wi-fire, frame & cover. $253. Nugal
$90 or $90 each. Dishes. Inn furniture.
Cell # 842-6071.
FUTON SALE
PRELUDE PRICE SALE PRICE
830 1499 1489
950 1679 1659
900 1679 1679
7000 1529 1599
9000 15200 15150
930 SHX 1629 15150
850 SHX 1529 1499
830 SHX 1529 1499
5199 15199
PRAIRIE MILANO 1599 1550
ROCKHOPPER COMP 1680 1685
STUMPJAMER 1775 1815
1
$ OFF BASIC TUNE-UPE
BRAVE IN THIS CITY TO FURNISHMEN
AND RECEIVE $20 OFF THE REGULAR
BRIDGE OF XAN BA (917) 437-8000
Biancchi ALFANA 1869
Cheapy Sleepy frame & foam-core futon starting at
$119
STATE OF NEW YORK
BLUE HERON
· Futon Manufacturers
937 Mass. St. 841-9443
water katered, complete setup. New heater & mattress 100 obo 843-287-98
Stairhard blue Westone (Spectrum) sax-string guitar, with an 18" body and a 6.5" trumpet. Up to Trumann with finger line tuneing and rate base and treble controls.蕴含 with a lack of hard carrying case and a Crate 60-46 amplifier with a tonearm for the instrument.
340 Auto Sales
81 Yamaha 650cc S3K Midnite Black 750/150 B08 323
85 HIOC All Power, T Tops, TPI, new goodyear,
21.000 lbm 749-900
Reliable transportation 86 Ford Pinto $500/Best
offer Call Terry at 841-2746.
370 Want to Buy
$4 for your HP 48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5269
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
3 bt² inch pfd for rent Campsite Virey case
3 bt² inch pfd for rent Campsite Virey case
Call 800-249-6715 or visit www.campsite.virey.ca
3 BR, 2 bath apt. for rent. Campus Place, Close to
Campus Reasonable rent. Smoker 642-6085
Apartment-houses, 1 to 2 blocks KU, sorry no pets. 749-5863
WASHER & DRYER
Renta
For Only $40 a Month
Free Maintenance
• GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty,
Large Capacity
Delta Corporation
842-8428
Over the Edge
Available Immediately : 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath house
32 BRE 2RB comes to campus, off-street parking, no pets allowed. 749-2819 or 842-9007
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct., Suite #5
Lawrence; KS 66047
Naismith Halls'
pels allowed '749-2019-0834'
NICE 2BR
address on car of offset parking, no
parking at 749-2019-0834
address on car of offset parking, no
services give students the competitive edge.
Holiday Apartments
- Front door bus service
24 hr. computer center
3
Fitness room
4
3 Bedroom $650
4 Bedroom $800
PALM TREE ISLAND
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid service
Recently constructed
---
NAISMITH
On bus route
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
- Energy efficient
- Nice quiet setting
210 Mount Hope Court 843-0011
Remodeled 1 bd. apartment available at already
building, water and heat are paid, $275, $149, $138,
$109, $96, $83, $70, $67, $64, $61, $58, $55, $52, $50, $47, $45, $42, $40, $37, $35, $34, $32, $31, $30, $29, $28, $27, $26, $25, $24, $23, $22, $21, $20, $19, $18, $17, $16, $15, $14, $13, $12, $11, $10, $9, $8, $7, $6, $5, $4, $3, $2, $1,
430 Roommate Wanted
2 male NM1 room needed + share 60 house
2 female NM1 room needed + utilities + paid cell call
vn. 841-8609
NM1-8609
3 bldr 2 campus for rent Campus Place, Close to campus Reasonable rent. Smoke please. 642
5th yr pre-med student looking for clean room water pd pool, laundry. Close to campground.
Female. Non-Simuler for 2 BR 2 Bath Condo. Alloy
combo. On bus Route B210 $10/month.
*Ubit AUS 849 9913*
*Female non-smoker to share 2 BR house off-campus* **$250** + includes utilities. **794-696**
How to schedule an ad:
Female non-smoker to share 2FBR Ap1 block from female non-smoker to share $20 + \uplus\uiities Please Call 829-243-6120
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Plan not including Quizzes
Female roommate needs change for their
roommate. Plan it before you begin.
Female roommate to share new condon on bari r. No smoking. Pet. Yes lease $275 +1/2 tax
Roommate to share house. $250/mo * 8 utilities
large yard, large hard wood floor
NLEASE # 14327
NLEASE # 14328
Looking for a roommate to share 41drm. furnished
on bus seat. $192 per month + utilities and free
cleaning.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* in men: 119 Staffer Flint
Responsible, non-smoking (female student to share
complex - complex 810 $5 +収率) Requires:
645-93-169
FRIENDLY, grad level modern bi-level duplex
clean on a air, on a level beautiful 4 BR, laurid. 2LR,
c/w d/etc. non-smoking* Responsible (female or
male) senior teachers. Call 841-7264, kevry in-
phone.
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom at 10th & 14th.
Complete kitchen. W/D hookup, mostly furnished.
$190/month + util. Smokers welcome. Call 841-617,
leave message.
Roommates for 2 BR, pets, AC, cable CHEAP! Will put fast Cat Alive. 835-933-8157 message male seeking non-smoking male student willing to work for low $13/month and 4Utilities. 823-993-
- by person: 1191 Stairflirt Flat
Stay by the Kissan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged
with credit card.
Calculating Rates:
Classified Information and order form
- By川 10:34 AM. Quit your certificate. No phone calls. You may print your classified order in the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanan Office. Or you may choose to have it缮刻 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.
Calculating rates.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day imanions and the size of the ad (the number of agate 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 total cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertor's account will be credited for the unpaid fees. Reduced on call charges that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Do notUMMERS.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
***
Rates
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.
105 personal 140 list & bound 350 for sale
118 business personales 200 rented 540 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
125 pristine services
Cost per mile per day
1X 2-4X 4-7X 8-14X 15-23X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Starts on Los:
Name:
Phone: -
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper
___
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:
Account number:
MasterCars
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hlst, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Universal Press Syndicate
Tantor burns up on I-90
14
LAKE MENDOTA. THE PROJECT CONSUMED HALF THE STUDENT BUDGET FOR THE YEAR AND CAUSED A CAMPUS FUROR
Thursday, August 26, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A RADICAL GROUP CALLED THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY TOOK OVER THE
Statue of Liberty at high tide.
University of Wisconsin
You see some weird things on college campuses.
Like the COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. At 9c a minute, its late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate is certainly unusual. Not to mention the GREAT STUFF you get just for using your calling card.
Moonlight
Machine56
Sprint®
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD*
816 354 1138 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FONCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FÖNCARD IS SO EASY, IT'S WEIRD.
two friends in two different places at the same time? Strange, huh? That's PRIORITY PARTY CALL. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. We're working to MAKE COLLEGE LIFE EVEN EASIER. And that's the
Free goodies? That's weird. And how about talking to
weirdest thing of all.
---
Sprint.
Be there now.
1. 800.795.5971
Aug. 26th, 27th, & 30th at the Kansas Union, Level 4 Aug. 25th, 31st, Sept. 1st & 2nd at Wescoe Beach
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. © 1993 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
ERECTED A STYROFOAM REPLICA OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ON FROZEN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. DEDICATED TO THE PURSUIT OF SILLINESS, THEY IMMEDIATELY
SPORTS: A look at the Big Eight's football teams shows that Nebraska may be the strongest. Page 8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.6
FRIDAY, AUGUST 27,1993
KANAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS650-640)
Relationships policy outlined
Meyen explains history of the plan to Council
NEWS:864-4810
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
KU administrators explained how the new consensual relationships policy came into effect to faculty and student leaders at the University Council meeting yesterday.
The presentation was led by Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. David Shulenburg, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and Sandra Wick, assistant director of the college honors program, also spoke about the policy.
Meyen outlined a brief history of the plan.
Mayon训回 1091; Del Shankel, then intern
executive vice chancellor, and David
Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
appointed a task force on sexual harassment headed by Wick
Spring 1992: The task force submits its findings.
Spring 1983: Acting on the recommendations of the task force's report, the University establishes a draft of the consensual relationship policy. The draft proposal is sent to a committee of deans, campus organizations and University Governance officials for input.
Fall 1903: The policy is approved by Chancellor Gene Budig and goes into effect Aug.20.
Every group that reviewed the approval of it, Meyen said. Some even suggested an outright prohibition of consensual relationships, he said.
Meyen said the University received a lot of input from the groups before the policy was approved by Budig.
"It was not something we sat down and did in one day." Meven said.
Usually the University Senate Executive Committee and Council is offered the
"I was just surprised that they didn't use the normal governance procedure," she said. "University Governance was involved in the back end of the policy."
Shulenburger tried to put the policy into perspective. He said there was going to be no special action taken to enforce the policy.
"This is a University policy like any other policy," he said. "There is no special mechanism that needs to enforce it."
Although Wick said she was glad that the University acted on the recommendations of the task force, she said she was not pleased with how the University included University Governance in the approval of the policy.
chance to approve a policy before it goes to Budig or Meyen.
Despite fervent attempts by some Council members to discuss the policy with the administrators, the presentation was limited to 30 minutes.
The time limit was set so the presentation would not dominate the meeting. Council's next meeting, on Sept. 16, will be devoted solely to discussion of the policy.
Student Senate has accepted the policy but would like it to be revised.
William Alix / KANSAN
Guide claims racial tension rising at KU
Campus minority leaders say recent criticism unwarranted By Carlos Tejada
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
The 1994 Fiske Guide to Colleges did not think that every aspect of life at the University of Kansas deserved four out of five stars.
Despite praise of KU's libraries and and other programs, the guide criticized the University's increasing tensions.
"Race relations have been good on the whole, but 'are becoming more visible and tense because of the activist nature of the minority groups' which are 'widely supported', reports one junior," the guide said.
Leaders of campus ninority organizations called the criticism unfair
Criticism unraveled.
"If there is a racial tension, I don't see it," said Terry Bell. Tampa, Fla., senior and president of the Black Student Union. "There's just a racial presence."
Arthur Chiu, Joplin, Mo., senior and president of the Asian American Student Union, agreed with Bell.
"It sounds as if we're separatists, and that's definitely not our objective," he said. "We're not trying to create tension, but we're trying to get our message across."
Pipe dream
Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior and president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said there was a difference between positive activism and creating tension. He cited his group's protest in April of the University Daily Kansan for not covering the death of Hispanic labor activist Cesar Chavez. Protesters held a candlelight vigil in front of the Kansan's offices for a week.
"It didn't hurt anyone." Hinjosa said. "It didn't offend anyone. It just got attention."
Bell agreed with Hinojosa. He said there was a need for actions even though they might create the impression of tension
"I don't believe there is a divisive image of race relations on campus, but there's an awareness on campus that things aren't as they should be." Bell said. "The University isn't as diverse and multicultural as it could be."
Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said the statement in the guide was "unfortunate."
"It casts a cloud over an environment where I think so many people have worked so consistently and thoroughly to improve that," she said.
"I don't always agree with them, but I could say that about any organization," he said. "I think they play an important role in college life."
But student activism can be seen as positive and not just as a source of tension, said Donald Stull, professor of anthropology.
Stull said student minority organizations created opportunities for change.
"Student activist groups are often outside beating on the door, wanting to get in," he said. "School administrators are usually the ones who hold the door."
Stull, who has done surveys about race relations around the nation, also questioned the guide's methods for determining the presence of racial tension.
Geoff Shandler, editorial assistant to the guide, said that the guide's writers were moving its facilities to another office and could not be reached for comment.
Fall of communism enables and disables scholarly work
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
When jarslaw Piekakiewicz visited Poland in 1961, Stalinism reigned.
"I was followed everywhere I went by the police," said the KU professor of political science. "I wasn't intimidated, but I knew whoever I talked to, and whatever I said, they would be questioned later about it."
In 1991, Piekalkiewicz returned to Poland on a two-month sabbatical and served as a business advisor to the vice minister of foreign affairs.
The climate had changed considerably.
The titles and contents of courses at KU have changed since the fall of communism. Until two years ago, the class REES 895, Post-Communism and Marxism, could not have been offered because communism in the former Soviet Union was not dissolved until August 1991.
For Piekalkiewicz and many others at KU, the dissolution of communism in eastern Europe — especially the former Soviet Union — has meant many changes.
Pekalkiewicz, who teaches politics of east central Europe, now relies on news articles to keep abreast of new changes.
"I think it's extremely difficult to study those 'countries' because the changes are constant," Piekalkiewicz said. "In a term, it's chaos."
"The title 'Russian and East European Studies' was decided on
When the Center for Russian and East European Studies dropped "Soviet" for "Russian," it was a matter of evolution.
because our focus has always been on the Russian Federation and eastern Europe," said Lyne McElroy, outreach coordinator for the center. "Basically, our focus has not changed."
Maria Carlson, director of the center, said the increased level of activity at the center was significant.
The center serves as a resource not only to the University but also to community groups, educators and businesses.
The fall of communism enabled Eastern professors and students to
This fall, 17 students from the former Soviet Union are studying at KU through an exchange initiative signed by former presidents George Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev. Seven more will arrive for the spring semester.
experience Western education.
Ron Francisco, associate professor of political science, sad scholars of eastern Europe may benefit from communism's disappearance.
"Research has changed a lot because information that was not available is now available," he said.
Howard Soloman agreed. Solman is finishing up his doctoral dissertation in Slavic languages and literature and said his own research had been enriched by the release of formerly classified KGB diaries and other documents.
But Soloman said the frazzled infrastructure of the former Soviet Union could hinder researchers.
INSIDE
"I may need something from the Ukraine and from Russia," he said. "So now I'm dealing with two separate entities."
Kicking off a new season
The Kansan previews the 1993 Kansas Jayhawk football team, this season's opponents and tomorrow's Kickoff Classic.
Page 5-12
Labeling plan on vitamins upsets advocates
By Liz Klinger
Peter Schultz, vitamin and herb manager for Wild Oats Community Market, does not like being referred to as a snake oil salesman, a term used to criticize people who make health claims about the use of vitamins for health-related purposes.
Kansan staff writer
Sally Khris, regional chapter director of Citizens for Health, said Schultz is just one of 80 million alternative health-care method users who may have to fight the Food and Drug Administration for the right to continue selling dietary supplements and herbs.
If the FDA's proposed restrictions under the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act go into
effect, Schultz will be forced to remove items including herbs in bottles and capsules, all vitamins, some bulk herbs and all amino acids.
Khrisul told a group of 30 people last night at Wild Oats, 1040 Vermont St. that the FDA had proposed rules that would limit health claims and levels of dietary supplements in the interest of public safety. The passage of a 1992 dietary supplement act gave Congress until Dec. 31 to investigate the impact of the proposed limitations.
Khris urged members of the group who wanted to maintain their right to choose alternative health-care methods to support the 1983 Dietary Supplemental Health and Education Act, which will undergo a Senate committee
hearing in mid-September.
"There is an ongoing terror in the public about the government telling us what can we and cannot put in our bodies," Khrus said.
She said the FDA defines food as a substance you eat and a drug as something you take for its health and therapeutic elements. Any dietary supplement or herb with a label proclaiming health benefits would be considered a drug.
If you use cayenne pepper to season food — fine. But if you take it as a health remedy, it's a drug," Khris said about the FDA's view.
Schultz said the FDA wanted people to be uneducated about alternative health-care methods.
---
"We just want to get people to hear our side," he said.
Photo illustration by Martin Altstaedt. KANBAN
Vitamins and herbal medicines are popular components of alternative health care, but legislation is endangering the public's right to buy them over the counter.
2
Friday, August 27, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
$335.00
841-4611
ComputerLand
16K Flash for Nintendo
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater - Flint Hall, Lawrence, 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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
EAGLE
FREE Annual Hillel BBQ
Date: Sunday, August 29th Time: 5:30 p.m. Place: Hillel House, 940 Mississippi
For rides and more information call:
864-3948
They Came in Droves August 26-27 Playing at Quincy Magoos
In Topeka
Dancing Kitchen
Then Stop Over To
The Other Side
*Live Bands* **New Light Show** **DJ**
Every night of the week.
$2.00 92% Big Cup Refill
$3.50 Pit pickers - 756 Kamis
Upcoming Bands:
Quincy Magoo
- Turquoise Sol Sept. 16, 17, 18
* Nimble Pilote Sep. 23, 24, 25
1517 Lane
232-9800
The Hong Kong and Macau Association will hold an introductory meeting at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Markus Tang at 832-1541
ON CAMPUS
**U* KAMers and Role Players will meet at noon Sunday at TrTs' Comic Market. For more information, call 864-7316.
Auditions for "The Abyss Gazes Also" will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday and from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 4 to 5 p.m. Sunday in Hashinger Hall Theater. Those wanting to audition are encouraged to have two minutes of monologue prepared although material also will be provided. For more information, call Bernard Cox, 832-9108.
A student's Missouri license plates valued at $22 were taken from a car in KU parking lot No. 92 on Tuesday or Wednesday, KU police reported.
ON THE RECORD
A student's parking permit valued at $53 was taken from KU parking lot No. 91 on Tuesday, KU police reported.
A student's purse, wallet, credit cards and driver's license, valued together at $250, were taken in the 3100 block of Iowa Street on Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's bicycle valued at $100 was taken in the 1700 block of West 24th Street on Wednesday. Lawrence police reported
A student's purse, passport,
KUID and cash, valued together
at $100 were taken from the see.
The police reported Wednesday. KU police reported.
A student's $127 refund check and coin purse were taken from the second floor of Haworth Hall on Wednesday, KU police reported.
CORRECTION
A photograph caption on Page 3 of yesterday's *Kansas* contained incorrect information. The movie "Ninth Street" was filmed in Kansas City, Mo., and Topeka.
WEATHER
Omaha: 87'/70'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 93°/73'
Chicago: 89°/74'
Houston: 98°/73'
Miami: 87°/77'
Minneapolis: 89°/70'
Phoenix: 85°/79'
Salt Lake City: 81°/55'
Seattle: 68°/51'
LAWRENCE: 85°/65'
Kansas City: 92°/73'
St. Louis: 94°/78'
Wichita: 97°/72'
Tulsa: 98°/68'
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Cloudy
High: 85'
Low: 65'
Sunny
High: 85'
Low: 68'
Sunny
High: 85'
Low: 67'
WEATHER
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Cyclist recovering from surgery
tions.
A KU student was in good condition last night after surgery Tuesday to repair a broken leg he suffered in an accident on campus.
"The operation went very well considering how nasty the injury was." Wendt said.
Physicians put a rod into the skin of Andrew Mitchell, Lawrence junior Richard Wendt, the orthopedic surgeon who performed the operation, said it was a routine procedure for such cases. Wendt said a bone in Mitchell's lower leg was broken in several pieces near his knee. He said a complete recovery was expected in three to 10 months, barring an infection, blood clot or other complica
Mitchell was injured Monday when he was riding his bicycle north on Mississippi Street near the Kansas Union. A truck turned in front of him on its way to the loading docks behind the Union. Mitchell hit the side of the truck and was thrown from the bicycle.
Mitchell said he planned to return to class Wednesday.
Scott J. Anderson
Neighborhood group studies street parking
The Oread Neighborhood Association is moving forward on a proposal that would restrict daytime parking on city streets just east and north of campus.
Jennifer Brown, president of the association, said association members would be surveying parked cars for a few weeks to study parking patterns on neighborhood streets.
streets from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The streets fill up during the morning when students come to campus for class.
Cars parked during those hours without permits would be ticketed and fined.
The latest version of the proposal would restrict parking on city streets in an area bounded by Ninth, Tennessee, 14th and Maine streets. Permits would be required on those
Networking for Career Enhancement
Among the reasons for the change that were listed in the proposal was that residents in the area could not find place to park and that they were trying to preserve the value of the property.
Brown said the association would meet in October to discuss results of the parking survey and make final revisions to the proposal before taking it to the Lawrence City Commission.
Shan Schwartz
September 9 - 10, 1993 • Kansas Expocentre • Topeka, KS
Women's Issues Related to Science Careers
PROGRAM TOPICS
Grant Funding and Proposal Writing
Career Management: Your Professional Image and Tomorrow's Opportunities Attitudes and Abilities: A Look at the Gender Issues in Pre-collegiate Science Education
Upward Mobility: The Glass Ceiling
K
Entrepreneurialism. No Guts. No Glory!
Entrepreneurialism: No Guts, No Glory!
K STAR
University/Business Partnerships: What are the Possibilities $ ^{1-2} $
Early Intervention Programs
NATIONAL SCIENCE
FOUNDATION
Two Career Families - Blending Careers and Family
For More Information Contact: Pam Hicks, The University of Kansas, (913) 897-8522 * FAX (913) 897-8540
Hosted By: The National Science Foundation and the Kansas K*STAR NSE PPSoR Program.
K*STAR - Kansas Science and Technology Advanced Research - represents a coalition of Kansas State University, the University of Kansas, and Wichita State University to increase Kansas' competitiveness for federal research grants.
Presented by STUDENT SENATE
LOST...CONFUSED...WITHOUTFUNDS???
Is your student organization
The University Comptroller's Office
then don't miss the
Treasurer's Workshop
- How to keep accurate records *
Saturday, August 28 9:30-11:00 a.m.
Walnut Room, Kansas Union
- Creating University accounts*
- How to spend state funds *
- How to receive Student Senate funding *
Tuesday, August 31 7:00-8:30 p.m. Pioneer Room, Burge Union
Topics will include:
ATTENTION KU STUDENTS!
SPORTS COMBINATION TICKET DISTRIBUTION IS AS FOLLOWS:
READ THIS BEFORE PICKING UP YOUR TICKETS DO NOT THROW AWAY
YOU MAY PICK UP YOUR TICKETS ONLY NOT ANOTHER STUDENTS!
PLEASE BRING YOUR CURRENT I.D. WITH FALL FEE STICKER
WHERE: Gate C, South End Memorial Stadium
TIME: 8:30 a.m. -4:00 p.m.
DATE: See Schedule Below
A-E Monday,August 30th F-K Tuesday,August 31st L-R Wednesday, September 1st S-Z Thursday, September 2nd Make-up) Friday,September 3rd
If you miss your assigned pick-up date, you have from September 6th until October 15th to pick up your tickets in Allen Field House (East Lobby).
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 27, 1993
3
1336407
Work on sewer interferes with parking near Robinson
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Construction work in the parking lot south of Robinson Center is making life complex for KU students who park on campus, and it probably will not be completed any time soon.
Construction workers blocked off separate lanes of traffic two weeks ago on Naismith Drive, north of 18th Street, to improve sections of underground storm sewers.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Doug Riat, administrative manager of Design Construction Management, said he expected the project to last until the middle of October.
The construction cut off access to the parking lot at Schwegler Road and took over the lot's northwest
Workers moved across the street Tuesday to Schwegler Road and Parking Lot No. 90, south of Robinson, to continue work on the storm sewer.
1987年6月26日
在河南省洛阳市偃师市三阳镇王庄村北侧的沟塘内进行渠道开挖作业。施工人员正在使用机械设备将大型管道进行挖掘。沟塘底部为岩石堆砌而成,沟壁由钢筋混凝土制成。开挖过程中,工作人员必须注意安全,避免意外事故的发生。同时,工程组还将对沟塘周边的环境进行调查,及时发现并处理可能存在的隐患。
"It's been a terrible disruption," he said. "A lot of people are unhappy about this."
The construction is an inconvenience to people who use the lot, said Wayne Osness, chair of Health, Physical Education and Recreation at Robinson.
Osness said an old storm sewer, installed not long after an addition to Robinson was built in 1980, allowed drainage water to flow outside of the sewer ditch this summer, carrying soil with it down the hill. This process, Osness said, caused the southeast end of Robinson to sink into the ground and damaged a few tennis courts.
He said the major complaint students voiced about the construction was that it should have been completed in the summer.
The new sewer will safely carry all of the drainage water past Robinson and out to the storm sewer just completed on Naismith Drive, Osness said.
"They probably feel like, I've been gone all summer, and now they feel like tearing up everything?" Osness said.
Riat said construction had been scheduled to begin on June 21, but heavy rains delayed the work until Aug.9.
Roosevelt Palmer, left, and Terry Garringer, right, both of Garney Construction Company, install a 60-inch sewer-drainage pipe that leads to Naismith Drive.
NEWS BRIEFS
NEW YORK
A radical Muslim cleric was the guiding hand behind a terrorist organization that bombed the World Trade Center, plotted to blow up other New York landmarks and planned a host of other violent acts, prosecutors say.
Terrorism indictments handed down for sheik
Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman was accused in a federal indictment Wednesday along with 14 followers of conspiring to wage a "war of urban
terrorism against the United States." Rather than being charged with any specific act, the 55-year-old blind Egyptian cleric was charged under a rarely used sedition law as the leader of a conspiracy who was "consulted in pursuing and planning bombings, murders and other acts of terrorism."
JOHANNESBURG, S. Africa
Teens arrested in killing
A mob of young blacks dragged the pleasing Amy Biehl, 26, from her car in Gugaluetu township Wednesday and stabbed her to death.
The Fulbright scholar from Newport Beach, Calif., who planned to return to the United States on Friday, was taking Black friends home to the township when they were ambushed.
to the Black majority
The two arrested youth, who are 17 and 18, were not identified.
Police arrested two Black teenagers yesterday in the killing of an American student, lauded by friends as a freedom fighter for her devotion
Bieleh graduated from Stanford University in 1899 and planned to begin a doctorate program at Rutgers University this fall.
Kansas lures businesses with football
New York and New Jersey businesses interested in relocating or expanding to Kansas will get a taste of what it is like to be a Jayhawk on Saturday.
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas Department of Commerce decided to use Saturday's game against Florida State as a method for recruiting new businesses to Kansas, said Debi Moore, assistant director of economic development for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
"There's already enthusiasm around the game," Moore said. "We can attach to that enthusiasm."
Bill Martin, executive economic director of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, thought of using the Kickoff Classic as a setting for their mission, Moore said.
Thirty prospects have been invited to Saturday's activities, she said, and the other prospects who were very interested. Their names could not be released.
The department holds several prospect missions a year, Moore said.
"He noticed we've got a lot of key prospects in New Jersey and New York," Moore said. "We're so used to bringing people here he said, 'Why don't we go there and take advantage of the national exposure?'"
Martin left Wednesday for New Jersey and could not be reached for comment.
Kansas Cavalry, a group of business and community leaders, is sponsoring the mission. Cavalry members have been contacting businesses this week. Moore said, and would meet with prospects and site selection consultants tomorrow at a pre-game breakfast. From there, they will go to the KU alumni pep rally and then on to the game. Moore said.
The breakfast, game and pep rally give the businesses a chance to ask questions and receive extra information. Moore said.
"It's just another personal contact that allows us to close the deal," Moore said.
Charles Krider, professor of business and co-director of the Institute for Public Policy and Research at the University of Kansas, said that the game was a good way to begin conversation with companies.
"It capitalizes on some very positive
pitility for the state," Krider said.
The game begins at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Rutherford, N.J.
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OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Congress recently appropriated $7.7 billion for flood relief amidst deficit debates.
THE BACKGROUND
The "500-Year Flood" this summer caused more than $10 billion in damages and displaced over 100,000 people. The flood clean-up efforts will cover nine states, and emergency appropriations will not be available until after the end of the federal fiscal year on September 30. Kansas has suffered more than $2 billion in property damages and only 20 percent of those who are eligible for flood insurance have it.
THE OPINION
Congressional gridlock preventing flood relief
The sites of the raging Mississippi River and human suffering have faded from the media and the minds of many Americans, but the misery of those with homes and businesses devastated by the "500-Year Flood" is far from over. Unfortunately, Congress has turned the need for disaster-relief appropriations into a fight over deficit reduction and pork-barrel legislation.
The clean-up effort is going to be much more extensive and costly than previous disasters such as Hurricane Andrew and the San Francisco earthquake, but the emergency disaster appropriations have been surrounded by more controversy than any of the previous disasters. Democrats and Republicans alike responded to the needs of victims by fighting over how much the appropriations were going to hurt deficit-reduction efforts. The indifference Congress has displayed reflects a frightening loss of compassion.
Those without flood insurance can expect only a maximum of $11,900 in grants and loans. This is devastating and inadequate for any family with little or no financial reserves to fall back on. There are also those who are unemployed because of damages to businesses. Any delay in aid to these victims is embarrassing and should be a flag for change in the way disaster funds are distributed.
If Congress allocated a larger amount of emergency contingency funds within the budget,political bickering caused by emergency appropriations could be avoided. Federal agencies would be able to distribute aid to victims faster,and those in need could be left out of the politics and given the chance to put their lives back together.
EISHA TIERNEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KU computer system should be renovated
The University of Kansas prides itself on its excellent facilities. Unfortunately for students who need to use a computer, KU falls short. Computer labs are hard to find, overcrowded and divided among many departments, each with their own policies. Many of the labs contain outdated equipment. The University should make more of an effort to standardize lab operations, better publicize lab locations and update equipment.
A glimmer of hope was provided by last semester's opening of a lab on Daisy Hill. Unfortunately, this lab is only open to residents of the Hill. Because of that rule, the lab is underused. This lab should be made available to all KU students.
Budget constraints make it hard to improve everything; however, computers are very important in this competitive world, and KU should make an effort to provide students with the tools they need.
MIKE SILVERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
MAXNEILY Chicago Tribune
WHAT JOB?
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Test your compatibility with a motor vehicle
If I could pick one time, as I'm often asked to do, when I really hold disgust for my fellow human beings, it's when I'm at the wheel of my decked-out 1979 brown Honda Accord. Out on the open road, breathing the fresh air next to the nitrogen plant outside Lawrence and dealing with stupid, no, make that extraordinarily ignorant drivers.
1 estimate that roughly 35.6 percent of drivers have some difficulty operating a motor vehicle, while 16.9 percent are completely incapable of driving. To understand how these people got authorization to drive, I only need think of my own driving beginnings. In a rush to obtain my license, I failed to pass my driving test — twice (I would have passed the first time but inadvertently ran a hidden stop sign. They're tough on those things.)
The height of my dismay came when my father remarried and we moved into the heart of Leawood, which is, deservedly so, the home of the national headquarters for STU PID (Should Try Using Planes instead of Driving). People in Leawood, especially between 3 and 7 p.m., apparently forget that other people exist in this world. I made this conclusion after noticing that a Leawood driver will turn, change lanes, etc., regardless of whether someone is, oh, say, right next to them.
STAFF COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
Unfortunately, STDs (stupid drivers) aren't confined to Leawood. If that were the case, I'd just never go home. No, SDs are everywhere, waiting to prey on unassuming GDDS (good drivers) at all times. So as a service to the community, I've devised the following test to determine your degree of driving stupidity, or to be less harsh, "incompatibility with an automobile." See if any of the following situations ring a bell:
1) You are behind a car and an exit you wish to use is a half mule or less away. Quickly, you jump to the passing lane and reach at least 78 mph to win the "Exit Race." You arrive there 0.9 seconds ahead of your expletive-shouting opponent and remark, "Man, what a sore loser!"
2) While cruising down 23rd Street, you note that the right lane is closed ahead. Here, it would be a good idea to move into the left lane as GDs are
doing. Too bad your brain neurons aren't firing that day, and you pass 21 cars before the lane ends and yourself, "Why won't these jerks let me in?"
3) You're enjoying a drive toward a busy intersection, surprised and thrilled to hear that great song "Aim' Nothin' Gonna Break My Stride" on the headphones to which you are jamming. It's a pity that the light can't hear the song and goes yellow 50 yards before you arrive. Being a sly cat, you know the other lights won't change to green for 0.75 seconds after yours go red, which gives you plenty of time for a "zoom-zoom" through the intersection. You may think you're brilliant — I think you're stupid.
If you've caught yourself doing any of these things, you may be at high risk for SDS — Stupid Driver Syndrome. For a full list of symptoms or information on how to get help, send a self-addressed stamped envelope and your key toes: the Zsa Zsa Gabon School, P.O. Box 1234, Leawood, Kan., 12345 or call the toll-free number 1-911-CNT-DRIV.
The hardest step is the first step. Don't just do it for yourself, do it for the world.
Chris Ronan is a Olander Park sophomore major in radio-television-broadcast.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
The president's anti-crime package won't reduce criminal activity in U.S.
There are some commendable aspects of President Clinton's anti-crime package. For the most part, however, the proposal is more likely to enhance ... Clinton's image as being tough on crime than to actually do much about reducing criminal activity.
It's good that the Brady Bill — the five-day waiting period on gun purchases — is once again being pushed. Just as it's good that ... Clinton has, by executive order, added additional foreign-made assault style handguns, such as the Uzi, to the list of proscribed weapons, and made it more difficult to become a federally licensed gun dealer.
tinely execute criminals.
Beyond that, the president offers little. Expanding to 50 the number of federal crimes calling for the death penalty, as ... Clinton asks for, will almost surely do little to deter criminals. That, at any rate, appears to have been the experience of the several states that still rou-
Nor will the expenditure of $3.4 billion on 50,000 more police officers like do much...
A more fundamental objection to Washington financing a total of 100,000 police officers is that fighting crime — especially violent crime — is almost wholly a local concern. In the first place, the local governments know best their own crime problem and how best to confront it ...
With rare exception, American cities of all sizes can afford to pay for this most basic service themselves. Why should the federal government get involved at all with putting officers on the streets? ...
Crime is a serious problem, and this country needs an effective anti-crime strategy.
The Times Union Albany, N.Y.
STAFF COLUMNIST
SIE
Fee payment can be fun with music, food, games
I was standing in the eternal fee-payment completion line when I began wondering how much interest the University collects from the deposits that are paid with the mail-in fee payment system. The lines were long, the ballroom was hot, and I couldn't even see the front of the line. I read my class schedule over and over, looked around and saw hundreds of unhappy faces. Not a smile in sight.
SCOTT GILLASPIE
So, I thought, why doesn't the University use some of the money they pocket from the deposits to provide entertainment? It was a far-fetched idea, but when you're standing in a line that stretches from one end of the Union Ballroom to the other, you think about a lot of things you could be doing.
What about music? With all that money, I don't mean a local band, although that would be much better than nothing. Bring in a major group. We waited all last year to see who would be the headliner for Day on the Hill after they brought us Pearl Jam in 92. Then there was no major group last year, so maybe they can make up for that by giving us someone to listen to at fee-payment completion.
Or maybe we could have a carnival-style system. As you go through the line, you pass different games you can play with a chance to win prizes. You can have a dunk tank where you have a chance to soak some important University people, like the chair of the math department or that English professor that you didn't like. You could win prizes like bookstore discounts, coupons for free food, or maybe even a parking pass (Right. Like Parking Services would actually give something away for free). When you get to the end of the line you pay your fees or get your refund, go to the bookstore and spend a couple of hundred dollars on books, and then go home and order the pizza that you won for throwing a football through a hoop.
Another thing I thought of was the use of celebrities. We could have sports stars and actors working the tables. You can present your student ID to Michael Jordan and then get in line to write out your check to Demi Moore. Your work-study authorization card would come from Andre Agassi or Julia Roberts.
Again.
But, stepping back into reality ... we'll always have to endure that one day each semester of waiting in lines to pay our remaining fees, only to be told that we're in the wrong line. The University will get our deposits and accrue the interest, overcharge us for books, and then charge us to park on a campus where the closest lots seem miles away. But then we'll get a break.
We'll have a few months until many of us have to do it all over again, with no music, no food and no games, just several long lines and an hour or two of complete frustration.
It was about 12:30 p.m., and I hadn't yet eaten lunch. Why couldn't they deliver a few pizzas for those of us waiting in line? Just call Pizza Hut, order a few dozen pizzas and hey, I'm sure time would pass much quicker. Maybe a few six-foot party subs would be nice also. Don't forget the Coke.
Scott Gillespie is a Topeka sophomore majoring in English.
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET
Technology coordinator
KANSAN STAFF
Reporters
*assistant to the editor* ... J.R. Claiborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrie McConkey
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kirsten Grogue
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Rosenwald
Kobe ... Era Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
Web Rules
Assistant Editors
Associate editorial ... Colleen McCain
Associate campus ... Dan England
Assistant campus/planning ... Jess Delwain
Associate sports ... Todd Bellert
Copy Chiefs
Allison Lippert ... Trace Ritchie
Corey Shouse
Reporters
Scott Anderson Sara Bennett
Mark Button Traci Carl
Matt Doyle Anne Feinstein
Garry Fey Christopher Fuhrman
Donella Heame Kent Hohlfeld
Brian James Kurt Miller
Shan Schwartz David Stewart
Kathine Stolte Candio Tojada
Washington
Copy Editors
Elizabeth Beary ... Craig Glozzi
Kevin Butter ... Lisa Cosmillo
Jess Delvatean ... Dan England
Jack Fischer ... Keith Gliese
Martin Holman ... Michael Klimamon
Will Lewis ... Stephen Martino
Sarah Nagi ... Minasutu Nassau
Barton Schultz ... Todd Selffor
Valerie Bontrager Dan Carver
Julia Clarke John Gambir
Doug Hesse Paul Koda
Melissa Lovett Tom Lehlinger
Holly McQueen Susan Mcpadden
John Paul Fogel Stacy Freidman
Will Lewis
Graphics Areas
Dave Campbell James Friedrich
Micah Laeker Schauer
Designer
AMY CASEY Business manager
Business manager
AMY STUMO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
BILL THOMAS Production
Business Staff
Campus sales manager ... Ed Schagar
Regional sales manager ... Jennifer Perrit
National sales manager ... Jennifer Everson
Co-op sales manager ... Blythe Foote
Production managers ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelley McConcellan
Creative director ... Brian Furoc
Lead team manager ... Janice Davis
Special sections manager ... Judith Standley
Teamsheets manager ... Tricia Bumpus
Retail assistant ... Andrew (photographer)
Lead assistant (photographer) ... Andrew Ackroyd
Zone Managers
Zone Managers
Jane Ellerby
John Garton
Jason Hale
Justin Gartner
Robin King
Retail Account Executives
Mindy Blum ... Chris Buigren
Chris Butler ... Kelly Caffrey
Jennifer Carr ... Jennie Goerke
Laura Guth ... Jill Hogan
Allison Kaplan ... Jason Kort
S yanda Kunto ... Mark Mastro
Chris Morrissey ... Frank Muller
Paula Ostrowski ... Heather Richetto
Jenny Schwab ... Andrew Shriver
Dave Smith ... Stacey Stricklin
Campus Account Executives
Keri Kimmal ...Beth Pole
Shannon Reilly ...Troy Tarwater
Jeanne Tohey
Regional Account Executive
Alex Kolb Frederick Jewsome
Brian Platt Paulus Probotone
Shelly Falevits Bradley Feinberg
Dean Houlnd Lynn Hul
Matt Spett
The 1993 Season
The challenge to improve
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KU
Coming off an 8-4 season and their first bowl victory since 1961,the Kansas Jayhawks are looking to reach new heights,including the top of the Big Eight Conference.
KU
PASCAL
Dan Eichloff, the Jayhawks' all-time leading scorer, is one of the team's offensive threats this season.
KANSAN
...
By Matt Doyle
K
ansas coach Glen Mason, who came to Kansas from Kent State in 1988, has brought many changes during his tenure as the Jayhawks football coach. Each year the Jayhawks
have become a stronger team, culminating in last season's breakthrough-8-4 record with a 23-20 victory in the Aloha Bowl against Brigham Young.
Mason's program will be tested this season to see if it can maintain the success it has attained. The last time Kansas put together three consecutive winning seasons was 1950-52, but Mason has higher expectations for the Jayhawk football program.
"I firmly believe that either as a player, coach or program you either get better or worse," he said. "You never stay the same."
There is a new look to the jayhawks on both the offensive and defensive sides of the football this season. The most notable change on offense is at quarterback where junior Fred Thomas replaces All-Big Eight performer and three-year starter Chip Hilleary.
"Chip 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."
Thomas will have the benefit of an experienced offensive line, with potential big play-makers in tight end Dwayne Chandler, wide receiver Rodney Harris and running backs George White and LT Levine.
Mason said the Jayhawk defense played the type of defense in 1992 that was needed to be successful in the Big Eight Conference.
"That's not to say our previous teams had poor attitudes, but this team's collective attitude is better as a whole, which probably comes from winning," Mason said.
Mason said that he enjoyed the pressure of living up to the changing expectations that the Kansas program had experienced with winning records each of the last two seasons.
Kansas lost defensive linemen Dana Stubblefield, Gilbert Brown and Kyle Moore this year, but Mason is not worried because Chris Maumalanga, Sylvester Wright and Guy Howard are returning to anchor the defensive line. Each of those three players saw extensive playing time last year in both starting and reserve roles.
The Kickoff Classic
The attitude of the Kansas players is better than any of the previous Mason-coached Kansas teams.
"Pressure forces a team to reach different level of expectations," he said. "The pressure will be helpful in our situation."
**When:** 11 a.m. Saturday, August 28
**Where:** Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J.
**Who:** Kansas Jayhawks (last year 8-4, Aloa Bowl champion)
vs. Preseason No. 1 Florida State Seminoles (last year
11-1, Orange Bowl champion)
**Television:** ABC Channels 9, 49
**Radio:** KLZR 105.9 FM, KLWN 1320 AM
Kick off Classic
AUGUST 27,1993 PAGE5
Seminoles want to prove they're No.1
Florida State taking Kansas seriously in season opener
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
For Kansas, the Kickoff Classic is a chance of a lifetime.
"There is no apprehension on our part about playing these guys," said senior linebacker Larry Thiel. "No one believes in us, but it doesn't matter. No one will be intimidated by the setting or situation."
The speed and quickness that the Seminole players possess is Mason's major concern entering this game. He said that Florida State was the fastest team he had ever prepared for as a coach.
For Florida State, the Kickoff Classic adds another difficult non-conference game in their attempt to win the national championship.
"If we were still here in Lawrence on Aug. 28, watching two other teams playing, knowing we had the opportunity, we would be embarrassed that we shied away from competition." Mason said. "I might not have the best players or coaches, but we're not afraid of losing."
Kansas coach Glen Mason steadily maintains that the chance to play in this contest was just too good for him and his team to pass up.
Senior quarterback Charlie Ward returns to lead the Seminole offense. After a slow start last season, Ward emerged at midseason to direct the team to seven consecutive victories to close the season and finish as Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year. He was a third team All-America selection.
Florida State players recognize that a loss could hurt the team's chances of winning a national championship. The Seminoles hope the final piece to their national championship puzzle is freshman kicker Scott Bentley. He made 11 of 13 field goals from inside of 50 yards last season for Overland High School in Aurora, Colo.
Florida State's non-conference schedule was one of the toughest in the nation before they accepted the bid for the Kickoff Classic. The Seminoles play host to preseason No. 5 Miami and travel to No. 7 Notre Dame and No. 9 Florida. But Seminole coach Bobby Bowden said the $625,000 payout for the game was too good to turn down.
Preventing big plays might be a tall order against the Seminoles.
"This game was too good financially for us to pass up because we have to pay the bills around here," Bowden said. "Football is the biggest revenue producing sport, and we can afford to turn down opportunities like this."
"We have 13 steps to go to a No. 1 finish and we'll treat each step equally." Brooks said. "Don't think we won't take Kansas seriously. We need to show that we deserve that No. 1 spot."
Despite the fact that his team is ranked No. 1 in the nation and is a 28 point favorite, Bowden said he had
Florida State junior linebacker Derrick Brooks said he realized the national championship would not be won in this game.
"Early in the game is when the difference in speed is most noticeable," he said. "It's impossible to prepare for. That's why field position will be very important because you want to try to prevent big plays."
"This is a great opportunity for us," said senior center Dan Schmidt. "Florida State is a huge challenge, but playing them can only do good things for us."
"The first game of the year is always the most unpredictable because both teams have had a lot of time since the last game to put in some things you might not have seen on film," he said.
Jayhawk players have been excited for the last six months since the match-up was announced.
But what about the fear of losing by a big margin?
concerns about the game against the Jayhawks.
"It is the biggest area that we have to shore up," he said. "We lost five players on our defensive front seven that were drafted in the first four rounds of the NFL Draft. Players, such as Marvin Jones, who can't be replaced easily."
Bowden's main concern is his defense, which must replace five starters.
"The biggest test for us will be our defensive line against their big, experienced offensive line," he said. "We'll have to depend on our speed and quickness."
Junior linebacker Derrick Brooks is touted as Jones' replacement. Senior defensive end Toddrick McIntosh is expected to be a leader on the offensive line.
Jones, last year's Dick Butkus Award winner as the top linebacker in college football, was a first-round pick of the New York Jets.
Bowden said his team's defensive line play would be a key against Kansas.
The Classic's History Opening game is in its 11th year
FOOTBALL Preview
KANSAS JAYHAWKS
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
The Kickoff Classic, the traditional first game of the college season, first kicked off on August 29.1983 when Nebraska defeated Penn State 44-6.
The idea for the game was born in January 1983 at the NCAA's annual convention. An overwhelming majority of the delegates approved the proposal. The intent of the first, and all following games, was to raise money to help retire the mortgages of the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame building in Kings Island, Ohio.
Robert E. Mulcahy III, the president and chief executive officer of the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, made the announcement in February that Kansas and Florida State would play in the 11th Kickoff Classic. The authority and the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics are the managing bodies of the game and its preparations.
"Florida State and Kansas epitomize the best in collegiate athletics," Mulcahy said. "Their appearance in the Kickoff Classic will add to the game's prestigious history."
According to the rules laid out by the NCAA, not just any team can play in the classic.
Some of the regulations include: that both teams must not be on NCAA probation or suspension; that the two teams did not meet in a bowl game in the previous year and will not play each other during the ensuing regular season; seven conferences and two independent teams must be offered a spot in the game during any seven year period; and the conferences included in the regulations are the Atlantic Coast, Big Ten, Pac Ten, Southeastern, Southwest Athletic, Western Athletic and Big Eight conferences.
Kickoff Classic officials hope that this year's game between the Jayhawks and Seminoles will continue the classic's tradition of exciting finishes. The second Kickoff Classic in 1984 might have been the most exciting. This match up featured the defending national champion Miami Hurricanes, led by quarterback Berrie Kosar, and the SEC's Auburn Tigers, with Bo Jackson in the backfield.
6
Friday, August 27, 1993
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1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW
Jayhawk Football Listed are the starters for Kansas' offense and defense
Offense
33, Costello Good
FB
12, Fred Thomas
QB
78, Mark Allison
RT
69, John Jones
RG
75, Dan Schmidt
C
66, Hessley Hempstead
LG
54, Rod Jones
LT
1, Dwayne Chandler
84, Rodney Harris
WR
TE
CB
28, Tony Blevins
DE
97, Sylvester Wright
DT
72, Chris Maumalanga
DT
98, Daryl Jones
DE
90, Guy Howard
CB
3, Gerald McBurrows
Defense
FS
8, Kwamie Lassiter
OLB
46, Ronnie Ward
MLB
35, Larry Thiel
OLB
16, Keith Rodgers
SS
38, Robert Vaughn
Defense expects success despite injuries
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas improvement during Coach Glen Mason's tenure in Lawrence has been directly correlated with the overall improvement of the Jayhawk defense.
In 1988, Mason's first season at Kansas, the Jahayhaws allowed an average of 536 yards per game. Each year since has seen a decrease in the amount of yardage allowed by the Kansas defense.
Last season's 8-4 record was spurred by a defensive unit that played the type of defense Mason said was necessary to be successful in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas allowed an average of 318.7 yards of total offense and only gave up 125.7 yards rushing — the third lowest average in school history.
The key to any success on defense
Senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga returns to anchor the defensive line that must replace tackles Dana Stubblefield and Gilbert Brown and end Kyle Moore.
The middle linebacker position was decimated by injuries during spring practice, but some of the injured have regained their health.
"We don't have the depth on the line like we had last year, but there aren't many teams that have that kind of depth," said Bob Fello, defensive coordinator.
begins with the guys up front - the defensive line. Two members of last season's line are currently in NFL training camps, but Kansas will return five players to the line who saw quality playing time in 1992.
Senior Larry Larki, who broke his left ankle last season against Colorado, and sophomore Dick Holt, who sat out during spring drills while recovering from shoulder surgery, have returned.
Senior Guy Howard and junior Sylvester Wright, who along with Christian shared the starting defensive end position opposite of Moore last year, are scheduled to start at
Senior Brian Christian was shifted from defensive end to defensive tackle and senior Mike Steele adds depth and experience at the tackle position.
both end positions.
Junior Steve Harvey's condition remains questionable as he recuperates from an injury to his right Achilles' tendon. Doctors said the earliest Harvey could return would be October, and Mason said he would decide then on whether to classify Harvey as a medical redshift. Harvey would not lose year of eligibility if he were classified as a medical redshift.
Junior outside linebacker Don Davis will miss the first few games with a sprained knee, but sophomores Ronnie Ward and Keith
Rodgers, who shifted from strong safety, will bring speed and intensity to the position.
The secondary had been described as the weak link of the defense for the past few years. However, the secondary has been an area that the coaching staff has worked hard at in recruiting during that time period, and the dividends should begin to pay off.
Seniors Kwanie Lassiter and Robert Vaughn will start at the safety positions. Lassiter earned All-Big Eight honors in 1992 after transferring from Butler County Community College. Vaughn moved from cornerback to strong safety to replace Rodgers.
Junior Gerald McBurrows returns as a starter at cornerback, and he will be joined by true freshman Tony Blevins, the headline recruit in last winter's recruiting class.
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1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 27,1993
Offensive line expected to be best in recent Jayhawk history
By Matt Doyle Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas offense averaged 395.1 yards per game last season and 31 points a game. Those were the fourth and second highest totals respectively in those categories in Kansas football history.
Quarterback Chip Hilley triggered Kansas' offense for the last three seasons and finished up second on the Kansas career total offense chart with 5,888 yards. Hilley is gone, and Coach Glen Mason must find a new starting quarterback for the first time in three years.
The entire starting backfield, which contributed to Kansas' success on offense in 1992, is gone. But the offensive backfield is not worrying Mason.
"I feel very good about the quarterback position because we have more talent, depth and competition at the position than any time that I have been here," Mason said. "I think we'll be more talented in the backfield because we have some young kids with more ability than we've had in the past."
Last year, Mason had to replace both starting running backs, Tony Sands and Roger Robben. Maurice Douglas and Monte Cozzes both had good seasons in their senior campaigns in replacing Sands and Robben.
Junior Fred Thomas will be the replacement for Hilleary at quarterback. Thomas saw limited action in seven games last season, but played the final three quarters in the 22-17 loss at Missouri after Hilleary left the game with a concussion.
Thomas completed only 4 of 18 passes for 49 yards in the Missouri game, but looked impressive in spring practice and in the spring game where he completed 9 of 17 passes for 186 yards and one touchdown.
"There are no questions about his abilities because he has the tools to play quarterback," said Golden Pat Ruel, defensive coordinator, about Thomas. "We're concerned, though, about how he'll react under pressure situations. As a coaching staff, we'll have to help him through that."
"I feel very good"
"Ifeel very good about the quarterback position because we have more talent, depth and competition at the position than any time that I have been here."
Glen Mason Kansas football coach
Sophomore Asheki Preston and juniors Van Davis and Rodney Hogan are listed as backups to Thomas.
Kansas hopes to repeat its success of running the football. Only one conference team, Nebraska, has run for more yards than Kansas over the last two seasons. Mason said he was excited about the potential of senior George White and sophomore L.T. Levine.
"We've got a lot of depth at the tailback position," he said. "George has big play ability and LT.really came on at the end of last season."
Mason and Ruel both said they plan to use Levine in a one-back set with White setting up as a receiver at times this season.
Junior Chris Powell started three games at fulback last season, but injuries at the middle linebacker position in the spring dictated his move to that position. At the start of fall practice, Powell broke a bone in his left foot and will be out for at least a month. It is uncertain which position Powell will play once he returns.
The passing game is something both coaches have emphasized more during the last two years, and they
believe they have some players who can catch the ball.
Senior Dwayne Chandler heads a group of outstanding tight ends that Mason believes is the best in the conference. Chandler was named an All-Big Eight performer last year after catching 17 passes for 398 yards and six touchdowns.
The tight end position is so deep that Mason moved junior Rodney Harris to wide receiver before the Aloha Bowl against Brigham Young. The move paid off as Harris caught four passes for 142 yards, including a 74-yard touchdown.
Harris and sophomore Ashaunald Smith are slated to start at the two wide receiver positions. Smith caught six passes for 137 yards and one touchdown in the spring game. Fort Scott Community College transfer Robert Reed, nephew of former Jayhawk receiver David Verser, is expected to contribute this season.
"We want to be versatile on offense, and these guys have to come through for us," Ruel said.
Mason considers this year's offensive line to be the best in his six years at Kansas. Senior center Dan Schmidt and junior guards Hessley Hempsted and John Jones have started the last 14 games together, and each is considered one of the best at their positions in the Big Eight.
Sophomore left tackle Rod Jones made his first career start in the Aloha Bowl victory, and sophomore right tackle Mark Allison switched over from defensive tackle before the bowl game.
"Our 'center box', the center and two guards, I believe, are the best interior three lineemen in the conference," he said. "Both Mark Allison and Rod Jones are good athletes and competitive players."
Ruel, who also coaches the offensive line, agrees with Mason that this is Kansas' best offensive line.
Senior Dan Eichloff returns for his fourth year of handling the kicking and punting chores. He ranks as the school's all-time leading scorer with 238 points and third in career punting average with an average of 41.8 yards per punt.
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8
1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. August 27,1993
Big Eight gears up for tough season
Conference teams ready to rekindle last year's rivalry
Change became apparent in the 1992 Big Eight Conference football season.
Colorado and Oklahoma junked their traditional option-oriented running game in favor of highly potent passing attacks.
Kansas football was the sport people in Lawrence were talking about during the fall and even into the early winter — the time when Jayhawk basketball gamers all of the attention on Mount Oread. The Jayhawks were the only conference team to win a bowl game. Now there's a change.
Kansas State put together a respectable, albeit disappointing, 5-6 season. Oklahoma State recovered from an 0-10 1-1 season in 1991 to host a 4-6-1 record in 1992.
10-1 season in 1987. Iowa changed its offense to the triple option last season and it paid off with a 19-10 upset of Nebraska in Ames, Iowa, last November. Missouri changed defensive coordinators in 1992, and the Tiger defense allowed 100 fewer yards a game in '92 than it did in '91.
But no matter how much things change in the Big Eight, the more they stay the same.
ESPN college football commentator, and former Kansas football coach, Mike Gottfred said last year that when it came time for the Big Eight title to be decided in the cold weather of November, it would be won by the team that ran the football the best. And in the Big Eight that team was Nebraska.
NEBRASKA
This year, the Big Eight has only one deluxe running back.
AUTHENTICITY
Calvin Jones, who just happens to reside in Lincoln, Neb. And there are no apparent dominating defenses around. Is there any question why the Cormuskers are favored to return to the Orange Bowl for the third consecutive year? When Nebraska coach Tom Osborne has an experienced
running game to go against average defenses, the Husker will win and win big.
Nine wins a season would be acceptable at many programs, but it is not acceptable at Nebraska. Husker fans expect more, and this season could see Osborne earn his first national championship as Nebraska head coach.
Players such as quarterback Tomnie Frazier, running back Calvin Jones and linebacker Trev Alberts are among the best players at their position in the conference. In fact, Jones and Alberts are candidates for All-American status as well as other national accolades.
as well as his Hafen. Once again, Nebraska features the conference's best offensive line to lead Jones to a possible Heisman Trophy award. And this year, the Huskers have a favorable nonconference schedule that will help them in their quest for the national championship.
CU
COLORADO
However, Nebraska must travel on Oct. 30 to Colorado to face the Buffaloae, who want to avenge the 52-7 pounding they suffered last year in Lincoln, Neb.
The Buffalooes return 10 starters from an offense that produced 400 yards a game in 1992. Quarterback Kordell Stewart and 1,000 yard receivers Michael Westbrook and Charles Johnson lead the high-powered Colorado passing attack. However, Coach Bill McCarty must revive a running game that plummeted from 19th to 100th in the nation last season.
Also, six starters must be replaced on a defense that will face the high-powered passing attacks of Stanford and Miami on consecutive September Saturdays.
returns for his senior season with a group of fine receivers to complement the passing game and a pair of freshman running backs, Jeff Frazier and James Allen, to execute the option portion of the offense.
QJ
OKLAHOMA
the opener for N.C.A.A. Defensive end Aubrey Beavers leads a group of eight returning starters on defense, which was the Big Eight's second best unit last season. Depth remains a concern, though, as Oklahoma has not fully recovered from the NCAA probation handed down in 1980.
oSui
Oklahoma is going back to a dominant running game while
OKLAHOMA
STATE
Lugg to get the fans off Coach Gary Gibbs back. Spring practice at Oldham saw Gibbs and new offensive coordinator Watson Brown implement the option back into the Sooner offense, which dropped to fifth overall in the conference in 1992. Quarterback Cale Gundy
dominant running game while trying to get the fans off Coach Gary Gibbs' back
Oklahoma State, like its intrastate rival, is still trying to
hair case is vital, and he recovered from NCAA probation. Coach Pat Jones, the 1992 Big Eight Coach of the Year, will field his best offensive unit since the 1988 unit that included running back Barry Sanders, quarterback Mike Gundy and wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes.
Z-Back Rafael Denson and receiver Shannon Culver are referred to as "home run threats" by Jones. Quarterback Gary Porter had his moments, both good and bad, in 1992, and Jones is looking for more consistency from him in 1993.
Graduation hurt the Cowboys defense as only four starters return. However, two of those starters are all-Big Eight performers defensive end Jason Gildon and linebacker Keith Burns.
MIZZOU
MISSOURI
A two-game winning streak that concluded the 1992 season and a two-year contract extension for Coach Bob Stull have given Missourians an air of optimism.
The Tigers have eight starters returning to a defense that allowed 100 fewer yards a game last season than in 1991. However, Mizzou lost defensive coordinator Don Lindsey to Southern California. New defensive coordinator Skip Hall said he would continue to use the attacking defensive scheme that Lindsey installed a year ago.
One thing Stull won't have to worry about is a quarterback controversy since Phil Johnson transferred to South
west Missouri State in July. Jeff Handy started the final six games last year and ended up as the top passing sophomore quarterback in conference history when he threw for 2,436 yards.
KANSAS STATE
C
With the new emphasis on the game in the Big Eight.
passing game in the Big Eagle Kansas State should feel safe with three returning starters in the secondary, including Jim Thorpe Award candidate Jaime Mendez.
That might be the only coach Call Snyder feels comfortable with on the K-State defense. Only defensive end John Butler returns on the defensive front seven from a year ago.
Snyder promoted Chad May to the starting quarterback position after Jason Smarglasso did not return for fall practice. Leon Edwards and J.J. Smith are expected to fill the void at running back left by the departed Eric Gallon.
IOWA STATE
Cyclones
After a 6-5 season in 1989, Iowa beat noah Jim Welden thought
State coach Jim Walden thought his program was ready to turn the corner and join the upper division of the conference on a regular basis. It has not happened.
Walden has been under pressure to produce winning seasons, and he switched to the triple option offense last season in hopes of producing success. It produced big yardage against Kansas but could not produce a victory as the Jayhawks rallied from a 26-point second half deficit for a 50-47 victory. The offense, though, paid dividends in the Cyclones stunning 19-10 upset of Nebraska.
Quarterback Bob Uttier returns to direct the offense, but he must remain healthy. Utter suffered three concussions last year and one more could mark the end of Utter's playing days.
Defensive tackle Troy Petersen anchors the Iowa State defense that starred in the upset of the Huskers.
Big Eight previews compiled by Kansan sportswriter Matt Doyle
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1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 27, 1993
9
Kansas' nonconference foes
WESTERN
CAROLINA
WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
Western Carolina coach
steve Hodgin, in his third season with the team, led the Catamounts to their best finish in eight years with a 7-4 record last season. Western Carolina's record was good enough for a second-place tie with Georgia Southern in the NCAA Division I-AA's Southern Conference behind Division I-AA champion Marshall.
Senior quarterback Lonnie Galloway returns as a starter this year, leading the Catamounts freeze option attack. Last season, he completed 61 percent of his passes, for more than 2,000 yards and 20 touchdowns.
Western Carolina earned an award as the NCAA-1 AA's most improved team. The Catamounts compiled a record of 2-9 in 1991. Hodgin was the conference's coach of the year in 1992.
Junior returning starters Kerry Hayes and Craig Aiken were ranked among the nation's top 20 receivers last season.
Defensively, Western Carolina will return eight starters, including senior All-American candidate Tony Johnson at noseguard
Western Carolina's unusual mascot originated from the variety of wild cats, or Catamounts, that have roamed the Appalachian Mountains where the university is located.
Kansas will play host to the Catamounts on Sept. 4.
nuts owner opener
S
MICHIGAN STATE
Losing only three defense and three offensive starters, Michigan State heads into the 1993 season with a veteran, but youthful team.
Coach George Perles is entering his 11th year of coaching the Spartans. The Spartans improved from a 3-8 finish in 1991 to 5-6 last season. The team
had a 5-3 record in the Big Ten Conference last season.
son:
"This team is more experienced and has greater depth than either of the last two squads." Perles said. "We expect this team to compete with everyone in the Big 10 and may be a factor in the championship race."
The offence will be led for the second consecutive season by quarterback Jim Miller, a senior. Miller is the Big 10's top returning signal caller, completing 122 of 191 passes last season, for a 64 percent completion average. He threw for 1,400 yards but only two touchdowns.
Senior place kicker Bill Stoyanovich, the Big 10's leading retURN for accuracy and brother of NPL place kicker Pete Stoyanovich, also will return to the Spartan lineup this season. Stoyanovich made 11 of his 14 attempts last season.
HORNS Prairie Park
Returning junior starters Juan Hammonds, left end, and Aaron Jackson, left tackle, will anchor the defense.
Kansas travels to East Lansing, Mich., to play the Spartans on Saturday, Sept. 11.
U
Last season, Utah recorded a 6-1 record, including a 31-28 loss to Washington State.
UTAH
Having lost two-year starting quarterback Frank Dolez, Utah coach Ron McBride will turn to junior Mike McCoy to run the offense.
Behind McCoy, the Utes are loaded.
Belinda swayed, one. McBride wrote both senior tailbacks Keith Williams and Pierre Jones, the Utes leading rushers in 1991 and 1992 respectively, returning to the line-up.
up:
Williams rushed for 511 yards last season with four touchdowns. Jones scored three times and ran for 317 yards.
Senior Chris Yergensen remains the Utes' starting place kicker for the third straight team. Last season, Yergensen hit on 13 of 20 field goal attempts.
McBride said Utah would have the best defensive secondary in the Western Athletic Conference. Seniors Mark Swanson, who made an off-season transition to free safety from cornerback, and cornerback Sharrif Shah will head the defense. Both were honorable mention All-WAC choices last season.
The Jayhawks will play host to the Utes on Saturday, Sept. 18.
COLORADO STATE
Lubick has a winning history. He spent the last four years as the defensive coordinator at Miami, which won national championship in 1989 and 1991. The Hurricane defense ranked first nationally in most defensive categories each of those years.
The Rams, 5-7 overall and 3-5 in the WAC last season, are scheduled to battle with seven teams this year that competed in post-season bowl games in 1992. In addition to the defending Aloha Bowl Champion Jayhawks, Colorado State will play Brigham Young, Fresno State, Nebraska, Oregon, Air Force and Utah.
The Rams will return 17 starters, eight on offense, including junior receiver Matt Phillips and senior halfback Billy Gonzales.
Senior outside linebacker Brian Schneider and senior returning safety Roy Williams will lead Lubick's 4-3 defense.
Another member of the Western Athletic Conference, Colorado State faces perhaps the most challenging season in school history.
If that were not motivation enough, fuel is added to the fire by the hiring of Sonny Lubick as coach of the Rams.
Previews complied by Kansan sportswriter Matt Doyle.
A
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Tickets are $5 (plus service charge and tax)
TICKETMASTER
Produced by Nobody in Particular Presents
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POSTER CHILDREN
& TENDERLOIN
10
Friday, August 27,1993
POSTER
PO
POSTER
Thursday and
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Tent Sale 12th & Oread
Next to the Crossing
and Yello Sub
10am-7pm
We buy and trade
for CD's
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JACQUES
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LAWRENCE KANSAS
Restaurant & Ultimate Sports Bar
DAILY SPECIALS
FOOD | DRINK
MON. $3.50 Chef Salad
$1.15 Hot Wings (After 7)
$3.75 Pitchers
TUES. Chicken Sandwich
$3.90
2 for 1 Well Drinks
WED. 2 for 1 Burgers
112.7
$.75 Draws No Cover
THUR. Soup & 1/2 Sandwich
$3.95
$1.50 Longnecks
FRI. Bacon Cheese Burger
$3.95
2 for 1 Well Drinks
SAT. Philly Sandwich
$3.75
$1 Draws $1 Shots
SUN. 2 for 1 Nacho Supremes
$1.50 Margaritas
$3.75 Pitchers
Be sure to visit the ultimate sports bar 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center 865-4040
GOOD LUCK HAWKS IN THE KICKOFF CLASSIC
MYERS
RETAIL LIQUOR
902 W 23RD • 842-6605
PROUD SUPPORTERS OF JAYHAWK FOOTBALL
Rentals Sales
ROLLERBLADE®
1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
STREET HOCKEY EQUIPMENT TOO!
.
1029 Massachusetts 841-PLAY(7529)
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
FULLY LICENSED
Jayhawks 1993 Schedule
August 28
Florida State (11-1)
(Kickoff Classic)
11 a.m. on ABC
September 4
October 2
Colorado State (5-7)
at Lawrence
1 p.m. (Family Weekend)
Western Carolina (7-4)
at Lawrence
1 p.m.
October 9
October 30
Oklahoma State (4-6-1)
Kansas State (5-6)
at Manhattan
1:10 p.m.
September 11
at Stillwater
Michigan State (5-6) at East Lansing 2:30 p.m. on ABC
November 6
Nebraska (9-3)
at Lawrence
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
October 16
Utah (6-6)
Iowa State (4-7)
September 18
at Lawrence
1 p.m. (Homecoming)
at Lawrence 1 p.m. (Band Day)
November 13
Colorado (9-2-1)
October 23
at Boulder
1:10 p.m.
Okahoma (5-4-2)
at Norman
1:30 p.m.
Missouri (3-8)
at Lawrence
1 p.m.
November 20
Kansas safety finds home in position as linebacker
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Injury to teammate led to new position
By Matt Doyle Kansan sportswrite
It was only a coincidence that sophomore Keith Rodgers was shifted from strong safety to outside linebacker after junior Don Davis sprained his left knee in the first week of fall football practice.
"It was a move that we had been thinking about," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "Davis' injury just sped up the process."
operated. Rodgers was approached by the coaching staff about the possibility of changing positions before Davis went down with the knee injury. Davis began fall practice as one of Kansas'
starting outside linebackers with sophomore Ronnie Ward.
something more important," "Initially, they asked me to think about the switch and how it would benefit the team," Rodgers said. "Then when Don was injured, the coaches said they needed me at outside linebacker since they needed to solidify the position."
soundly the position for The changing of positions for Rodgers was made possible due to the depth and talent the Jayhawks possess in the defensive backfield. Senior Robert Vaughn moved from cornerback to Rodgers' strong safety position, and freshman Tony Blevins moved into Vaughn's old cornerback position.
Junior Harold Harris originally moved into Davis' starting role, but it did not take long for Rodgers to assume the starting role.
The move of Rodgers is not without
precedent. Two years ago, Mason moved Hassan Bailey from cornerback to outside linebacker, and it benefited the Jayhawks. Bailey brought speed to the Kansas pass rush.
"Keith is similar to Hassan in that they were both big defensive backs." Mason said. "But Keith is much farther along than Hassan was at outside linebacker."
Rodgers said he credits his quick ascension to the starting role at outside linebacker to the many questions he asked the coaches.
"So far, I haven't made too many mistakes there," he said. "I hope it can stay like that."
Many of the things that Rodgers will do at outside linebacker are similar to his old strong safety spot, except that he will be allowed to blitz the quarterback more often from the linebacker position.
10
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Live It! Love It! Wear It! KU
Keith Rodgers, sophomore outside linebacker, tests his blocking techniques during a practice session. The team's first game will be Saturday against Florida State.
"I take similar dropbacks as the strong safety does, and I'm more involved now in run support," he said. "The WILL (outside linebacker) position mirrors the strong safety in some parts. I still, though, get to play hardened, snot-knocker-type football."
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
SPORT CLUB
KANSAS KU KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
Lawrence's original fan shop.
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1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW
Friday. August 27, 1993
11
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
New quarterback ready for action
By Matt Doyle
Departed Kansas quarterback Chip Hillieary was the only option that Coach Glen Mason had the last time the Jayhawks started the season with a new quarterback.
Kansan sportswriter
"That made me nervous because Chip was the only quarterback we had," Mason said. "He had leverage on me at that time, but now I feel really good about our quarterback situation."
12
Today, unlike 1990, when Hileliye was the only quarterback, Mason has more talent, depth and competition at that position than at any time since his arrival at Kansas in 1988.
The one thing that the Jayhawks lack at the quarterback position is experience.
Hilleary started for three years and compiled a 16-16-1 record. He finished second on the school's career total offense chart with 5,888 yards and fifth in that category in the Big Eight Conference.
mentor Fred Thomas has the responsibility of replacing last season's All-Big Eight quarterback. Thomas' only significant game experience came against Missouri last year when Hillary left the game in the first quarter with a concussion.
Thomas completed only 4 of 18 passes for 49 yards in the 22-17 loss against the Tigers, but he said that game helped him prepare for this season.
"I didn't do as well as I liked to against Missouri, but I look at it as a valuable experience." Thomas said. "Coach has always encouraged me every day to do my best and be consistent."
Thomas showed the consistency the coaching staff was looking for during spring practice. He finished spring drills by completing 9 of 17 passes for 186 yards and one touchdown in the annual spring game.
Mason has announced that Thomas will be the starting quarterback but said that he will make a change if it is necessary.
"We don't have a quarterback controversy and we're not going to rotate quarterbacks," Mason said. "But If Fred is hurt or not playing well, I'd put Asheki (Preston) in the game."
Preston, listed as the No. 2 quarterback, is noted for his ability to run the football. Preston showed his ability to throw the football in the spring game when he completed 6 of 5 passes for 228 yards and three touchdowns during his stint with the first team offense in the game.
"I can only control what I can do on the field," Preston said.
Junior Rodney Hogan, a transfer from Independence Community College, and junior Van Davis both are listed as the No. 3 quarterback on the depth chart.
Brian Schottenheimer, who was the No. 3 quarterback at the conclusion of spring practice, transferred from Kansas to Florida earlier this month.
Kansas quarterback Fred Thomas works on a passing drill during practice Wednesday on the practice field behind Allen Field House.
Holly McQueen/KANSAN
AFRICAN ADORNED
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5 East 7$^{11}$ • 842-1376
NEW STORE OPENING Lawrence, Kansas
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This Liz Glalcore Outlet Store is opening in Lawrence during November, 1993. We offer flexible schedules, excellent starting salaries, and for full- and part-time employees who meet eligibility requirements, we offer an attractive benefits package
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- $1.25 draws on Friday & Saturday
* jazz night on Thursday
- live piano on Friday 6-10:00pm
- cafe
- 1020 Mass
Downtown Lawrence
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4pm-1:30am
842-1390
- live band on Saturday
1020 Mass
- also available for rental
Be sure to check out the back to school sale at the Athlete's Foot for your footwear and clothing needs. Many new styles of basketball, cross training, running, tennis and aerobic
BackToSchool SALE
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Time: 5:30 p.m.
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For rides and more information call:
864-3948
DOS
HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
MONDAY:$4.25 All You Can Eat Beef Tacos
$6.95 Margarita Pitchers
$3.25 Beer Pitchers
TUESDAY:$5.25 Burritos
$1.50 Strawberry Margaritas
$1.50 Amaretto Sours
SUN
THURSDAY: $2.00 Off Fajitas
$1.25 Longnecks
75¢ Margaritas
WEDNESDAY: $5.25 Chimichangas
25¢ Draws
$1.00 Margaritas
FRIDAY: $8.95 Margarita Pitchers
SATURDAY: 2 for 1 Well Drinks
$3.50 32oz.Draws of Sam Adams
SUNDAY: $2.00 Off Fajitas
$3.25 Beer Pitchers
$2.00 Mexican Imports
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Friday, August 27,1993
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1993 FOOTBALL PREVIEW
65 19 53 20 75
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Taking a time-out
Members of the Kansas football team take a break during practice. The team was preparing Wednesday for Saturday's game against Florida State at the Kickoff Classic at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
Jayhawks excel in 1992
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Seven days later, the Jayhawks defeated Ball State 62-10 Kansas junior place kicker Dan Eichloff booted a 61-yard field goal, a school record in the third quarter.
The 1992 Kansas football season certainly appeared to have its ups and downs. But the season concluded with the school's first bowl appearance in 10 years and its first bowl victory since 1961.
The Jahyahs began their season in Cowalls, Ore. against the Oregon State.
Kansas took advantage of two early Beaver turnovers and a punting miscue and quickly leaped to a 21-10 lead. From there, the Jayhawks a 49-20 victory. Seven Jayhawks scored, and Kansas totaled 450 yards of offense.
Kansas opened its Big Eight Conference schedule on Oct. 10, against intrastate rival Kansas State. More than 55,000 people watched the Jayhawk defense hold the Wildcats to minus 59 yards rising, 31-7.
After a 40-7 victory against Tulsa, Kansas played California at home. California defeated Kansas 27-23.
Kansas mounted a comeback as senior quarterback Chip Hilleary threw for four touchdowns to bring the score to 47-42 in favor of the Cyclones.
The following week, the Jayhawks were on the road to face Iowa State.
On the Cyclones' next possession, linebacker Larry Thiel picked up an Iowa State fumble and ran 37 yards for a Jawahk touchdown and the strangest comeback victory of the season.
Kansas continued its winning ways by defeating Oklahoma 27-10, its first defeat of the Sooners since 1984.
Kansas jumped to an early 21-7lead, but the Cyclones then racked up 40 consecutive points.
Kansas finished the regular season
with a 49-7 defeat by Nebraska in Lincoln, a 25-18 home loss to Colorado and a 22-17 upset defeat at the hands of Missouri in Columbia.
The Jayhawks were selected to play Brigham Young in the Aloha Bowl on Christmas Day in Honolulu. Hawaii
The score was tied when receiver Matt Gay threw a 74-yard touchdown pass to Rodney Harris.
on the opening kick-off, Brigham Young's Hema Heimuli returned the ball 94 yards for a touchdown.
The Cougars went on to dominate the game in the second and third quarters, taking a 20-12 lead into the final quarter.
LIFE'S A BEACH • BIG JOHNSON • TEVA
The Jayhaws tied the game at 20 halfway through the fourth quarter. Then, with less than three minutes remaining, Eichloff kicked a 48-yard field goal which gave Kansas the 23-20 lead that would prove to be the final score and the end to one of the most successful seasons in Kansas football history.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, August 27, 1993
13
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TEL 749-5363
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TEL.749-5363
Lawrence,KS
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730 New Jersey 843-4416
ADVERTISING CORRECTION
Due to an advertising error, prices in the ComputerLand advertisements
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$335.00
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The Kansan regrets any inconvenience this has caused the advertiser and
The Kansan regrets any inconvenience this has caused the advertiser and its customers.
V
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642 Mass
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Friday, Saturday 7:00 & 9:30 pm
Sunday 2 pm $2.50
Day, Saturday Midnight $5
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For information call 864-509
@864-SUW
Friday, Saturday Midnight $2
DICKINSON
THEATRE
841 8400
Dickinson 6 2339 South Iowa St.
Rising Sun™ (*4:15) 7:9.50
Secret Garden™ (*4:30) 7:00
Hard Target™ (*4:30) 7:20.45
Father Hood™ $^{P13}$ (4:35) 7:15.95
The Fugitive™ $^{P13}$ (4:10) 7:05.95
Man Without a Face™ $^{P24}$ (4:20) 7:00.93
Jurassic Park™ $^{P13}$ 9:35 only
3 Primetime Show (+) Hearing Baby
Senior Cities Anytime Imagery Daily
Crown Cinema
VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $3.00
(UNLIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Needful Things $ ^{R} $
Needful Thinks $ ^{R} $ 5.00.
2.98 8.45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
Heart and Souls PG13
5.90
Sone of the Pink Pantheon R
5.15
In the Line of Fire ¹
5.15
Sleepless in Seattle ¹
7.15
The Thing Called Love PG13
7.15
Aladdin G
Dave PG-13
Last Action Hero PG-13
5.90
7.30 8.40
5.90
7.20 8.40
CINEMA TWIN 111 SFAMS
3110/OWA 841-5191 $1.25'
OWIMES FOR IODAX ONLY
Wanted
Quality used sports equipment
U
Tennis
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
We pay CASH
1029 Massachusetts
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts call 841-PLAY(7529)
LSAT
TOTAL
TRAINING
We teach you to think your way to the right answer
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
CLASS SESSIONS with
expert teachers
4- VOLUME SET of home
study books
THE TRAINING LIBRARY:
scores of LSAT- style practice
test s and released LSATS
with right and wrong answers
explained, topical tests,
make-up classes
THE LSAT Test Run
TOTALTRANSFERABILITY between centers
842-5442
KAPLAN
The answer to the test question
14
Friday, August 27, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Recycle the Kansan
Paradise Cafe & Bakery
Live Jazz
Thursday Nights
10p.m.-Midnight
No Cover Charge
728 Massachusetts • 812-5199
Bottleneck
913-841-Ive
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
Tonight Salty Iguanas
Saturday August 28
Freddy Jone's Band
with
Spankin' Rufus
18 and Over
Monday August 30
Open Mic
$1.75 Imports
No Cover
Upcoming Shows
Thursday September 2
Wake The Band
Friday September 3
Webb Wilder
18 and Over
Advance Tickets
TRAVEL CENTER
AIRLINE HOTLINE
841-7117
GIANT YUKON
- Royals Games
- Bus Charters
- Social Events
- Thanksgiving and
- Social Events
- Job Interviews
- Christmas Plans
- Spring Break Packages
- Student Discounts
Alloy main frame & fork
Alloy, QR wheels
21speed Shimano shifting
- Lowest Air Fare to
- Get You There!
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 W 23rd, M-F 9:5-30 Sat, 9:30-2
QUANTY
only $339.95 save $20
---
Campus Parking Permit...
FREE! lock & cable with every GIANT bicycle. Promo ends 9/4/93.
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642
TARANTINA
S
SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
AURA KMS
Brocatto
Specials Good August 17 - Sept. 0
BEAUTY WAREHOUSE 841-5885
PAUL MITCHELL
PAUL MITCHELL
HAIR ZONE
NATURAL FASHION WAREHOUSE
QUARTS
Shampoo I
Shampoo II
Awapuhi
PAUL MITCHELL
$795
$9^{95}
S
BROWN MITCHELL
SHRMPOO
SHAPER or SHAPER PLUS 16 oz.
AT • BEAUTY • WAREHOUSE
$ 6^{49} $
REDKEN
JOICO
MIRA 9
CONDITIONER
1/2 liter
KERAPRO
SHAMPOO
1/2 liter
AMINO PON SHAMPOO $ _{1/2} $ liter
$6^{95}$
$ 6^{95} $
REDKEN
Oil
$ 7^{69} $
JOICO
LITE CONDITIONER 16 oz.
$ 3^{95} $
REDKEN
MILK CHEESE
LIMITED EDITION
NEXUS
THERAPPE $ _{1/2} $ liter
$ 6^{3 9} $
NEXUS
REJUVAPERM
SHAMPOO
1/2 liter
$8.49
REDKEN
CAT
5 oz.
pump
$7.95
S
SEVENTH
SPRITZ
FORTE
16 oz.
$4.99
---
5 oz. pump $795
SCIENTIFIC
SPRITZ
FORTE
16 oz.
NEXUS
THEAPPUC
MARKETING
MANAGEMENT
SYSTEMS
WORKSHOP
INVESTIGATION
BOOK
O. P.I.
NAIL
LACQUER
HAIR ZONE
Experienced Stylists for Expert Hair Care
Salon Open 7 Days a Week
GET A GREAT NEW SALON LOOK
FROM OUR SALON
$ 4^{99} $
30% OFF
Crystal Hill
Tuxie Secgrist
Mimi Fell
Susan Aubucher
Carye Meyers
10 years
5 years
6 years
13 years
FORTE
MUSIC BY
JOHN M. CRAIG
THE NEW YORK
TREASURES
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
THE CHRISTIAN TOWNSHIP
COLLEGE OF BROOKLYN
VOLUME 1
1
$ 2^{00} OFF
Hours: M-F 9-8, Sat, 9-6, Sun, Noon-6
529, 730, Wed, 23rd
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
2-COKES
$9.00
BEAUTY WAREHOUSE
TWO-FERS
3-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
4-COKES
$11.50
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
PRIMETIME
841-5885
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
PARTY10"
Exp. 9/6/93
10-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
$30.00
842-1212
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
DELIVERYHOURS
Mon-Thurs Fri-Sat Sunday
CARRY-OUT
$3.50
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
11am-2am
11 am-3 am
11am-1am
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass 843-0611
WETLY SHAVED Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
Classified Directory
200s Enclosure
100s
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
SERVICES
235 Typing Services
---
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of people based on race, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Y
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open to qualified residents.
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 for sale that is race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disffered by the Student Assistance Center
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Light mechanical work your home or mine also van
available for moving or hauling 542-2688
120 Announcements
CALCULUS Workshop. Learn skills for the success in Math 115. $FREE! No registration required. Registration is not presented by the Student Assistance Center. Campus Christians invite you to two weekend events Cookout at Potters Lake, 4pm Thursday, March 26th and Saturday, March 27th @ 6pm on First Christian Church, 100 Kentucky
COMMUTERS. Self serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kelvy, Kansas Union.
First Southern Baptist church Sunday August 28 9:15 am 1917 Naismith Dr.
Jayhawk Day
WORKSHOP learn techniques for success in Math 115 & 116 FREE!
Students Welcome
Monday, August 30, 7-9 p.m.
CALCULUS WORKSHOP
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
4035 Wescoe Hall
DANCE AUDITION Phoenix Jazz Dance Ensemble seeks dancers with strong jazz, ballet or modern bigdress. Mon Aug 8th 9pm Lawrence Arts Center 200 W. hall 749-4834 for info
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program.
Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversation skills. Tues. Aug. 31; 9:50am
wksscee. Presented by the Student Council.
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING WORKSHOP teaches the correct method
FREE!
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
Wednesday, September 1,
7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
TUTORS. List your name with you; refer students to requires you to Student Assistance Center. Study at SUNY New York.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 135 Strong Wanda Blvd., Kansas City, KS 66209. Students遭遇 accidents between车 and motorcycle at 11th & 8th Sun. Aug 2nd about 4p.m. 11th Ave, Kansas City, KS 66209.
130 Entertainment
MONDO DISCO Industrial, Alternative. Techno,
cover 40% of room 100 N W am 18 & arm 2.
coverage 100% of room 100 N W am 18.
L.A. Ramblers CD Release Party
at
Saturday, August 28th
2 For 1 Wells
BENCHWARMERS
LOVE SQUAD TONIGHT at BENCHWARMERS 2 for 1 Wells
Jayhawk
LADIES NIGHT featuring 25¢ DRAWS -plus- 75¢ Monster Draws & 75¢ Well Drinks
Presents
TONIGHT & EVERY FRIDAY
- 7 Beers on Tap
- 4 Pool Tables
- Darts & Air Hockey
it could only happen at.
THE HAWK
THE HAWK will be open at 10:45 a.m. Saturday for the GAME!
1340 OHIO·843-9273 A Campus Tradition Since 1919
140 Lost & Found
LOST-Thin blue sweat shirt w/raised white sleeves and strong black leggings. Law School & Strong Hall Reward $200 for lost. Last one pair black wire-rimmed men's glasses at Jawlbay Blvd. on 8-25-9. Sweet reward, call 888-764-7111.
男厕所
女厕所
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Adams alumni center needs AM-PM Dishwasher, Cook & Desk Students. Flexible hours. Apply in person, no phone call. Address 186 Edward Ave.
Aerobics instructor needed $19.00
Adults only. 12-hour time.
Aerobics instructor needed for 6a class. $10.99
hr - experienced instructors on 844-5364 Ask for
me.
10am-2pm, Must enjoy children, Sunshine Acres Preschool 842-223-796
Assistant Desk Manager, Administration. Master's degree, organizational and administrative ability, superior interpersonal skills, good writing skills. Good word processing ability. Preferred: Ph.D. and knowledge of
Duties: Assisting Graduate School dean in day-to-day operations; keeping track of fellowship applications and awards; working with glevences and program reviews; carrying out internships offered by the dean. Complete job description and application form available upon request at (913) 864-3381.
Application Procedure Contact the Graduate School at 913-864-3301 for an application form and position announcement. Send completed application form, current GPA, and resume to The Graduate School, 222 High Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66043.
Deadline: September 1, 1993.
Baby nursed for 7 yr, old girl-3.00 s 6:35 m.
M-F. Transportation required. 842-9988
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment in person by in班 184M and 185M, on a Thursday from 9AM to 7PM.
Christian daycare needs reliable/ambulatory afternoon helpers. Experience preferred.
CITY OF LAWRENCE
**PARKS & RECREATION LOCAL**
Part-time instructors for Children's Art, and Aquatics / Water Walking. Prefer experience in instruction area. $7 80 per hour.
More information and applications are available at Adm. Services. Room 210, City Hall, 40th and 6th St., Suite K. 6004a, Deadhead. Aug. 10. EOE/ FDW
COMPUTER SYSTEM ENGINEER
COMPUTER SYSTEMS
person for person with PC networking.
LAN management, NOVELK experience,
good customer skills (ONE training)
support network and applications. Attractive salary, benefits.
Send resume by 09/7 to Director of Client Support,
Midwest University, 913 Mass. Lawrence,
E/M/F/V/H/
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
15
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT:
Requires good academic record in chemistry,
is or related science, laboratory experience,
design experience, and/or writing wk/sk. Submit application with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to INTEGRY
employer. M/F/M/ F. An equal Opportunity Employer. M/F/M/ F.
Children Learning Center is now hiring i am 1 and 2 pm teacher aids for infant and preschool children. Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 311 Main, 841-2185.
Cottonwood Inc. A facility for adults with developmental disabilities is located in the residential department. Responsibilities include training individuals in self help, community awareness, socialization and teamwork. Please contact group home. Some positions may require sleep evenings, evening and weekend hours. Proof of good health is required. Position number. Incodent 2001 W 1st Lawrence, KS 66407. Desperately Seeking Student Associates-Spencer Museum of Art (864-4710). Work Study Award requires completion to the Ship to get and fill申请表。
DJ's wanted for DJ service and Karaoke. Experi-
mental group 841-800-9800 Mane Beers Entertainment
group 841-800-9800
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFARRIDE. Must be 21 years old and have at least two years per wk + very flexible. $5/hr. Bail 842-6544.
EARN EXTRA CASH on weekends. Friendly people need for products in concentrations in the KC market.
Evening driver-driver wanted. Dependable.
At Peking restaurant,
d2 krewa. Call 74-890-6800.
Faculty family in Lawrence require after school care for 19 year old boy and 7 year old girl, 10 to 12 years a week. Must have own car. Salary negotiable. Call 843-3394
FEMALE SINGER WANTED
Establish a vocal team, and provide vocal training. Must have creativity, creativity, and groove. We have the gigs and equipment, you provide the vocal training and not just watch it. That bar stage and not just watch it then call for me.
Full time independent living skill trainer to assist individual with disability and learning skills to attain/maintain independent life style. High level of range of life skills demonstrated commitment to independent living required. Experience working with people with disability and creative teaching experience. Ability to provide ability are encouraged to apply. Complete job description available upon request. Send resume and cover letter to: Independence Incorporate EOE/AA Lawrence, Akron, KS 65048 by Sept. 3.
Full-time live in nanny needs for 3 active children (toddler, 4; 7: Relian, non-smoker, have own car. Housekeeping duties include IU/B + salary expenses. Previous exp. ref: F41 Call 682-9523 after h
Home Healthcare Aide
Like to work independently in a pleasant environment?
Flexible scheduling for part-time hours available. Must be a certified nurse's aide. Apply to 401-623-9575 or 401-623-9580. Involvement Dr. Lawrence, KS E.O.
Ideal part-time position for mature graduate student in HDFL or related field, design, facilitate a variety of programs for parental education. Req. to be admitted through five-2 3 hours per week (1 morning) $15 to $20 per hour For more info call 94-8321 or resume to "The Family Center" 6026 Orchard Street D.C.
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part-time, boury
for Pascal for FSA. Must know computer skills.
Must know. full class schedule to apply. See job board. Union Personnel Office,
L 5. Kansas Union Building for job specifics.
UK GAME PARKING ATTENDANTS 35 People needed at KU home football & basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both season. If interested please apply immediately.
LAND COORDINATION ASSISTANT Student monthly Deadline 9/17/18. Salary $350/month, 20 hours of training. Duties include assisting with all land development, database updates, filing, and other duties as assigns. Writing database reports using HAITD. Performing database analysis for application, current resume, and transcript to Angela Berman, Personnel Officer, Computer Support. Current salary, Lawrence, RS 6045 EO/EAA EMPLOYER
Haintreit Montessori School is interviewing for 3 positions. Teachers-Montessor must be native speaker, have experience working with 6-12 students in the F-M field and experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children required. Hrs 1-5; 30 M-F. Jantzer-highlights hours 29 hrs; bwrs Call 84-6400-7333.
Now Taking Applications
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PIZZA
20
Now Hiring
Drivers
Must have car
and insurance
Fast growing company.
Fast growing company. Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth.
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
Needed before and after school child care for 2 school age girls. Salary relevant contact information.
**RED E RIDER/RIDE:** Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Needed warm responsible female to receive free room and board in exchange for part time care of my 9-year old son. Transportation needed. Refs.
Call Information #820-4000
New accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time banquet service. Willing to train the right people All shifts are available. Admits at Ada University Center 1600
Office help needed 11-30-29 MWF & 11-30-5
T/TH Must be a business major, be enrolled in
at a KU have GPA of at least 2.0 and be a
Ken student Call 841-695-9, M-F
Outgoing, friendly, dependable person needed at local country club 189, Crosgate
Part-time sewed needles Would like some experience. Come by CLAS, Inc. 2000 E 23rd, or call 618-547-9811.
FACT-TIME SUPERVISEM Mass Street Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start on Monday, up to $25/hr-20% a week, a bse, and wendles. Apply at Schumann Food Company. Business office at 718 Mass (upstairs above Smokehouse F-3).
Part-time telephone market needed. No experience necessary. Come by phone at 1234 Floor 200 E, Experience Required.
PHILIPS 66 seeks cashiers to work the following
shots, 4am-12pm, 1pm-12pm, 12am-4am. Must be neat,
clean and enjoy working with public. Apply in
person to PHILIPS 66 - 90 Iowa.
Part-time 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 printed on KU printers. Payments $6.82 per hour. Apply at the KU Printing Service, 2425 W. 15th to 4 EOE.
PRESCHOOL TEACHERS
Read Books for Pay. Earn $10 per title. Free
DVDs. Envelope Ship to FIRESTONE FL 912-563-7800
Everyday Man Fri 7, 11, 14, 16, 30 or 3-5-30
Provide 3 child care services and expre
chiefs in child care and expre
444 228 228
Responsible highly motivated individual to work
15 to 30 hrs a week, a work and obtain management
experience. Apply in person. University Photography,
2449 Away, Suite I.
Sitter Solutions Inc. is in need of sitters. Must have ear, be responsible and love children. Flexible to work with children.
SOFTBALL UMPIRES) Recreational Services is looking for students interested in officiating Intra-mural Sports. No experience necessary. 44 bb sports. 12 wk Monday, 8 & 10 a.m. in Robinson. 864-354-366
Varied hours prefer 3 courses in child development and experience Sunshine Acres B42-8225 Construction nisture Construction nisture HelpLaborers call necessary. Must be able to work mornings or afternoons. Call days B42-8229
Headquarter Counseling center 6308 Counseling training personnel INFO meeting, Sun/2/9 or Wed/7/1
Friday, August 27, 1993
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the School of Business, Professor u. a. other department.
KU Students
Learn the records
Learn more records management profession and make money doing it! Flexible hours, start at $5/hour + bonuses. Office work, we provide full training. Day and evening positions available, 100 Riverfront Rd. at Riverfront Square in North Lawrence. Apply between 9am and 8pm.
MICRO SOURCE
MARKETING INC.
Student Assistant Position
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has a student assistant position available. REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS 1. Enrollment as a student at the student assistant position. 2. Excellent communication skills PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS 1. Eligible for work study program; 2. Prior experience as a receptionist; 3. Experience in office position. POSITION AVAILABLE. September 1, 1989 to May 17, 1994. DEADLINE. Eligible applicants are invited to submit an application by 5:00 p.m. Friday, August 27, 1990 to Dr. Barbara W. Ballarini, University of Kansas, 118 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 66045-1880; 9163-8654-EOE/A
STUDENT WORK
No experience necessary. Flexible full and part time schedules. No phone calls. Telephone sales calls.
CALL 612-809-3722
CNR 612-809-3722
Full & Part-Time Openings.
Full & Part-Time Openings.
1. Busperson $4.75/hr
2. Line Cook $7.25/hr
3. Housekeeping $5.25/hr
4. Banquet Server $6.85/hr
5. Engineer $9.00/hr
6. Dishwasher $5.25/hr
7. Launch Attnd. $5.25/hr
8. Phone Operator $5.50/hr
9. On-call Security $6.00/hr
One meal provided per shift.
225 Professional Services
Apply in person, M-F, 9-4 p.m.
10100 College Blvd.
Overland Park, KS
E.O.E.
WALK-INS WELCOME
Advance opportunity
EARN$15CASH!
NO APPOINTMENT
NECESSARY
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
*RECEIVES 51 CASH
TODAY FOR A 45 MIN.
BLOYD PLASMA
DONATION
*ITS QUICK, SAFE & EASY
*STUDY WHILE
DONATING
*DONATING PLASMA
SAVES LIVES
*MEDICALLY SUPERVISE
- RECEIVE $15 CASH
HOURS
MON-THURS
9AM-6PM
FR
9AM-5PM
SAT
10AM-3PM
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
FALSE I&D & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters the law offices of
NABI
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
The lawmant
DONALDG.STROLE
1-der Women Word Processing. Former edit
transformer used to into accurate pages of lette
type. 850-260.
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Suite B
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
Are you Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the grade at 85-2855.
X
749-5750
108 Mercury Cougar, wagon. AT PS, good shape
107.098 $1050 / 404 - 864.053
1884 Volkwagen Rabbit Wolfsburg. dependable.
low miles. price negotiable. 432-353曼
1984 Magna M4, 500 v350 Excel cond. low mi $160管理. 1985 Toyota V30 pickup, 4a, 80. 400 mL owner. runs great $150 less 1929 Nissan Sentra XGRE; 1987 Honda CR-V too small for growing family DR2-8072J, DR2-8072J
300s Merchandise
1800 Cherry Cavalier Z2A, 3 speed, good cond.
1800 Chevy Mustang m241109/less pressure.
18:46 14:59 mobile home 2 b, 2 baths, C, fenced Yard, & yard. Kitchen appliances, W/D. Call 641-738-2300
iOS IIGS computer with 3/14 in. and 3/12 in.
disc drives, color monitor, WritePrinter
笔显示器, 841-3900, 841-3900
65 gal. Aquarium with oak stand for $650 new.
Akspray $3500 Call 842-4155
in disk drive. Mouse keyboard 14 inch gauge.
Software 850 853 424-269
388 IBM Compatible Computer 40MB 3.5 & 3
inch disk drive, Mouse, keyboard 14 inch ga-
om
15 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5269
Bout Bodyutile membership $10/mo. * 2 window A/C units, work great, antique wedding gown, leather jacket.
Bridgestone MB-4 Mountain Bike for sale 15 inch
weight condition. Please call between 30 & 90
hours.
Liquidating estate of former professor. 100 albums in new condition $800ea for the lot. Pair Bair 842.
Don't miss this one!
Trinity Episcopal Church Sale
5-6 p.m. to 10 p.m. 911 Vermont
Jarm room size roll of carpet in good shape. Call
22 0900.
Fender 39-60 Bass Guitar for sale **Body &**
**Body Only**
Please call 2:45 m 892-1688
www.fender.com
FOR SALE: Used school desk, office desks, files,
drawing tables, et. Aug 28, 9am-12pm 2201 W
35th St, New York, NY 10016
For Sale Fender Freeless Jazz Bass Special, also
also MVXP M A X P. Head .749-2248
r or Sale - men's 20 inch Raleigh Rainbow 12 sp.
Sale - men's 20 inch Rainbow 12 great Price
O B O J B OE BENRIGHT-857-755
Garage sale FT, 4. Sat. Bedroom suite, Serita mattress like new, 2 matching chairs, chest of drawers, matching coffee table and end table, TV stand, women's clothing & mice. 91 W, 81st St.
The Quotient Sequence
Gray contemporary love seat. Light gray
cushion with removable fabric. 15" Call
in price: $399.99 at 914-268-7000 or
http://www.babycenter.com/buy/cushions.
IBM PS/2 (60/071) *286* expanded to 5 megabytes
850d monitor VGA graphics. Excel
Like new 89-90 Pujti $200 28" frame, red call Susan at 749 7421
GREAT RUG *8 x 12* dark green w/ pattern
Excellent condition. $30.749.5892
Compact Discs
$5.95 each
Lizard for sport. 3/2 foot black and 4D tegu.
Health good eater, B.O.B O.D.612-171
Leather-like texture.
Nearly new two 19 *12* 12 pedal Fuji road bike like Kisso, each less than 50 milimeters. The Vauxen expert ect. is made in China. $3,499.00
Mint condition 7 tooth+ disk walkers with stands.
$400/pr, Rotel 85 CD-player, $250 Teach 3200S two-track to-reel tape recorder, $20.00. Call Vance 864-4304 days, $449 nite light.
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
Lawrence Pawn
QCEH QED H2O wrt, nxt stk, & acc ece 0W Mat-
CORP. SP0 709 WP 841-3441
CS0P. SP0 709 WP 841-3441
RIKES ON SALE FOR THE ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE, AND BEGINNER COMPARE AND SAVE ON REDUCTIONS OF THESE 95 MODELS BEFORE THEY RELEASE.
Patrick Nagel limited edition framed print
sale call蔡先生 at 643-6728 leave a message if
you are interested.
One-way ticket, K.C to Miami, fly anytime
one-way train, k.p to Miami, $150, ride bicycle for
one-way train, 869-724-7927
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9:5:30
Minolta X-790 camera w 2 lenses &案 sara B64 864
*407 W) | 1.863-287 (H)
910
895
790
700
700
700
900
900 SHX
850 SHX
820
200
310
T
Futons & Frames On Sale!
BLUE HERON
where comfort and quality is assured.
937 Mass.
841-9443
4999 4480
6799 6597
6999 6799
6999 11500 11500
IX 5200 IX 5200
IX 5200 IX 5200
IX 5200 IX 5200
IX 5199 IX 5999
IX 5199 IX 5999
IX 5199 IX 5999
UNIVERSITUD MILANO $3199 $350
ROCKHOPPER COMP $680 $699
STUUNIUMPJER $775 $815
4
Bianchi ALFANA 5869 $750
REGULAR PRICE SALE PRICE
$5 OFF BASIC TUNE-UP
BRING IN THIS COUPON TO SUMMERW
AND RECALL $150 TO THE NECILIAR
RECEIPT. MAKE A WAREHOUSE CARD
VALID WITH COURT OUNT EXPENSES $0-91
size cut size, frame & cover. $253. Nakaj
$50 each. $55 each. Dishes.慕中 furniture
Call 84-925-4100
FUTON SALE
50
& foam-core futon starting at
Cheapy Sleepy frame
---
$119
BLUE HERON
Water queenbed, complete setup. New heater &
watters. 500/400, 842/887
Starbaird blue Westone (Spectrum) six-string guitar. Two dual back pickups, and one bass guitar with a tremolo. Rated base and treble controls. With a locking hard carry case and a Crate G-64 amplifier with a 12 cm Titanium speaker $500.700-966 or 845-966. A $200.00 price tag. 7 yr. old. IKE new. $202.842-8458
340 Auto Sales
ii) Yamaha 600cc SK Midnite Black $750/OBO $83
815 IROC All Power, T-Fops, TPI, new goodyear,
72.000 km, 749-908
Reliable transportation 80 Ford Pinto $500/Best
call, Call Motor at 914-2746.
360 Miscellaneous
3 bdr 2 bath apt for rent Campus Place. Very close to campus. Request an apartment. Smoker please. Call
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841 - 0550
370 Want to Buy
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
---
85 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-3188.
Frame optional # 84-6138
Apartimentia houses, 1 to 2 blocks KU, sorry no pets. 749-5865
400s Real Estate
campus residence rent center
4 bedroom apartment for rent Call 749-0445
3 BR 2 bath apt. for rent, Campus Place Close to Campus reasonable rent. Smoker 842-6098
PACE BR close to campus, off-street parking, no
breaks 329-819-9011 or 847-0007
405 For Rent
Over the Edge
Naismith Halls'
Holiday Apartments
HOLIDAYS IN MALIA
3 Bedroom $650
4 Bedroom $800
NICE 2 BH, close to campus, off-street parking, no
room. 749-281 or 842-9007
Naismith Halls services give students the competitive edge.
Front door bus service
Fitness room
-Recently constructed
24 hr. computer center
- Energy efficient
Dine anytime meals
- Nice quiet setting
- On bus route
NAISMITH
Weekly maid service
Remodelled 1 bld apartment available at brady
building, water and heat are paid $279, 813, 139.
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
210 Mount Hope Court 843-0011
Room for rent. $225 includes utilities. Block from
campus. Clean and quiet. Call 841-8488
430 Roommate Wanted
2 male, NS roommates need a dh室 chair,
3 female, NS roommates need + cable pay call
bill, Ivani, 841-4609
- By phone: 864-4358
3 bdr 2 bath bap for rent Campus Place. Close to
bldr. Reasonable rent. Smoker please. 842
How to schedule an ad:
Female non-smoker to share 2 BR house off-campus. $250/mo. includes utilities. 749-946.
5b yr. pre-med student looking for clean roommate; 20w water, Pool, laundry. Close to campaion.
Female non-smoker to share 21B Apt. 1 block from male redemption redem $25 + utilities. Please BK call B29-8280.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN
*female roommate needed in exchange for third
child care. IPhone, 1-786-4029*
Female roommate to share beautiful new condo on bus #1. No smoking. No pets. Year lease $250
Roommate to share house. $250/mo * 8) utilities Washers and Dyer, large yard, hard wood floor
Responsible, non-smoking female student to share
the computer complex. $65 + $5 / verify.HR
required. $65+$10.
Looking for a roommate to share 4dbm, furnished
with bedding. 1928 mon. uits and free
cells. Call B23-8572.
Ad pressed in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Store by the Kauanese offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Wanted: Roommates for 2 BR, pet. AC, cable CHEAP! W will go to call AST. K66-803.1v message.
White male seeking non-smoking male student
available for low $138/month and
$15 utilities. B22-803.
Calculating Rates:
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom at Ontario & 14th
Complete kitchen, W/D hookup, mostly furnished
$190/month + util. Smokers welcome. Call 841.
6107 | leave message.
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Half, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1987 FarWorks, Inc./Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Vince! Just trample him! . . . He's drawing you into his kind of fight!"
16
LAKE MENDOTA. THE PROJECT CONSUMED HALF THE STUDENT BUDGET FOR THE YEAR AND CAUSED A CAMPUS FURO
Friday, August 27,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A RADICAL GROUP CALLED THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY TOOK OVER THE
Statue of Liberty at high tide.
University of Wisconsin
You see some weird things on college campuses.
Like the COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. At 9¢ a minute, its late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate is certainly unusual. Not to mention the GREAT STUFF you get just for using your calling card.
MOONLIGHT
MACHINECARD
COLLEGIATE
FÕNCARD™
816 864 1133 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FÕNCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FÖNCARD IS SO EASY, IT'S WEIRD.
two friends in two different places at the same time? Strange, huh? That's PRIORITY PARTY CALL. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. We're working to MAKE COLLEGE
Free goodies? That's weird. And how about talking to
LIFE EVEN EASIER. And that's the
weirdest thing of all.
---
Sprint.
Be there now.
1. 800.795.5971
SIGN UP AT OUR BOOTH AND GET OUR SIX-CAN COOLER AND 30 MINUTES OF CALLS--ALL FOR FREE.
HOW'S THAT FOR WEIRD? Aug.26th, 27th, & 30th at the Kansas Union, Level 4 Aug.25th, 31st, Sept. 1st & 2nd at Wescoe Beach
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. © 1993 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
ERECTED A STYROFOAM REPLICA OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ON FROZEN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. DEDICATED TO THE PURSUIT OF SILLNESS, THEY IMMEDIATELY
SPORTS: No. 1 Florida State breezes through Kansas 42-0 at the Kickoff Classic. Page 11
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.7
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
A new generation commemorates march
30th anniversary brings fresh issues to Washington
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Thirty years after a call to conscience echoed across America from the Lincoln Memorial, an assertive new generation marched on Washington on Saturday, pressing fresh demands for jobs and justice and trying to rekindle Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream.
Under a relentless sun, the marchers retraced 1963's "Empanicia"
tion March on Washington "But this time, they argued that legal equality is empty without economic opportunity.
"We want more than just fair treatment," said Ben Chavis, the new president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "We want a fair share of the economy."
And from the steps where King spoke, an old King ally, Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, pleaded with minorities to lock arms in friendship.
"Let's turn to each other and not on each other," he said. "When we have justice, we'll have peace in the 'hood' and peace in the 'burbs.'
STILL LEADERS: This weekend's
march in Washington showed that the elder civil-rights leaders are not yet ready to give up their guard. Page 8.
- POLL1 Six in 10 Americans think that racial equality is improving but that it's still a problem. Page 8.
The crowd thinned out early, but at its peak, the National Park Service estimated the number of marchers at 75,000. Disputing that figure, the Rev. Walter Faintroy, the march chairperson, claimed the crowd equaled the 200,000 who heard King's "I Have a Dream" speech on Aug. 28, 1963.
King's riveting words helped galvanize support for the civil rights and
voting laws that changed America.
At noon, King's widow, Coretta Scott King, and his children and sister started the parade to the monument.
Behind them came Attorney General Janet Reno, locked arm-in-arm with Jackson. Flanking them was Carol Moseley-Braun, the first African-American woman to sit in the U.S. Senate.
Jackson, in his speech, said that in many ways the poor in America were worse off now than 30 years ago.
But he sounded his familiar "keep hope alive" theme.
"Don't let them break your spinn, though the tides of fascist racist behavior is on the rise," Jackson said.
Among the participants were veterans of battles old and new: Rosa
Parks, whose refusal to move to the back of the bus inspired a successful African-American boycott of the bus system in Montgomery, Ala, and Lau Gunier, whose withdrawal as President Clinton's nominee as chief civil-rights attorney caused a stir this year.
But along with the old civil-right pioneers were many people who had not been born when King spoke. One of them, Barbara Wiggins, president of the Greater Hartford, Conn., NAACP, said, "We hope to accomplish what we didn't accomplish 30 years ago — justice and peace and equality for everyone."
While marchers sang the old civil-rights anthems, they marched for a variety of causes not on the nation's mind 30 years ago — for sexual equal
ity, against abortion restrictions, for gun control, disarmament and the environment, for the aged, the victims of AIDS and Puerto Rico's statehood
The day's message carried a sharp edge — exemplified by one man's sweatshirt "Damn Right I've Got an Attitude. My people worked 400 Years Without a Paycheck."
10
A group of African-American teenagers wore T-shirts with a touch of racial pride in the form of a laundered label: "100% black. Gentle cycle. Handle with care. No bleach necessary."
Inter racial couples — which would have been a shocking sight in 1963 — were joined by Asians, Native Americans and Hispanics as well as many white people.
Kansans fiddle the weekend away
Bluegrass festival draws musicians to Lawrence park
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Wade Nachtigall, Lawrence senior, concentrates on his spoon playing during a jam session at South Park. The impromptu concert was one activity at the 13th Annual Kansas State Fidling and Picking Championships this weekend.
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Ten-month-old Morgan Banning had never heard bluegrass music before yesterday.
As she sat in the shade at South Park and watched Wade Nachtigall, Lawrence senior, play the spoons, she clapped along and wiggled to the beat.
"It's just something that reaches down and touches your heart," Nachgall said.
Morgan and her family joined other Lawrence residents and students who showed up for the 13th Annual Kansas State Fiddling and Picking Chamionships yesterday.
Nachtigall also was a member of the audience until a jam session of nine guitar, mandolin, bajo and bass players drew him into an informal performance.
Nachtigall's love of bluegrass brought him to the championships for his third or fourth year.
Several Saturday workshops focused on everything from buckdancing to flat-pick guitar at the Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St.; the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St.; and Harmony Hall.
The event started at 7 p.m. Friday at Harmony Hall, 10 E. Ninth St., with concerts by Cathy Barton and Dave Para, Rodney Sutton, and Kim and Jim Lindsay. There was another concert at 9 p.m. by the same performers.
The weekend event ended yesterday with 11 different contests and concerts on two stages. The festivities filled the eleven-hundred block of Massachusetts with music. Division winners received trophies and cash prizes.
Mike Rundle, executive director of the event, said the workshops on Saturday had a good turnout of about 300 to 400 participants.
The 94-degree heat yesterday didn't seem to keep anyone away. The championships drew a crowd comparable to last year's crowd, which was the biggest ever, Rundle said.
Craig Dernier, Stillwater, Okla.
graduate student and Nagalligh's
"See that little girl... dancing? You don't see something like that at a Motorhead concert."
Wade Nachtigall
roommate, plays the mandolin with the band Arkansas White Trash Express. This year was Dermer's third year at the championships but his first year performing with his band.
Lawrence senior and spoon player
"I met the fiddle and banjo player one year ago today," Dermer said.
Dermer also played his mandolin
with Ric Averill Songs and Stories, a performance aimed at children. He said he liked the fact that many different age groups could enjoy bluegrass
For Jay Johnson, a Wichita high school senior, the mandolin was a love he shared with his grandfather. As he waited to perform his solo, he stood by a pine tree and played Elvis' "I Can't Help Falling in Love" on his mandolin.
Yesterday marked Johnson's second performance at the championships. He played two years ago, he said, but didn't place. When he's not playing at local festivals, he plays with his grandfather in Jackson, Miss. Johnson said.
People from all over Kansas came to the championships to perform and watch.
Nachtigall said the festival had something for everyone.
Bob Egan
"People just can't help but dance," he said. "See that little girl over her dancing? You don't see something like that at a Motorhead concert."
Grant Cochran of Grandvillie Mo. plucks the bass during a practice session with his band.
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Israel, PLO closing in on peace accord
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israel is on the verge of recognizing the Palestine Liberation Organization, a key step toward resolving decades of conflict, senior Israeli Cabinet members and Palestinian officials said yesterday.
Both sides could sign within days an agreement in principle to implement Palestinian autonomy in the occupied
territories, starting with the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho.
"At this time all parties are cooking an agreement," said Azmi Shoabi, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization committee that supervises the negotiations. "It will include direct negotiations between Israel and the PLO to discuss details of Gaza-Jericho first."
PASSERAL
Israel has refused to recognize the PLO and has branded it a terrorist group. But informal contacts have stepped up since the center-left government of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin took power last summer.
Yasser Arafat
Israel radio said that in exchange for Israeli recognition of the PLO, the group would renounce terrorism and delete references in its charter that Israel interprets as supporting the Jewish state's destruction.
RAID: A Soma-
The reports of possible recognition brought immediate bowls of protest
Raid: A SOMN warlord will be the target of an early morning raid by U.S. troops in Mogadishu.
Page 8.
brought into the room and from Israel's right wing and from Islamic activists opposed to PLO leader Yasser Arafat. Both threatened to respond with violence.
Arafat has backed the deal despite opposition from Palestinians who demand outright independence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. They say the PLO leader is making too many concessions to hold on to his power, which is being challenged by a growing number of fundamentalists in the occupied territories who reject any deal with Israel.
The Israeli Cabinet is expected to vote tonight to let the Israeli negotiating team pursue the autonomy plan. Foreign Minister Shimon Peres is expected to fly to Washington this week to sign it, Israel radio and the Palestinians said.
Rabin might also seek a Cabinet vote today on whether to recognize the PLO, which recognized Israel in 1988.
The change comes after months of quiet exploratory meetings between PLO and Israeli officials that culminated last week in Scandinavia with the outline of an autonomyplan by Peres and Mahmoud Abbas, the No. 2 PLO lead.
Rabin's office declined comment on recognition. Rabin has argued that negotiating with the PLO would raise Palestinian demands for statehood and the return of millions of refugees. But he has come under increasing pressure from the liberals who make up a majority of his Cabinet to start negotiation with the PLO.
INSIDE
I am sure you can do that.
Pitching in
Television readies for the 'Late-Night wars'
When not leading the Kansas' softball team to victory, senior pitcher Stephani Williams searches for someone to talk to and peanut butter sandwiches
Page11
The Associated Press
Mega-hyped showdown pits Dave against Jay
NEW YORK — It all boils down to this:
Dave vs. Jav... mana a mano.
CBS "Late Show with David Letterman" against NBC's "Tonight Show with Jay Leno." the long-awaited, much-hyped main event in what the abiding media have christened "the Late-Night wars."
The temporal arena in which this television war will be waged is known in the industry as "11:30" (actually 10:35 CDT).
Of course, other men (and they are all men) will be in the ring, too.
The senior player on the late-night scene is Ted Koppel of ABC's "Nightline." The syndicated "Arsenio Hall Show" will continue to
air in many cities at that same hour. On Sept. 7, "The Chevy Chase Show" kicks off in the 10-11 p.m. slot on the Fox network. Also, Conan O'Brien, the famously unknown young comic who inherits Letterman's slot, will sign on Sept. 13.
But tonight, only Jay and Dave will really matter in Late-Night Land.
With guests Bill Murray and Billy Joel, the "Late Show" premiere starts at 10:35 p.m. In this long-awaited face-off, Dave goes up against NBC and Leno's "Tonight Show," which will feature country singer Garth Brooks and "Beverly Hills 90210" heartthrob Lake Perry.
Don't bet on it.
But in moving to another network, has Letterman been forced to leave some classic comedy behind?
In July, NBC President Bob Wright laid claim to Letterman's repertoire of "Late
Did that mean that on CBS, Dave would never have a Top 10 list, Stupid Pet Tricks or visit from the likes of Pea Boy?
Apparently not. Judging from a run-through taping Wednesday, at least a couple of favories will be part of the "Late Show" regimen, albeit in slightly different form:
"The Top 10 List" is now "The Latest Show Top 10." And "Brush With Greatness," a recurring send-up of celebrity worship, becomes "Celebrity Encounter."
In an earlier interview, Letterman promised to revive some of his old routines at his new network.
Night" bits and skits, calling the bag of tricks the network's "intellectual property."
But those who long for the old Dave and not the reborn, classic Dave should take heart: NBC tonight is rebroadcasting the very first edition of "Late Night with David Letterman," which originally aired Feb. 1, 1982.
F. B. M.
David Letterman
2
Monday, August 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AFRICAN ADORNED
5 East $ 7^{\mathrm{TH}} $ 842-1376
THE RAVEN
A cartoon character of a raven wearing a police uniform.
ATTENTION Pre-Med Students!
Including dental, optometry and veterinary students
Informational meeting
Wednesday,September1, 7:00pm Kansan Room--Kansas Union
Representatives from the KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
- Admission Requirements
- Application Procedure
- MCAT preparation
ON CAMPUS
For more information call the Office of Pre-Med 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall.
Black Student Union will hold an assembly meeting at 7 tonight in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3894.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 8 ontight in the Walnut Room at Kausus Union. For more information, call Sean Roland at 841-8774.
OAKS Non-Traditional Student Organization will hold a brown-bag lunch 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Rock Chalk Room at the Burge Inon. For information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
The Jahewkah Association of Environmental Professionals will hold its first meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Walnut Room at 10 a.m.
the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kristi Holdsworth at 832.175).
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow in Alcove A at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danielle Myron at 842-5407.
KU College Republicans will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Centennial Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 832-8565.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 844-4256.
■ The department of communication studies has scheduled the Oral Communication Exemption Examination for Sept. 15. Registration, with a $10 fee, is due Sept. 10 in 3090 Wescoe. For more information, call 864-3633.
ON THE RECORD
A student's wallet and contents, valued together at $65, was taken from Alderson Auditorium on Wednesday, KU police reported.
Six square yards of carpeting, valued at $100, was taken from the basement of McColllum Hall between Aug. 20 and Wednesday, KU police reported.
second floor of Hashinger Hall, KU police reported.
Three floor lamps, valued together at $35, were taken from the third floor of Murphy Hall between July 15 and Aug. 13, KU police reported.
A student's clothing, valued at $170, was taken Tuesday from the
A window was broken at Carruth O'Leary on Thursday or Friday. KU* police reported. Damage was estimated at $200.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Finl 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, K6045
WEATHER
Omaha: 87°/70°
LAWRENCE: 85°/65°
Kansas City: 92°/73°
St. Louis: 94°/78°
Wichita: 97°/72°
Minneapolis: 89°/70°
Phoenix: 85°/79
Salt Lake City: 81°/55°
Seattle: 68°/51°
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Cloudy
Sunny
High: 85'
Low: 65'
Sunny
High: 85'
Low: 68'
High: 85'
Low: 67'
Interim Regents director won't just 'mind the store'
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The interim director of the Kansas Befard of Regents vows to "keep the ball rolling" until a permanent director is found
Warren Corman, who begins his duties Wednesday, said last week that he would not be satisfied just "minding the store" until a successor to Stanley Koplik is found later this year or early next year.
Regents have done in choosing $m_{n}$ but I also believe they expected me to see it as a challenge to keep the ball rolling until a permanent director is chosen," said Corran, whose permanent job is director of facilities for the Regents.
Among Corman's first tasks will be finding money to repair Kansat State University's Anderson Hall, damaged by lightning two weeks ago. That will mean asking the 1994 Legislature to approve about $1.5 million in supplemental spending during the current fiscal year.
"I'm honored by what (chairman)
John Montgomery and the other
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
for Driving
by BAUSCH & LOMB
ARE YOU INTERESTED IN ...
928 Massachusetts
Available at
- A gathering of KU graduate students for fellowship, fun and growth
* An intentional place to share your struggles and joy?
* A supportive environment in which you can explore the Christian faith?
* A new organization ... one which you can help to shape and form?
THE KU
GRADUATE STUDENT FELLOWSHIP
Sponsoring KU Religious Organizations
First Fall Meeting
Tues. 8/31/1993 a1:6:30pm
Pizza Hut (804 Iowa) downstairs
Bring S for pizza and drink costs
RSVP to any organization below
American Baptist Campus Center ...B41-8001
Baptist student Union ...B41-8001
Canterbury House (Episcopal)...B42-802
Immanuel Lutheran Church & Student Center ...B43-0620
Ecumenical Christian Ministry ...B43-893
Evangelic International Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ
Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship ...B41-861
Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA) ...B43-4948
United Methodist Hospital (ELCA) ...B41-861
WHERE: Gate C, South End Memorial Stadium
READ THIS BEFORE PICKING UP YOUR TICKETS DO NOT THROW AWAY YOU MAY PICK UP YOUR TICKETS ONLY! NOT ANOTHER STUDENTS! PLEASE BRING YOUR CURRENT I.D. WITH FALL FEE STICKER
TIME: 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
DATE: See Schedule Below
SPORTS COMBINATION TICKET DISTRIBUTION IS AS FOLLOWS:
A-E Monday, August 30th
The Etc.
Shop
TM
L-R Wednesday, September 1st
F-2 Thursday, September 2nd
ATTENTION KU STUDENTS!
S-Z Thursday, September 2nd
F-K Tuesday, August 31st
(Make-up) Friday, September 3rd
If you miss your assigned pick-up date,you have from September 6th until October 15th to pick up your tickets in Allen Field House (East Lobby).
A. W.
"Our reputation is resting on your shoulders."
843-2138
OpenMonday thru Friday 8-7
Saturday 9-4
HAIRSTYLING
GQ
611 West Ninth, Lawrence
BLACK STUDENT UNION
Announces their First Informative Meeting
TONIGHT
Monday,August 30 7:00 P.M.
In Alderson Auditorium Located on the 4th Floor of The Kansas Union
For More Information About Black Student Union Please Call 864-3984.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 30, 1993
3
William Alix / KANSAN
Students rush through the entrance of Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union between class periods.
Congestion at Woodruff cuts into class time
Students fight to get in, out
Kansan staff writer
The pressures of college life can range from making the grade to paying the bills. But some students have been feeling a crush on another kind
— of hundreds their classmates — as they leave or enter their classes at Woodruff Auditorium.
Located on the fifth floor of the Kansas Union, the University's only 500-seat classroom has 25 class periods scheduled per week this semester, with many of them allowing only a 10 minute break between sessions. Students trying to leave the auditorium have had to slowly wend their way past other students waiting to get into their next class in the auditorium.
"It's tough. It gets really crushed," said Bob Thurm, Topeka junior, waiting outside the auditorium for his physics class to start.
"There's just tons of people. Iget out early all the time from my other class," said Carmen Ruprecht, Kansas City, Mo. junior. "But if I didn't, I'd have to truck here from Haworth."
Students are not the only ones who notice the problem.
"It's been a bottleneck, but it's been a bottleneck every semester," said Bill Towns, operations manager for the Union. "This is a problem. There is congestion there. But it seems to be somewhat unavoidable."
The crowds coming in and out of the auditorium last week have resulted in late class starts, long waits on the Union's main stairwell and students opting to leave class early to avoid the rush.
"It was late. We weren't in here until about 20 or 25 to eleven," said Krista Nye, Chicago sophomore. "It's like the crowds at football or basketball
Depending on the class that preceded it, five to 10 minute late starts were common for many classes, said students and professors.
'Crunch'time at Woodruff
Some of the heaviest crowds coming in and out of Woodford Auditorium occur during transitions between these classes.
Mondays and Wednesdays:
univ-burbsby
9-20 to 9-30
Social Warfare 303, "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life," and Chemistry 624, "Organic Chemistry."
all trying to get in to the games."
10:20 to 10:30 a.m., between Chemistry 624 and Psychology 360, "Social Psychology."
Professors also complained about the delays.
- Thursdays and Thursdays;
KANSAN
Tuesdays and thursdays:
9:20 to 9:30 a.m., between Biology
104, "Principles of Biology," and Business
368, "Statistics."
"Students are paying to take courses here and aren't getting their full 50 minutes worth," said Nyla Branscombe, associate professor of psychology. "I'm not going to give up 10 or 15 minutes of class every day."
Some students try to leave early in hopes of beating the incoming crowd.
"I usually sit toward the back to get out quickly," Nye said. "But I'm not happy about it. I know it's more personalized if you can sit toward the front."
Professors teaching in the auditorium said they warned their students in advance that they should wait before trying to get into class.
"I told the students, 'Don't try to come up the steps early,' because what do you have otherwise: gridlock," said Earl Huyer, professor of chemistry. "By next week, you shouldn't notice it all. People learn."
Towns agreed that traffic flow in and out of the auditorium improves after the first few weeks of each semester.
Stephanie Schintler, Smith Center junior, also said she expected the crowding to lessen.
"I think once everything gets settled into a routine, we'll know when to show up."
Scholarship halls get more parking
New lot eases parking crunch
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Students living in KU's scholarship halls this year are finding that parking is not a problem — for a change.
Jolliffe Hall, a former scholarship hall and instructional building at 15th and Ohio streets, was razed this summer and the site was leveled to provide 24 additional parking spots for scholarship hall residents. Another few spaces were gained in a gravel lot at 13th and Louisiana streets, which was traded with the University of Kansas Alumni Association for a lot one block north.
The result? For the first time in years, residents of the halls are not
"I haven't heard hardly anything compared to how it was in the past," said Carmen San Martin, Wichita senior and president of the All Scholarship Hall Council. "So I guess the problem has been alleviated pretty well."
complaining about parking.
Alumi Place parking zones, those available to scholarship hall residents, comprise about 230 parking stalls for the 438 students of the halls
Donna Hultine, assistant director of the Parking Department, said that as of Tuesday, 100 Alumni Place permits had been sold. However, Hultine said that permit sales had been numerous last week and that number would increase.
Hultine said Alumni Place, like most campus parking, has been oversold in previous years, forcing scholarship hall residents to park on neighborhood streets off campus. However,
those streets are often crowded on weekends and evenings because of patrons parking near neighborhood bars.
Scholarship hall residents could face a further restriction on parking this fall because of a proposal by the Oread Neighborhood Association that would restrict parking on streets surrounding the scholarship halls. That proposal is still under study and could go to the Lawrence City Commission in October.
San Martin said that although she hoped the proposal wouldn't become reality, the new Alumni Place parking would preclude some problems in case it did.
"If they can't park on the city streets, they'll have to go somewhere," San Martin said. "I'd assume the problem would just go farther down the hill. But I think the Jolliffe lot has helped innumerably."
Grace Pearson
Douthart
Louisiana Street
Lot 122
Lot 121
New parking in Lot 107
Amini
14th Street
Stephenson
Pearson
Lot 100
Ohio Street
Alumni Place
Formerly Joliffe Hall
Sellards
Lot 107
James Frederick / KANSAN
water world
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Squirt-gun fun
100 100 100
Trevor Garberg, Overland Park freshman, blasts cheeri Jaremba, Orlando, Fla., junior, with a burst of water. The two were participating in a water war Friday between the Pi Kappa Alpha and Phi Kappa Psi fraternities and the Kappa Delta and Delta Gamma sororites.
Medical students learn health firsthand
Bv Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Some medical students at the University of Kansas Medical Center have found that the best patients to learn from can be themselves.
As part of Clinical Sciences I, a firstyear course at the Med Center, students are learning to assess their own health so they can better assess the health of others.
In the course, doctors-to-be learn to counsel future patients about health promotion and preventive medicine by conducting a series of personal health, fitness and dietary assessments.
"I'm real big on experimental learning," said bac courses director Christine
Moranetz.
She said the course was a great opportunity to learn about various health conditions they would see in future patients.
Students will measure their own heights, weights and blood pressures and will have their blood drawn for blood fats and lipids. They will undergo fitness tests, such as a one-mile walk and timed sit-ups and push-ups. Flexibility of the hamstring and lower back also is measured.
Calculating the body fat of each student involves measuring his or her skin folds with a caliper. Students then must divide their waist measurements by hip measurements to formulate waist to hip ratios.
After completing the assessments, each student will receive a comprehensive report of the results.
Learning to interpret the results of their own assessments should help students assess the health of their future patients.
Moranetz gave the example of a patient having a waist to hip ratio of one or more, which would put them at a higher risk of obtaining hypertension, cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
They also undergo dietary analysis.
Manoranetz explained that overweight men were most likely to experience android-type obesity, in which excessive weight settles around the waist, resulting in what is called an apple shape. She said overweight women were most likely to experience gynoid obesity, in which excessive weight settles on the buttocks and hips, referred to as a pear shape.
In either case, the student would have to address the patient's obesity and prescribe the proper type of exercise and diet.
"Obviously the focus is to get them understand they will play a very significant role in the year of 2001 as a physician incorporating prevention into their practice." Moranetz said.
Moranetz said the course should give students a greater understanding and appreciation for optimal health. It will teach students to address a patient's lifestyle and behavior issues and not just treat the problem, she said.
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4
OPINION
Monday, August 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
On Aug. 21, scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., lost contact with the Mars Observer spacecraft, and as of Thursday, had not restored communications.
THE BACKGROUND
The $1 billion Observer was to be the first U.S. spacecraft to reach Mars in 17 years. It would have surveyed Mars' terrain and climate.
THE OPINION
Botched Mars probe must not ground NASA
The silence of the Mars Observer has been a tremendous loss for NASA scientists, but the mission was commendable and should be allowed to proceed in some form in the future.
However, any further attempts to reach Mars should be made only after a long period of deliberation to find out what went wrong with the Observer spacecraft and to decide the future of NASA and U.S.space policy.
NASA's record has been marred by the tragic Challenger explosion, the embarrassing Hubble Space Telescope failure, the overwhelming expense of the space station and increased criticism that the agency is a bureaucratic nightmare.
The troubles in NASA may have made lawmakers understandably wary of approving funds for space programs. The approval might be seen as taking away money from competing veterans and housing programs. This year, NASA has come under fire from legislators who want to do away with the expensive space station — a program initiated by President Reagan in 1984 and enthusiastically approved by the House and Senate. On Thursday, Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., a key member of the committee overseeing NASA'S budget, said the agency's failures will help him "dramatically with killing the space station."
The space station, more a jobs program for the aerospace industry than a great scientific endeavor, would not be a terrible loss for science if eliminated. But lawmakers should not use the failure of the Mars Observer as an excuse to quash future missions like the Observer project. The objective of the Observer mission made the project worth the expense. Using highly sophisticated optics, the space probe would have provided the clearest view ever of a landscape rich in history — the history of a terrestrial-type planet; of possible value to the study of the Earth.
Moreover, backing away from high-risk missions now would be ignoring a recent success of NASA — the Cosmic Background Explorer, which made important discoveries about the creation of the universe.
But money procured for space programs must be spent wisely. In the future, U.S. space policy should, and probably will, support fewer manned missions and more of the smaller, cheaper, unmanned missions. And already, NASA's new boss, Dan Goldin, is addressing the problems of an overgrown bureaucracy by cutting down the size and cost of the administration.
Space exploration is difficult, risky, expensive, but sometimes vital. Therefore, activities and objectives of space programs should be stated clearly and supported by relevant arguments if the public is to support space programs along with lower taxes, improved health care and a secure job.
CHRISTINA CORNISH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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HOOD
UDK 93
Day planners can prove dangerously addictive
"You know, if you're going to be that busy, you really ought to look into getting a good day planner. I just couldn't survive with it mine."
My friend was right. The semester hadn't even begun, and already, my desk was immined with papers, Post-it Notes and scraps of news clips with notes written all over them. Maybe I did need to get a little more organized.
I dipped through my friend's painter. Days, months and even years were all planned out in neat block lettering, along with project outlines, names and addresses of friends and family, lists of people to whom she owed letters and perhaps everything of course, conversational tattoos fullbaked under entries such as "sources," "objectives" and "most important."
"I don't think I could use all these headings." I said.
It all seemed silly. Why would you want to write down that you talked to John Smith about his kid Bucky with the deviated septum at a company picnic anyway?
"Each person's planner is unique," my friend said. "All the good ones can be tailored to your specialized needs."
STAFF COLUMNIST
I later discovered that my friend's company sent her to a seminar on how time management can be made simple with a day planner.
Her persistent maging eventually paid off. Against my better judgment, I went to a local retail outlet in search of a day planer. I couldn't believe how many options lay before me. I settled on one with a ring binder so I could customize it for my every need. Then,
VAL
HUBER
Uooked at the price.
"Twenty-five dollars! Who were they kidding?"
A man standing by me, leafing through refills, defended the price: "Trust me, it's worth it. I couldn't survive without mine."
So, $25 poorer, but so much richer in organization potential, I began to transfer my life into my day planner.
After three and a half hours, all my phone numbers, schedules, lists of column ideas, notes on my thesis, checkbook balance and favorite pen and pencil were in one easy to reach place. I also had plastic holders to display my successful friends' business cards, a stamp dispenser, a place for My post-I note Notes and a note pad.
Soon, I began to realize that organizing my planner was taking up a large amount of my free time. I was canceling movie dates because I had to have time to plan my day each evening. I couldn't afford to go out to eat anymore because I had to invest in a matching wallet and a larger purse — to hold my planner. One look at my list of things to do for the day and I immediately wanted to go back to bed.
Why bother doing all these things? It
seemed so much more clean and neat just to write about doing them in neat, block lettering. I was in trouble.
In simple English, I had become a plenantic.
I had seen these people before. Once in an airport, I saw a man frantically searching for his planer. "Please," he shouted to anyone who would listen. "I'll pay a reward! Has anyone seen a black leather planer? It's got my life in it."
I have to thank my friends for making me see the light.
"You need therapy! No one in her right mind should spend so much time planning on her life!" said one well-meaning individual.
Others tried shock treatment. They would hide my planner and watch me scuttle around the room searching for it.
I now realize that no one should put so much into something so small. It makes life look too easy. I haven't given up my planner, but I've quit writing down things "to be done" five minutes before I do them.
Well, it's a start.
Just the other day while I was at the bookstore, I noticed someone flipping through a day planner with ring binders.
"Forty dollars!" I heard him say. I knew he had to do something.
"Trust me, it's not worth it," I said and directed him to a spiral version for $3.25.
If I can save just one ...
Val Huber is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in journalism.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Flood insurance should reflect risk
People along the Mississippi River are trying to put their lives back together after massive flooding. They deserve sympathy and support.
should, and all American taxpayers will bear the brunt of the cleanup and rebuilding.
At the same time, the nation has been shown, again, the folly and ineffectiveness of our flood-insurance program.
But American taxpayers should demand a change in our flood-insurance approach.
The flood has left more than 70,000 homeless and has done more than $12 billion in damage.
It may sound cold-hearted, but there are simply places people should not build homes and businesses, and if they do, they should bear the risk.
the federal government will bail them out.
Instead, our flood-insurance program provides insurance at a cost that does not match the risk. Worse, many in the flood areas do not carry insurance or drop it. If disaster strikes, those in flooded areas know
It is profitable to build on beaches and near rivers, so development is hard to stop. But flood insurance should reflect the risk in its price. It should be required. If it is not paid, then there should be no bailout.
American taxpayers must come to the aid of the flood victims, but there should be a serious overhaul of the flood-insurance program to prevent future misery.
JACKSON, MISS.
THE CLARION-LEDGER
Congress is rushing to help, as it
Liberals still believe in helping the forgotten
I come from a long line of political left-wingers. My great-grandfather was a Socialist who followed Eugene Debs. A few of my grandmother's relatives were card-carrying Communists. My grandfather was harassed by the Ku Klux Klan because he was vocal about getting the drinking water of New Orleans fluoridated. My mother marched against the Vietnam War in the 1960s and with Cesar Chavez in the 1970s. I guess you could say that liberalism is in my blood.
STAFF COLUMNIST
To some people, that label makes me the enemy. It makes me one of those awful people who want to murder unborn children, expose children to homosexuality, fund disgusting art with taxpayer money and abolish the death penalty. Because I'm guilty as charged, I should explain what I think a liberal is. My purpose for doing this is not for people to agree at least to understand the liberal philosophy.
social liberalism is even more difficult to define. Reluctant to define conservatism, Russell Kirk, in "The Conservative Mind," nevertheless gives six of its tenets. In that spirit, I offer a list of my own on liberalism.
Like conservatives, liberalis are not always unified; therefore, a coherent definition of liberalism is tricky. Economically speaking, liberalism, especially its more leftist elements, is wary of capitalism. Economic liberalism sees how in practice capitalism caters to the rich and omits the poor.
Tolerance and individual freedoms. Liberals believe that many of the complexities of the world are best worked out by individuals. The differing ways that each of us use to work out the complexities deserve tolerance and respect. Liberals do not care what two consenting adult men do in the privacy of their bedroom, but they do respect the men. Liberals also believe that the question of whether a fetus is a life should be answered by the women who get pregnant not by overpaid white men.
*Enbracing a dynamic world.* The world is far from static. Liberals embrace change because it is often necessary. The civil rights acts of the 1960s showed us that it was becoming impossible for a country that considered itself free to continue to oppress people because of their skin color.
Equal opportunities for all. Liberals believe that all people should have equal opportunities to everything. Where opportunities are not equal, the government should be allowed, in some fashion, to balance the scales. The conservative response is that we are all on a level playing field. When the playing field isn't level, opportunities are not equal.
NATHAN
OLSON
Government's function. Government should be for the people. It should focus on those who are underprivileged or oppressed. It is not for those who, for whatever reason, have made it. Essentially, it is a way of ensuring that the voiceless, the powerless in this country, have a voice.
Simply put, liberalism involves listening to the people who are all too often shoved aside by the government or society. Liberalism is not something to curse. At the very least, it's something to think about.
Nathan Olson is a Chicago graduate student majoring in English.
T
KANSAN STAFF
Assistant to the editor J. R. Clairborne
News Stacey Frodman
Editorial Terrissa McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Kip Chin, Renée Foger
Photo Kip Chin, Renée Foger
Read Erza Wolfe
Graphics John Foxel
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KC TRAUER
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JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
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Technology coordinator
Reporters
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Reporters
Scott Anderson Sara Bennett
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**Photographs**
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Matt Spett
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 30, 1993
5
You never know what you'll find in your toilet
As you are aware if you follow international events, over the past year I have written a number (two) of columns about the worldwide epidemic of snakes in toilets. As a result, I have received many letters from people who have had personal toilet-snake encounters, to the point where I now consider it newsworthy when somebody reports NOT finding a snake in a toilet.
But now I am getting nervous. I say this because of a recent alarming incident wherein a woman, attempting to use her commode, was attacked in an intimate place — specifically, Gwinnett County, Ga., — by a SQUIRREL I have an article from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, written by Gail Hagans and sent in by a number
of alert readers. The headline — a textbook example of clear journalism — states: "Squirrel somehow makes way into commode, scratches Gwinnett woman's behind."
The woman is quoted as follows: "I went to the bathroom and lifted the lid and sat down. That's when I felt something scratching my behind." So, following the recommended "Jump, Slam, Call and Tell" emergency procedure, she jumped up,
stimmed the up down, called her husband at work and told him to come home immediately, which he of course did. But she had a gender identity, but男 have a protective instinct that dates back millions of years to when they would
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
Unfortunately, by the time the husband got home, the squirrel had drowned, forcing us to once again ask WHEN the failed Clinton administration will demand that ALL commodes be equipped with tiny life preservers. But that is not the issue at hand. The issue at hand is that the squirrel apparently got into the plumbing system via a roof vent, which means that if you, like so many people, have a roof, your toilet is vulnerable to ANY organism with a long narrow body, including (but not limited to) otters, weasels, dachshunds, squids and international fashion models with only one name, such as "iman."
have to defend their mates from such vicious predators as the sabertoothed tiger and the mastodon (toilets were much bigger in those days).
But that is by no means the only major toilet development. There is also the Mystery Toilet in Texas that produces ballpoint pens. I am not making this up, either. According to a story in the Witchita Falls (Texas)
Times/Record Neus, written by Steve Clements and sent in several alert readers, a man named David Garza of Henrietta, Texas, has fished 75 Papermate ballpoint pens out of his toilet over the past two years, sometimes as many as five pens per day. Garza has no idea where they're coming from, and neither do the local sewer authorities.
The story was accompanied by a photograph of Garza sitting on the bathtub next to the Mystery Toilet, holding a pen, looking like a successful anger. I called him immediately.
"What's the status of the toilet?" I asked.
"It's still a mystery," he said. He said he hadn't found any new pens since the newspaper story, but that he has become something of a celebrity. This is understandable. People naturally gravitate to a man who has a Mystery Toilet.
"Everywhere I go," he said, "people say to me, 'Hey, you got a pen?'
I asked him if the pens still write,
and he said they do.
"Papermate ought to make a commercial out of this," he said. "The slogan could be, 'We come from all over and write anywhere.' You know, like Coca-Cola, It's there when you need it."
Actually, I don't think that's Coca-Cola's slogan. But Garza's statement got me to thinking about a possible breakthrough TV commercial wherein an athlete is standing in the locker room, sweating, thirsty as heck, and the toilet gurgles, and up pops a nice refreshing can of Coke. Yum! A commercial like that might be exactly what Coca-Cola needs to counteract all the free media attention Pepsi got recently with the syringe thing.
But the question is: Why are Papermate pens showing up in this toilet? There's only one logical explanation — I'm sure you thought of it — ALIEN BEINGS. David Garza's toilet is apparently connected to some kind of intergalactic sewage warp, through which aliens are trying to establish communication by sending Papermate pens (which are for sale everywhere).
Speaking of toilets and communication, you need to know about a TV-view column from *The Daily Yomiuru*, an English-language newspaper published in Japan. The column, sent in by alert reader Chris Grallat, states that there's a children's TV show in Japan called "Ugo Ugo Ruga," which features "an animated character with heavy eyebrows called Dr. Puri Puri (Dr. Stinky), a piece of talking excrement that keeps popping up from the toilet bowl to express strange platitudes only an adult can fathom."
You're thinking: "Hey! Sounds like Henry Kissinger!"
Dave Berry is a syndicated columnist from the Miami Herald.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Lack of tables hurts Jayhawker
A recent article in the Kansan explains that facilities operations will no longer provide free tables for organized groups on campus. The article should have stated no tables, not free tables. That's right, facilities operations has all these tables collecting dust, and organizations can not even rent them.
Organized groups are part of the lifeblood of the campus. Without these tables, the effectiveness of group communication with students will be dramatically reduced.
Here is an example of what the Jayhawker must go through now that someone made a decision without thinking of the consequences. The Jayhawker needs two tables, Sept. 7 through Oct. 1, for yearbook portraits. Instead of getting the tables through facilities operations, the Jayhawker must go off campus and rent the tables.
Sounds easy enough, but here's the kicker. First, the Jahwacker must get permission from the Parking Department to allow the rental company on campus. Second, the rental company must deliver and pick up the tables daily since the Jahwaker has no
place to store the tables overnight. I doubt the rental company will do this.
Come on, facilities operations.
While the easiest answer seems to be no, it is not always the best.
David Gunderson
Lawrence senior
Damage to vehicle angers its driver
I am writing to express my absolute displeasure with an unknown individual who broad-sided my car in lot 91 on the evening of Aug. 4. Between
At this juncture, I have two words of advice to whoever did this and decided to run and hide in the masses. First, take some driving lessons. Second and more importantly, take some responsibility for your actions. Your cowardly response to this incident is truly pathetic.
7 and 10 p.m., as I attended night class, someone had a little difficulty getting out of his/her parking spot. In the process of backing up, the unknown assailant produced several hundred dollars worth of damage to the driver's door of my car.
Randall Griffey Norton graduate student
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Monday, August 30, 1992
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Champion
U.S.A.
When 6-foot-4-inch ROTC cadet Geoff Athey stepped up to a challenge this summer, he dwarfed it.
The rankings of Athey and the 2,000 other cadets at Fort Lewis were based, in part, on leadership skills. Performance in rifle marksmanship, land-navigation skills, physical fitness and other abilities also was evaluated.
Athey was named a regimental honor graduate at one of two U.S. Army ROTC camps. Only 14 of 4,000 Army ROTC cadets nationwide earned the title.
"Our troop consisted of 127 cadets, and that's a lot of people to influence," Athey said.
Athey said he probably clinched the top ranking with his performance as a troop commander.
"I set it as a goal before I left, but I didn't expect it," said the Sherman, Texas, senior.
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
After a grueling eight-hour day of defense tactics drills, Athey ordered
ROTC cadet earns honor
Athey earned the top honor by outperforming the other 259 cadets in his regiment at an ROTC camp in Fort Lewis, Wash.
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"He has good rapport with not only the students in ROTC but also students on campus," he said
Kari Van Hoof, who was among the other 31 KU cadets who attended the camp, said that the news of Ahey's achievement came as no surprise.
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"When I found out I said, 'Well, you kind just of hard to expect it,' said Van Hoof, an Enumclaw, Wash., senior. "He's one of the best around."
Geoff Athey
his troop on a four-mile march to a field for an overnight camp out. Athey organized tent location, meetings and meal and hygiene schedules until the troop returned to training the following day.
"I think one of the things that helped me at camp was how multicultural this university and this corps is," he said.
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Athley, who interacted with cadets from throughout the western United States, credited the University, in part, for his success.
Cadets' performance at the camp plays a strong role in their placement in the military after graduation, Athey said. Other key factors in placement are professors' recommendations and grade point average, he said.
IT TAKES A LITTLE MORE TO MAKE A CHAMPION
"There are seven regiments at advanced camp, and to be a top cadet in one of those regiments is really an outstanding achievement," he said.
This semester Athey is serving as the commander of the Jayhawk Battalion, KU's ROTC corps. He said he planned to graduate in May 1995 with a civil engineering degree and be commissioned as a second lieutenant. Athey said he then hoped to be branched into the Army's Corps of Engineers at Fort Hood, Texas, where he and his wife, Beth, will live.
reute was one quality that made him a good leader.
Lt. Col. Ron Nicholls, professor of military science, said that Athey was the only KU cadet in at least the past five years to earn the honor.
"It was pretty chaotic, but it went smoothly," he said.
Nicholl said that Athey's ability to
"My wife and I want to have kids when I go back into the Army, and so we want to be close to grandma," he said.
Lawrence notices increase in trash with students' return
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
It is 9 a.m. Sunday, and many KU students still are asleep. But evidence of a weekend of celebrating remains in downtown Lawrence.
Bottles, cans and cups litter parking lots and streets downtown. Some business owners and city employees said the problem has gotten worse since students have returned.
Downtown partying results in litter
"In the last two weeks there have been more beer bottles and cans and wine cooler bottles right around the bar areas," said Rebecca Grimstead, a Lawrence parking control officer. "They don't want to carry it around, so they set it down by meters or in a parking lot."
Enforcing city ordinances against
littering can be difficult, police said,
because officers must see someone
breaking the law to issue a ticket.
Martin said the landlord, Master Plan Management, had hired someone to clean the lot on Sunday mornings. He said he had tried to work out an agreement with The Bottleneck to keep the parking lot open as long as the bar made sure the lot was cleaned up.
Wayne Martin, manager of Kansas Furniture Factory Outlet, 738-E New Hampshire St., said he also had noticed an increase in the amount of trash downtown on Saturday and Sunday mornings.
"It all would take would be a message on the loudspeaker at the end of the night," Martin said. "Kids will listen to the loudspeaker, but they won't
"People come here to park to go to The Bottleneck," Martin said. "They empty the trash from their car in my lot, and I have a big trash can right there in the lot."
listen to me."
The owners of The Bottleneck could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Merchants in other areas of downtown said they also cleaned up around their stores but did not see an increase in the amount of trash.
One student said she was surprised that bar patrons were being blamed for the problem.
"I never see anyone throwing beer bottles or cups," said Casey Cooley, Wichita senior, who works and hangs out at Dos Hombres, 815 New Hamburg St. "No one can leave with anything, so I don't know how it gets out."
"I don't notice it at all," said Patrick Carlin, Arlington Heights senior, who goes to the Bottleneck. "I'm from Chicago, and Lawrence is sparkling" compared to that. I don't litter, and I know my friends don't litter either.
One student said she was surprised that bar patrons were being blamed
Students said they litter around their favorite bars didn't seem to be a problem.
A Unique Way to Volunteer in Lawrence The Praxis* Project
You can be involved in one of 45 organizations in the following areas: aging, youth, cross-cultural, education/tutoring, prison mental/physical health, hunger, shelter, environment.
(*reflection on action)
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What is Required?
- Fill out Praxis volunteer application form during Registration Fair at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread (1 bl. north of the Kansas Union) or Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana (1 bl. south of Corbin).
- Choose an agency/organization (descriptions are available)
- Make contact with placement site (with our assistance) and volunteer at least 1-2 hours/wk
- Be reliable and dependable
- Attend 2 Reflection Group meeting during the spring semester to discuss your experience and public policy, classroom "application," etc. arising out of your placement.
REGISTRATION FAIR MONDAY, AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER 3 10 am - 4:00 pm ECM CENTER, 1204 OREAD OR CANTERBURY HOUSE, 1116 LOUISIANA
Who sponsors the Praxis Project?
The Praxis Project is sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian, Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ) and Canterbury House (Episcopal) at KU. Membership or previous participation in ECM or any of their denominations is neither expected nor required for participation.
Need more information? Contact: Thad Holcombe, ECM Campus Pastor, 843-4933 or Joe Alford, Canterbury Chaplain, 843-8202
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 30,1993
7
Research links cancer, dioxin
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Leukemia, lymphoma and liver cancer are occurring at higher than-normal rates in people who were exposed to a cloud of dioxin from a chemical-plant explosion in Italy 17 years ago, researchers have found.
"We found a lot of cancer that was already known to be associated with dioxin" in laboratory studies and other research, said one of the study's authors, Dr. Adriana Troni of the University of Milan.
An Environmental Protection Agency researcher coordinating a review of dioxin's health dangers said the study, to be published today, was "one more nail in the coffin" for dioxin.
"This, together with other studies, clearly supports that dioxin has the potential to cause cancer in people,
just as it does in every animal it's been tested in," said Linda Birnbaum, the EPA's director of environmental toxicology. "The weight of evidence is becoming overwhelmed."
The study, covering the period 10 years after the 1976 chemical-plant explosion in Seveso, Italy, removes one of the last remaining doubts about dioxin's deadly effects, Birmbaum said.
"For years people have said, 'Seveso had such high exposures, but we haven't seen any cancers.' We've been saying we just haven't waited long enough," Birbaum said.
Proving that dioxin causes cancer in people, not just animals, has been important because efforts to clean up dioxin have caused tremendous expense and inconvenience, such as the federal buyout and evacuation of Times Beach. Mo., after dioxin was discovered in 1982.
In the completed study, the researchers determined the number of cancer cases in more than 36,000 people with varying degrees of exposure to a form of dioxin known as TCDD. The researchers then compared that group with 180,000 people living nearby who were not exposed.
Of the study group, the 4,824 people with moderate exposure to dioxin had 2.8 times the liver cancer risk of the unexposed population. The exposed group had 3.7 times to 5.7 times the risk of leukemia and lymphoma, the researchers found.
The 31,647 people with the smallest exposure to dioxin had double the risk of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and 3.5 times the risk of cancers called soft-tissue sarcomas, which can occur at various places in the body.
A separate group of 724 people heavily exposed to dioxin did not show a statistically significant cancer
increase, but researchers said the group was too small to allow meaningful conclusions.
He said there was little remaining question about the danger of dioxin, but questions do remain about how widely people are exposed to dioxin.
Dr. Olav Axelson of University Hospital in linkaged worker exposure to dioxin and related chemicals, said, "This is what we have been expecting to see."
Birnbaum said other research is showing that dioxin, in addition to causing cancer, also can have effects on the human reproductive system and the immune system.
The term "dioxin" refers to a family of chemicals produced as by-products in many chemical processes using chlorine. They also are released when chlorine-containing substances are burned in incinerators.
Azerbaijanis await referendum returns
The Associated Press
BAKU. Azerbaijan — Azerbaijanis voted yesterday whether to keep their democratically elected president out of power following his ouster by soldiers and replacement by a longtime Communist boss.
Voters in the strife-torn former Soviet republic turned out in large numbers to respond to the single referendum question: "Do you trust President Abulafaz Elkhebye?"
Official results were expected within three days, and Elicet's chances of winning appeared slim.
enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.
At polling stations across Baku, people said they voted against Eicibey, blaming him for Azerbaijan's economic hardship and military losses in a 5-year-old war over the secessionist ethnic Armenian
"They are not leaders. They are enemies of the people," Jafar Mageramov, an English teacher, said of Elcibey and his followers.
A "no" vote would be a major political victory for acting President Geidar Aliev, the former head of Azerbaijan's Communist Party who called the election. Aliev returned to power when Elcibey fed Baku after a military rebellion in June, and putsch leader Surat Huseyov, 34, was made prime minister.
Aliev, 70, hopes the referendum will legalize Elcibey's ouster and cement his own power in the nation of 7 million people.
Aliye is viewed as pro-Moscow, and Elibec bouried neighboring Iran and Turkey and refused to join the Commonwealth of Independent States, the
alliance of former Soviet republics.
Elcibey, a 54-year-old former dissident, lost power one year after he became Azerbaijan's first democratically elected leader. He has remained boiled up since the unrising in the village of Keleki.
Elcibey and his Popular Front urged a boycott of the referendum and accused Aliev of seeking to establish authoritarian rule.
"Without falsification, they will not achieve the necessary results," said Javet Bairamov, a Popular Front official observing the balloting.
Election officials reported an 82 percent turnout two hours before polls were to close. The referendum had to draw more than half of the 4 million registered voters to be considered valid.
Aliev has promised to hold new elections if voters decide to remove Keliriex from office.
Bosnian Muslims want more in land division
SARAJEVO. Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian President Alja Izetbegovic will return to peace talks in Geneva to squeeze out more territory from his Serb and Croat rivals.
But an overhaul seemed unlikely. Bosnia's Serbs and Croats, whose assemblies have adopted the plan, already have said there can be no more changes in the government's favor.
As many as 200,000 people have been killed and 2 million driven from their homes during the 17 months of war in Bosnia.
On Saturday, Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic said the plan as it stands was "the last chance for the Muslims." The international mediators had given the three sides until today to come up with a response.
The Parliament of the Muslim-led government declared Saturday that a plan to partition Bosnia into three ethnic states could be accepted only after changes. They told Izetbegovic to seek adjustments to the proposal.
Meanwhile in Mostar, civilians accompanying a U.N. convoy left the embattled city after being
trapped there for three days by Muslims who feared renewed Croat attacks.
The plan to end the war would give the Muslim-led government 31 percent of Bosnia. Serbs would get 52 percent — down from the 70 percent of Bosnia they now control — and Croats 17 percent.
Nigerian leader vows to return from exile
Izetbegovic in the past has demanded 40 percent.
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
LAGOS, Nigeria — It is a classic scene replayed throughout history. A popular figure returns from exile during a time of crisis to claim power, bringing peace to the country or plunging it into bloodshed.
Moshood K.O. Abiola, the wealthy businessman who apparently won the June 12 presidential election, is about to play that role. He is preparing to end a three-week absence on Thursday and, he promises, assume office.
"When M.K.O. comes home, nobody will have a choice any more," said Lagos cab driver Ojo Gibena. "He is who we elected the president."
Nigeria has been thrown off-balance by recent political events.
On Saturday, the nation's top unions began a strike aimed at forcing out the new government, which has promised to hold elections early next year.
Last Thursday, dictator Gen. Ibrahim Bangabida resigned under pressure and left power in the hands of an "interim government" of discredited civilian supporters. There is no commander-in-chief, creating a dangerous power vacuum at the top of the military hierarchy.
The walkouts have virtually stopped the oil production that brings Nigeria 80 percent of its revenues. Abia has been trying to increase the economic pressure urging the United States and Britain to toughen their limited sanctions against Nigeria.
Babangida began the crisis by voiding the June 12 presidential election that, by all accounts, was won overwhelmingly by Abiola. More than 100 people were killed in ensuing riots. Tens of thousands of people have been streaming back to their ethnic homelands out of fear that the situation will collate into ethnic conflict.
Abiola is a member of the Yoruba
tribe from southwest Nigeria, where much of the nation's wealth is located. The northern Hausa-Fulani tribes traditionally have dominated political and military life.
When Bambangia left office in a ceremony in Abuja, the capital, the four governors of Yoruba-dominated states boycotted the event out of loyalty to Abiola.
It is likely that if Abola were to proclaim himself president and begin acting like one, the governors of these four states would throw their loyalties to him — a potentially frightening split in a nation deeply scarred by attempts at secession.
One of history's worst civil wars broke out in 1967 when the southeastern lob tribe tried to form the nation of Bifraa, which resulted in a three-year war that killed an estimated 1 million people.
Both crises were the results of splits in the military that has long dominated this nation during its 33 years of independence. Many knowledgeable Nigerians are deeply troubled by the fact that Bangabida left behind no successor as commander-in-chief of a military rife with rivalries.
In 1980, Babangida narrowly survived a coup led by officers in his military who wanted to revive the idea of a southern breakaway nation.
"As sure as the shah had to go, so will I by the grace of God be in the office to which I was democratically elected," he said. "There is no if about it."
In an interview from London last week, Abiola drew a parallel to the ouster of the shah of Iran and the triumphant return from exile of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
He may have to sneak in. The previous government issued an arrest warrant against Abiola for allegedly violating air traffic rules when he left the country in his private jet three weeks ago.
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NATION/WORLD
Monday, August 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Warlord may be target of U.S. raid
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Elite U.S. army troops raided a building in southern Mogadishu before dawn today, snaking down ropes from hovering helicopters.
It was not clear whether the objective of the raid was Gen. Mohamed Farrah Aidid, the renegade warlord wanted by the United Nations in the Middle East, Pakistani peacekeepers and 11 other U.N. troops.
But one of the missions of 400 elite U.S. Rangers sent to Mogadishu last week was expected to be ridding the city of Aidid and putting an end to almost daily attacks by his militants on U.N. forces.
The raid, which involved more than a dozen heli- conters, followed an earlier mortar and small-arms
attack by multiamen on Mogadishu's old international airport, now a U.N. military encampment.
There was no word of casualties in either incident, and U.S. and U.N. military officials in Mogadishu could not be reached for comment.
A senior White House official said "there was a routine search and seizure operation" involving 10 to 15 U.S. helicopters operating under U.N. auspices.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that between eight and 10 people were apprehended, but the official offered no further details. The official spoke aboard Air Force One while returning with President Clinton to Washington from his vacation.
Reporters and TV cameramen using night-vision lenses saw at least half a dozen Rangers drop by rope from helicopters over a building near Digter Hospital in an area known as an Aidid strongpoint.
The raid began soon after 3 a.m. today (7 p.m. CDT yesterday) with the thunderous buzz of helicopters
whirling over Mogadishu's southern sector
Two nuffled explosions were heard.
About an hour later, reporters on the roof of a hotel about a mile away saw what appeared to be a U.S. Army Blackhawk helicopter land at the scene and probably to take out the Rangers. No gunfire was heard.
In the earlier attack on the old airport, at least eight explosions were seen or heard before midnight.
Clinton ordered the Rangers to Somalia after a U.S. military vehicle was ripped apart by a remotely detonated mine on Aug. 8. killing four soldiers.
Elders cling to civil-rights leadership
The Associated Press
Two notices were served on the civil rights movement at the 30th anniversary march on Washington: the young army officer, a lieutenant, but the old army's trot to retire.
"We believe this march is not a bred-
diction but a rebirth," said Joseph
Lowery, 70, president of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference for
the past 17 years.
There was some talk that maybe the movement's elders would "pass the torch" of responsibility for social change at this celebration of the dream of equality Martin Luther King Jr. embassed on the nation's psyche.
But on Saturday, fond remembrance prevailed, and the old guard made it clear that fond remembrance will endure.
"We're going to celebrate the march on Washington until there's nothing left to celebrate," declared Benjamin Hooks, 68, who retired from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and resurfaced at the helm of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights.
The young, however, made a few things clear, too.
"We let everybody know we will challenge, seriously, their leadership," said Carl Upchurch, 35, head of the National Urban Peace and Justice
Movement and the most vocal critic of Saturday's festivities. "They're on notice now."
Upchurch, along with three other leaders from his group of reformed-street-gang members, appeared at Saturday's march, even though they had said they were not coming.
They stood with NAACP executive director Benjamin Chavis, 45, who pledged his group's support of efforts to curb violence in the inner city.
"We have worked with these gang members for over a year," Chavis said. "They are my friends. I intend to work with them in every community in this nation."
come in our circles. He is making a valiant effort to link the traditional civil-rights efforts with our current struggle."
Upchurch said, "Ben Chavis is wel-
Other older Black activists, he added, have been affirmative.
added, have not been so forthcoming. But the young were. Upchurch's National Urban Peace and Justice Movement plans to link with the Student Coalition of Conscience, the teen-agers and young adults who worked with Saturday's march.
They want to "weave young America with urban America," Upchurch said, and take this mixture into every major civil-rights forum, to tackle the problems affecting the young: unemployment, poverty, murder.
Racial equality improving but not enough, poll says
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Six in 10 Americans believe the nation has made substantial progress toward the dream of racial equality that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. invoked 30 years ago, according to an Associated Press poll.
But a majority also agrees with organizers of Saturday's 30th anniversary March on Washington that getting involved is still a major problem for minorities.
The march was intended to push demands for "Jobs, Justice and Peace." Organizers hoped it also would serve to refresh what the poll
found to be hazy memories of one of the greatest moments of the civil rights movement.
Nine percent of Americans are not at all familiar and an additional 27 percent are not too familiar with the Aug. 28, 1963, civil rights gathering of more than 200,000 people.
"Sounds strange to me," King's daughter, the Rev. Bernice King said. "That was the event that made the movement national. Everybody that I talk to, if nothing else, they know the I Have a Dream" speech because every January it is focused on on."
clear memories of the march, the poll indicates. But older Americans are almost as likely to draw a blank as young adults, whose schooling generally includes black history.
King's daughter noted the changes that have occurred since 1963.
"We have moved from absolutely two separate societies to a society on track to trying to create what my father called the 'beloved community', where everyone is respected for what they bring to the table," she said in an interview in Washington on Fox Morning News.
The poll taken a week ago by ICR Survey Research Group of Media, Pa.
part of AUS Consultants, found 59 percent said there been "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of progress toward King's dream. The third who see little or no progress include 31 percent of whites and 47 percent of blacks in the poll.
In the poll, 33 percent of Americans think the economic situation of minorities is getting better, and 23 percent think it is getting worse. But those who say there has not been much progress over the years also think by a 3-2 margin that the economic situation of minorities is getting worse today.
0100
East Coast prepares for Hurricane Emily
The Associated Press
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Waves along the shore weren't big enough to interest surfers yesterday, but Hurricane Emily was on a blustery path toward land, and coastal residents rushed to stock up on food and supplies.
Some people, with memories of Hurricane Hugo still fresh, made plans to leave.
"I wouldn't want to go through the fear again. It's easier to get out than to stay." said William Holden, who left his North Myrtle Beach condominium to return to his home in New Jersey.
"If it's going north, I'm going south. If it's going south, I'm going north," said shrimper Larry Cobb, whose shrimp boat Bridget floated on the placid water of Shem Creek in Mount Pleasant.
Cobb remembers all too well well raiding out Hugo on his boat. The storm smashed into Charleston in September 1989. It caused at least $5.9 billion in damage and killed 85 people.
At 11 a.m. yesterday, Emily was located southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C.
Emily was moving west-northwest at 9 mph. Its top sustained wind speed was about 80 mph with some strengthening expected. A National Hurricane Center advisory projected the storm could make landfall tomorrow, possibly in North Carolina or even much farther north.
"It continues to pose a threat to the East Coast," said Bob Sheets, the director of the National Hurricane Center.
He said hurricane watches could be posted for sections of the coast late yesterday. A watch means hurricane conditions pose a threat. A warning means hurricane conditions with sustained wind of more than 74 mph are expected within 24 hours.
On North Carolina's Outer Banks island chain, residents were on the alert.
"Right now, you wouldn't even know if anything is going on," said Andy McCann, owner of the Nags Head Pier. "The ocean is flat. There aren't any surfers out there."
In Manteo, N.C., Dare County Emergency Management officials met to review plans, assistant director Cheryl Booth said.
"There are no shelters, no safe place to go, when a hurricane strikes," she said. "They will order an evacuation once they decide how long it's going to be before the hurricane strikes."
The population of Dare County is at its peak right now, more than 100,000.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency sent several trucks with emergency supplies from Miami to Thomville, Ga., which will be dispatched when it's clear which areas are most affected by the storm, said an agency representative Morrie Goodman.
In Charleston, South Carolina Electric & Gas Co. made sure its generators and supplies were in place. The Navy said 16 ships and seven submarines from the Charleston Navy Base were ready to head to sea, if necessary, to avoid the storm.
The Coast Guard reminded boaters not to try to ride out the storm in small craft. A dozen people died during Hugo trying to do that, the agency said.
The Yugoslavian freighter Kapetan Martinovic was also ordered to weigh anchor and leave the harbor to ride out the storm. The 500-foot freighter has been in the harbor since last fall when it was detained by the federal government, which froze $450 million in former Yugoslavian assets.
Mary Connelly of R&B Creations, a t-shirt printing company, had given scant thought to a Hurricane Emily T-shirt.
"Right now I'm more concerned with what I need to do to get prepared," she said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 30, 1993
9
THE NEWS in brief
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LAS VEGAS
Fire breaks out at new structure in casino district
Flames engulfed an under-construction observation tower yesterday and forced hundreds of gamblers to flee the adjacent 22-story Vegas World Hotel Casino. No one was hurt.
The fire broke out on the Stratosphere Tower around midnight and ragged for three hours until burning itself out, fire officials said. Flames leaping into the early morning sky could be seen for miles, and Las Vegas Boulevard became gridlocked before officials closed it to traffic.
Hundreds of guests evacuated the 1,049-room Vegas World casino and hotel but were allowed to return a few hours later.
Guest Gilbert Scheeringa of Tucson, Ariz., said he heard two big explosions and looked out "to see flames falling past my window."
The cause of the fire was not known, but Fire Chief Clell West said there was no indication of arson. The fire was fed by plywood construction materials and equipment inside the concrete tower.
The tower, which is about half completed, rises about 500 feet above the northern edge of the Las Vegas Strip. The finished version is to stand 1,012 feet high, and promotional material says it will be the tallest free-standing observation tower in the United States.
Construction of the $32 million tower began in February 1992, and it was scheduled to open next summer.
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka Suicide team attacks ship
A Tamil suicide squad rammed an explosives-packed boat into a naval vessel in northern Sri Lanka yesterday, killing 12 sailors, the military said.
There was no immediate information about rebel casualties in the attack off the northern Point Pedro, a military representative said.
Yesterday's attack was the most violent in several days of renewed fighting between the navy and guerrillas, who are fighting for a Tamil nation in the north and the east.
In the past, suicide teams have killed political and military leaders by driving explosives-packed vehicles into cars carrying their victims.
On Thursday, rebels attacked a naval boat in Kaliil lagoon in northern Jaffna province, killing five sailors and injuring four others.
More than 35 people have been killed in the past week.
More than 18,000 people have been killed in the decade-old war. Tamils, who account for 18 percent of Sri Lanka's 17-million population, complain of discrimination by the majority Sinhalese.
ROME
Fires blaze through Italy
Firefighters yesterday controlled blazes that threatened the museum home of 19th century unification hero Giuseppe Garibaldi and that raged across the tourist haven of Capri.
Fires, many blamed on arsonists, have been burning from Sicily through central Italy in one of the worst fire seasons in recent years. More than 173,000 acres of woods and brush land have been destroyed.
Saturday, fire destroyed the pine grove Garibaldi planted around his house on the island of Caprera, north of Sardinia, but firefighters saved his home.
Meanwhile, authorities said they are investigating why a chair lift continued to operate to Monte Solaro, the highest point on the island of Capri, while a fire burned nearby Saturn
Passengers leaped from the lift rather than risk being carried near the flames. Eleven people were injured in the 13-foot drop.
The fire on the tourist island burned through the night but was under control by yesterday morning.
Flames also were destroying more than 1,235 acres in a park in the southern region of Calabria. The causes of the fires yesterday were not immediately known, though strong winds and extremely dry conditions contributed to their spreading.
BONN, Germany
Neo-Nazis attempt to rally
rence detained 36 neo-Nazis who tried to stage a rally in southern Germany and arrested two other extremists who carved wasakitas at a former concentration camp near Berlin, authorities said yesterday.
Authorities in the southern city of Stuttgart had rejected a request by neo-Nazis for a rally permit and rounded up 36 militants Saturday night at a roadblock outside the club. Cubs, knives, flags bearing swastikas and neo-Nazi song books were confiscated, Stuttgart police said.
In a separate action, police in the east German community of Oranienburg arrested two men, one 19 and the other 20, and accused them of carving skwasikas into statues at a
Twenty-seven other extremists made it to the rally site, where police searched and dispersed them.
Holocaust memorial at the former Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
A representative at the police station in Oranienburg, near Berlin, said he did not know what the statues portray.
AUSTIN, Texas AIDS linked to lesbian sex
A doctor who has handled dozens of AIDS cases says he is treating two HIV-positive lesbians who may have become infected through sex with women.
If so, David Wright's patients would be among the nation's first cases of the deadly virus transmitted through lesbian sex.
Wright said his two lesbian HIV patients likely did not contract the virus through shared needles or unprotected sex with men, two of most common ways the virus is transmitted.
Experts long have said HIV can be transmitted by vaginal secretions, especially if the receiving partner has an abrasion on the genitals or other body part in contact with the vagina.
"There's been a myth over the years that gay women were not at risk," said Jana Zunbrum, a lesbian and director of AIDS Services of Austin. "It's amazing, but there are still lots and lots of people who think only gay men are at risk."
CASABLANCA, Morocco
Graced by the planet's tallest minaret, a laser beam pointing the way to Mecca and a retractable roof, the world's second-largest mosque ones today.
Monarch dedicates mosque
King Hassan II will inaugurate the mosque bearing his name in a televised ceremony reinforcing his role as leader of Morocco's 24 million Muslims.
The inauguration culminates a controversy that began in 1986 to give this seedy port Africa's biggest, most luxurious mosque.
Some of the mosque's $500 million price tag was paid by forced donations from subjects in anation where many live in shacks of tin, scrap wood and plastic sheeting.
The Hassan II mosque ranks among the most magnificent religious edifices.
The main sanctuary is built on plings above the harbor. The 40,000-square-foot aluminum-tiled roof can open in five minutes, turning the area into a sunny patio. When the roof closes, the interior is lit by 50 Venetian chandeliers.
"I want the faithful who come here to pray to meet each other, to praise God, to be on firm ground while contemplating God's ocean and sky," Hassan said soon after announcing the project.
To keep the harbor's polluted waters from profaning the space under the mosque, a system of pumps, drains and filters will carry dirty water two miles away.
The sanctuary holds 20,000 worshipers. An additional 80,000 can gather on an esplanade outside and 50,000 more on sidewalks and ramps. An electronic command room replete
Travelers approaching Casabala can see the 656-foot, North African-style minaret from miles away. The tower is topped by a laser beam that shoots 20 miles in the direction of Mecca, so the faithful know where to turn to pray.
with video monitors operates the facility.
The minaret is more than twice the height of its nearest rival, the mosque in Mecca. But the covered sanctuary of the Hassan II mosque is only one-eighth the size of the one in Mecca, the Saudi Arabian city that is Islam's holiest site.
NORTHBORO, Mass.
Marijuana grown for taxes
NORTHBORO, Mass.
A 70-year-old man said he turned to growing marijuana to pay off the tax man.
Dean Firth Squier pleaded not guilty to charges after a raid Thursday netted 50 marijuana plants. But he admitted he planted the illegal herb seeking to settle a 1986 tax debt that has grown to $40,000.
"Oh yeah, it occurred to me I'd get caught," Squier said. "This was the last resort ... I would've been home free if I'd got the crop out."
He said he squandered his savings with hard drinking.
"I was drunk. I let things go," he said. "I felt I was being overtaxed, so I put it off. If you're drinking, you lose it."
Now he faces up to 17 years in prison and loss of his property.
Police Chief Kenneth Hutchins said people were feeling too sorry for Squier because he is a kindly grandfather.
"I'm a little concerned that people are looking at him with more sympathy than they should because of his age," Hutchins said.
GUGULETU, South Africa Township mourns student
Hundreds of Blacks from the squalid township of Guguletu outside Cape Town attended a church service yesterday for Amy Biehl, the American woman stabbed to death on their streets last week.
The regular service at St. Gabriel's Catholic Church was dedicated to Biehl, who was killed Wednesday by a mob of Black youths two days before she was to return to the United States.
The 26-year-old Fulbright scholar from Newport Beach, Calif., had been conducting research in South Africa for 10 months and had visited schools throughout the education programs for Gurukul township.
A procession at the service included a girl holding a picture of Biehl.
Six girls did a dance in Biehl's honor, while others read a poem and told how the slain woman's dedication to the disadvantaged inspired them.
Two teen-age suspects are to appear in court today, and police said they expected further arrests.
The racial attack was the first of three in three days in South Africa. Political violence and
racial attacks have increased since African-American and white negotiators last month see April 27 as the date for the nation's first multitribal election.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan Minister on loan default list
Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto accused the government of partisan politics yesterday after she was included on a list of loan defaulters that reads like a Who's Who of Pakistani politics.
A representative of Bhutto, who is trying to make a comeback, she repaid her loan and shouldn't have appeared on the list of about 16,000 names prepared by state banks at the request of interim Prime Minister Moeen Qureshi.
Several weeks ago, Qureshi, a former World Bank vice-president, said candidates in the Oct. 6 general elections would be disqualified if they were found to be delinquent on loans above $31,250.
It is estimated that delinquent loans taken from state banks since 1985 total nearly $2 billion.
Bhutto is on the list for a loan taken out to finance a newspaper that was seized by military rulers in 1979, said Shafqat Mahmood, a party spokesperson.
Also yesterday, the government ordered an inquiry into a prison riot Friday that ended Saturday when police fired on inmates, killing 16.
BEIJING
Dam break unleashes flood
A dam in a remote area of northwestern China burst yesterday, unleashing floods that have killed up to 200 people, officials said.
The Xinhua News Agency report said the dam in the Qinghai province burst Friday night but gave no details on casualties or property damage other than reporting "big losses."
But two days passed before the official media reported the disaster, an indication the human toll was heavy.
An anonymous official at the State Flu Control Headquarters in Beijing said 100 to 200 people died in the disaster.
Lan Rong, the head of the Qinghai Radio and Television Department in the provincial capital of Xining, said yesterday he had heard unconfirmed reports of more than 200 dead.
The dam of Gouhou reservoir burst about 11 p.m. Friday in Gonghe county, about 70 miles southwest of Xining, the Xinhua report said The structure was 231 feet tall and held 91 million cubic feet of water.
Xinhua said that an investigation was under way to determine why the dam burst and that a group from the Chinese Cabinet had arrived in the stricken area.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fall TV schedule proves not all the world is a stage
By Frazier Moore
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Miami gets "Empty Nest." St. Louis gets "The John Larroquette show." Massachussett's Nantucket Island gets 'Wings'
Or, shame to say, even your states!
But for all of you who live in Birmingham, Ala., or Hartford, Conn., or Rapid City, S.D. — well, prime-time TV doesn't know your towns exist.
In fact, not a single TV series on the fall schedule is set in any one of more than half of the United States. That means one-third of the population won't have a single home-state TV show to call its own. This, according to a new survey called "Hometowns of PrimeTime TV," compiled by the N.W. Ayer advertising agency.
Numbers crunchers there concluded that in the fall line, urban areas remain vastly overrepresented. Only 16 percent of all the nation's residents are city-dwellers, yet cities are the site of 44 percent of all regular series, says the report.
No fewer than 13 series will take place in the New York City metropolitan area. Nine are set in Los Angeles. Seven in Chicago. Four in Miami.
Meanwhile, much of the nation, including a wide swath of the heartland, will be out of sight and out of mind — on the networks, that is.
Of course, there's the empty honor of being a plug-in town for a series whose setting doesn't mean beans.
Or "Hangin' With Mr. Cooper"? (It's San Francisco.)
Or "Step by Step"? (It's Port Washington. Wis.)
For instance, do you even know where "Family Matters" is set? (It's Chicago.)
In the past, TV shows whose locale didn't matter were set in a generic netherworld in some unidentified Midwestern state. And funny how often the town names ended in "field." ("Leave it to Beaver") took place in "May"; "Father Knows Best" took place in "Spring."
On the other hand, Bostonians were, and probably always will be, proud to claim the highly indigenous "Cheers." Now that it's off prime time, Seattle residents are surely ready to embrace its new spinoff, "Frasier." Never mind that both series claim their real home in a Paramount Pictures soundstage in Hollywood.
But then, the state for most series locations is only a state of mind.
'Fugitive' runs up $14.4 million
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — "The Fugitive" keep enough moviegoers running to theaters to remain atop the box office charts for a fourth consecutive weekend.
The film, based on the 1960s television series about a doctor wrongly accused of killing his wife, took in an estimated $14.4 million, an industry source said yesterday.
The new Stephen King's terror flick, "Needful Things," opened in second place, earning about $5.3 million. The Jean-Claude Van Damme action movie "Hard Target," took in an estimated $4.7 million for third place.
"The Man Without a Face," starring Mel Gibson as a disfigured recluse, had its debut in fourth place with an
expected $4.1 million in ticket sales.
Since its Wednesday opening, it has collected $5.2 million.
"The Secret Garden" earned $3.2 million for the No. 5 spot, followed by "Jurassic Park" with $2.9 million and "Rising Sun" with $2.8 million.
Rounding out the Top 10 were "In the Line of Fire" with $2.7 million, "Sleepless in Seattle" with $2.1 million and "Free Willy" with $2 million.
Debut films that didn't make the Top 10 were "The Son of the Pink Panther," "Only The Strong" and "Fatherhood," which each collected an estimated $1.2 million.
The figures are based on estimated tickets sales from Friday through yesterday. Final figures will be released today.
Many moods flow on Joel's 'Dreams'
New album plays both angry, light
The Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. — Billy Joel is still a New York driver.
A conversation from his car phone, as he drives from office to home in Long Island's swanky Hamptons, is punctuated by angry bursts at fellow motorists and dark mutterings about cars that have New Jersey license plates.
It's a mellower Billy Joel at age 44 — but not too mellow.
"Huh? What? You want me to run them over? OK, thank you."
In between shouts, Joel talked about a loss in faith brought about by long-running legal problems, his family's inspiration for his work and a desire to the songwriting chronicler of middle age.
At least initially, fans are responding. His new album, "River of Dreams," entered the Billboard album chart at No 1, following eight of 10 previous studio albums that hit the Top 10. The opening dates of what Joel said would be his last extended tour were immediate sellouts.
He spoke just before depositions began in preparation for a trial on the $90 million lawsuit he brought against Frank Weber, his ex-manager and former brother-in-law.
His legal problems were compounded early in August when a struggling songwriter filed a lawsuit charging him with cheating. He was offered to the singer years ago.
When Joel started writing songs for "River of Dreams" more than a year ago, he found the music reflected his mood — bitter, angry, wounded.
"I had the blues," he said. "I thought, who the hell am I to write that kind of stuff because the perception of me is that I'm this hugely successful pop
star who's married to Christie Brinkley and who the hell am I to have the blues?
"I didn't want to say that I did. And I put it off and put it off. I was in a quandary. I borrowed a page from John Lennon because he was never one to hold back the way that he was feeling. I thought if he could do that, maybe I could try to do that."
So it's an angry Joel as his album opens. He rants about crumbling suburbia in "No Man's Land" and proceeds into the fully veiled attack on Weber in "The Great Wall of China."
And then a funny thing happens.
Joel lightens up. His mood improves appreciably, and by the second half of the album he's singing love songs to his wife and 7-year-old daughter, Alexa Ray.
The sequencing of the album mirrors the order in which the songs were written.
The key to the transformation is one line from "The Great Wall of China"
that Joel apparently took to heart:
"You only beat me if you get me to hate."
"There's a story about a loss of faith and a crisis and because of that, a philosophical realization and a reaffirmation of what is substantive and a reaffirmation of faith," he said. "In the end, that's the story of my life."
Joel updates "Uptown Girl" in a teen song about his wife. "All About Soul" is about the powerful, unspoken bond between husband and wife.
Joel originally began producing his album himself but realized he needed a musical foil.
His "Lullaby (Goodnight, My Angel)" was sparked by a conversation with his daughter as he tucked her into bed.
Danny Kortchmar, who has worked with Don Henley and Neil Young, was brought in. Musically, the result is an aggressive rock album — The Piano Man's favorite instrument is buried underneath a wall of guitars.
The Associated Press
Fall movie lineup caters to sophisticated, serious tastes
LOS ANGELES — When Hollywood wants to make serious movies, it knows just where to look — it looks elsewhere.
With Labor Day approaching and the summer film season winding down, the studios are making an artistic about-face. Instead of calculated crowd pleasers such as "Jurassic Park," "In the Line of Fire" and "The Fugitive," the fall movie lineup is filled with distinctly intelligent, high-minded works.
Broadway and bookshelves.
But only a handful of these films were born on the back lot. Some of the more notable fall releases — "The Joy Luck Club," "Short Cuts," "Six Degrees of Separation" — are not based on original screenplays. Instead, these and a half-dozen other autumn movies are adapted from hit plays, accclaimed novels or short stories.
With kids back in school, fall moviegoers are generally older and crave more sophisticated works. Trouble is a filmmaker rarely stumbles across a script that will satisfy this audience and these tastes. Most screenplays, in fact, are cookie-cutter variations on familiar themes.
So Hollywood producers turn to
"They sort of have to because they can't come up with anything that is serious on their own," said Robert Altman, who adapted "Short Cuts" from the pensive stories of Raymond Carver. "You don't just sit down and knock off a farther profound piece of work."
Fred Schepisi, director of "Six Degrees of Separation," said, "It's very hard to convince Hollywood to allow you to write original or different material. They also have this disease called the three-week rewrite. When you have something rewritten that fast, it can't be as deep as a novel that's taken three years to write."
Though there will be several lowbrow fall action films, including Bruce Willis in "Striking Distance" and "Demolition Man" with Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes, adaptations will play a prominent role through November:
In "The Age of the Innocence," director Martin Scorsese retells Edith Wharton's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. His performers include Michelle Pfeiffer and Daniel Day-Lewis.
David Cronenberg directs Jeremy Irons in "M. Butterfly," based on David Huwang's Tony-winning drama of sexual deception and obsession. It is only the second film Cronenberg ("Dead Ringers") directed that he didn't write himself.
"Even Cowgirls Get the Blues," Tom Robbins' wild novel about a hitchiker and a lot more, is being adapted by Gus Van Sant ("My Own Private idaho"). It stars Keanu Reeves and Uma Thurman.
The director-screenwriter-producer trio that made "Howards End" is adapting "The Remains of the Day," Kazuo Ishiguro's wistful novel about an English butler. The cast is headed by Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson.
Of course, simply adapting a play or novel is rarely a painless process. Some books, such as Michael Crichton's "Jurassic Park," are so straightforward and cinematic they translate easily to the screen.
Other works are far more complicated.
"The Remains of the Day" on paper is essentially an extended monologue of reminiscences. Thanks to Robbins' vivid style, "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" is as much an exercise in writing as it is in storytelling. "And The Joy Luck Club" is a complicated compendium of many intersecting lives.
Altman's "Short Cuts" has 22 character units by experience, accident
and geography. It also runs 3 hours,
seven minutes.
Not a standard summer film but right at home in the fall.
"I would have hated my film to be released in the summer. I wouldn't have allowed it," Altman said. "The tenor of attitude changes in the autumn."
"I don't think this is a typical movie. But any progress or change has to come from something atypical."
Altman's film is an interpretation of Carver's prose. Similarly, "Six Degrees of Separation" starts in some places where John Guare's play stops.
Adapted by Guare, the film follows as wealthy New York family whose home and life is transformed by a visitor who proves too good to be true.
"I just think it is such a marvelous play of ideas," said director Schepisi. Nevertheless, he added, it needed to be adapted for the screen, not just filmed on stage.
"You'll be amazed at how much the same it is and how different it is in presentation." Schepisi said.
There's only one concern with so many refined movies coming out at the same time, Schepisi said. "All the good ones will come out and kill one another off."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 30,1993
11
Jayhawks no match for No.1 Seminoles
Kickoff Classic worthwhile team needs work, Mason says
Kansan sportswriter
By Matt Doyle
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Gale Sayers came close on one of his predictions regarding the Kickoff Classic. But Kansas coach Glen Mason said he was going to make sure Sayers was dead after another one of his predictions after No. 1 Florida State smashed the Jayhawks 42-0 Saturday at Giants Stadium.
Earlier this month, Sayers, former Jayhawk great and pro football hall-of-famer, said that if his alma mater got beat 40-0 in the game, it could discourage many of the players and possibly hurt the program in the long run. Once again, Mason had to defend his decision to play the game.
"Id do it again in a second," Mason said after the game. "We had an opportunity to play the No. 1 team in the nation and we got a good measuring stick of where we are as a team. I know we are capable of being a better team."
The opportunity the Kickoff Classic gave the Jayhawks showed that Florida State is indeed one of the top teams in the nation and that Kansas is not among the elite in college football — yet.
Kansas failed on two good scoring opportunities in the first half, and subsequently the
Senior Jayhawk running back George White returned the opening kickoff 48 yards
to the Seminole 38-yard line, Kansas' drive stalled at the 19-yard line and senior kicker Dan Eichloff made a 36-yard goal. But Florida State was penalized for 12 players on the field, which gave Kansas a first down. Mason decided to take the points off the board, a move that would haunt the team because four plays later, Eichloff missed a 23-yard field goal, the shortest miss of his Javhawk career.
"I normally don't take points off the board, but if you get a chance like that, you go for it, especially that early. "Mason said. "You are going to need more than a field goal to stay with Florida State."
Florida State took advantage of the muss and marched 80 yards in 12 plays, culminating in Sean Jackson's 4-yard touchdown run for a 7-10 lead.
Late in the first quarter. Eichloff had a punt blocked by Sinegale tight end Lonnie Johnson. Cornerback Clifton Abraham recovered the ball in the end zone for the touchdown.
"When you play a team like Florida State you hope nothing bad happens." Mason said. " actually you hope something good happens to get some sort of momentum."
Any chance Kansas had of getting momentum before halftime was stuffed by a valiant goal line stand by the Seminole defense. The Jayhawks had eight consecutive plays from inside the Seminole 2-yard line, four of which resulted from Florida State penalties.
With 3:15 left in the first half, Seminole corner back Corey Sawyer and linebacker Derrick Brooks stopped freshman running back June Henley short of the goal line on fourth down from inside the 1-yard线 to thwart Kansas' best opportunity of the afternoon.
"I thought I was in," said Henley, who ran for 45 yards in his collegiate debut.
Florida State coach Bobby Bowden said he thought that series hurt the Jayhawks more than it helped the Seminoles.
Florida State seized the momentum by going 99 yards for a touchdown just before halftime. Fullback William Floyd ran in from 2 yards out for a 21-0 halftime lead.
The Seminoles relied on the passing of Charlie Ward in the first half. Ward threw for 137 of his 194 yards in the opening 30 minutes. After that, the Seminoles used the running game to defeat the Jawhaves.
Smith led all rushers with 105 yards on 11 attempts and Jackson added 64 yards. White led Kansas' running game with 74 yards on 15 attempts.
Jackson scampered in for a 30-yard touchdown only 1.31 into the second half, and reserve sophomore running back Marquette dropped the running run in the third quarter for Florida State.
Bowden said he was pleased by the effort of his team but added that Florida State will be tested later this season by a better caliber of teams than Kansas.
Mason said the Jayhawks did not play well and had a lot of work to do before facing Western Carolina in Saturday's home opener.
"Sometimes you think you are good and you're not," he said. "I know we are a better team. We got knocked down today, but we'll get up and go again."
Florida State's goal-line stand stymies Kansas
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Florida State linebacker Derrick Brooks said he knew what was in store for him and his teammates if Kansas scored a touchdown after it got inside the Seminole 10-yard线.
"In practice, we have conditioning drills for every touchdown we give up down near the goal line," Brooks said. "We believed that Kansas would not score. We kept telling ourselves, 'they can't get in.'"
Brooks and his defensive teammates kept the Jayhawks out of the end zone on 12 consecutive plays inside the 10-yard line late during the first half, thus keeping Kansas scores in Florida State's 42-0 victory against the Jayhawks in Saturday's Kickoff class at Giants Stadium.
Kansas trailed 14-0 late in the second quarter and was looking for a momentum building halftime. The Jayhawks drove 70 yards to the Seminole nine-yard line with less than eight minutes left in the quarter. But about five minutes and 12 plays later, Florida State denied Kansas access to the end zone.
Kansas reached the Florida State two-yard line in four plays, but the Seminole defense, led by Brooks, held off touchdowns — and extra conditioning during its next practice.
On first down, senior running back George White was stopped by Brooks, resulting in a one-yard loss. Three of the next four plays were offsides penalties on the Seminoles.
On third down, Brooks dropped junior full-back Costello Good short of the end zone. On fourth down, Brooks teamed up with cornerback Corey Sawyer to keep freshman June Henley out of the end zone and thus take away the best scoring opportunity for the Javahaws.
Brooks' goal line performance helped him win the game's Most Valuable Player award. He finished with 11 tackles and one quarterback sack.
Coach Glen Mason said his team's inability to reach the end zone was embarrassing.
"I'm an old offensive-line coach, and we won't wait until tomorrow to straighten that out." Mason said. "We'll straighten that out tonight because we're better than that."
The Kansas offensive line was affected by injuries in the game. Senior center Dan Schmidt snapped the ball only during field-goal attempts, and his replacement, freshman Jared Smith, left in the second quarter with a sprained ankle. Starting left tackle Rod Jones, a sophomore, suffered a sprained right knee, and senior tight end Dwayne Chandler sprained his right foot.
Jones' replacement, junior Derek Brown, was playing in his first competitive football game. He didn't play during high school or his first two years in college at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia.
Junior guard John Jones said the goal-line stand by Florida State left the offense with many questions.
"It was tough to have so many shots to score from the two and come up with nothing," Jones said. "We can't afford so many mistakes in such a key situation."
Sterling softball success
Senior softball pitcher Stephani Williams relies on her rise ball pitch in most games. "When it works, it's the only thing I have to use," she said.
Pitching, school and talking natural to player
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
The appearance of a rainbow probably means there is a pot of gold hidden under it for the typical person.
Kansas softball pitcher Stephan Williams is not a typical person.
"She thinks different than the normal person," Kansas coach Kalum Haack said. "We were on a van trip going somewhere for a game, and it was raining really hard. The rain stopped and a rainbow appeared. Someone on the team said, 'Look at that rainbow. You know what that means.'
Haack said Williams then replied with a detailed explanation of how raindrops form when light is reflected off the water droplets.
"School is in the forefront of my mind," Williams said. "In the fall I like to work on academics, in the spring I like softball. I'm torn between the two."
Williams is a returning National Softball Coaches Association all-American, and still maintains a grade point average above 3.80 as a senior majoring in environmental studies.
"If you want to know about anything, ask Stephan." Haack said.
Monica Gormley, Boulder, Colo., senior, joined the softball team with Williams as a freshman and has lived with her for the past three years. Gormley is no longer on the team, but said Williams has made her look at life in a different way.
"She gets all these interviews, but she stays level-headed." Gormiley said. "It's the same with grades. If I had the grades she has I would tell everybody. You have to squeeze that stuff out of her."
Calm and collected on the mound
on the mound
William's intelligence is what makes her a good pitcher. Haack said.
Williams, who pitched 41 of the Jayhawk's 47 games last year, racked up 292 2/3 innings accounting for 29 Kansas wins. As a returning softball star, she gets a lot of press, but Haack said she is an unselfish player.
"She never gets rattled," Haack said. "No matter what happens, she maintains her composure."
"She thinks of everybody before herself." Haack said. "All the personal awards she gets are no big deal. She would rather have you talk to someone else besides her. Stephani gets along with everybody."
William's sunny disposition was one of Haack's concerns during her freshman year. "I was concerned that she was being too nice," Haack said. "Your pitcher is a good athlete. What makes them good is their intensity."
"When I'm frustrated, I'm very analytical on the mount." Williams said. "I feel weird when I talk on the field. I'm not the kind of person to tell people what to do because if they make a mistake, I know that I have made those mistakes myself."
Williams said she was always thinking on the mound and therefore was not a vocal player during games.
Williams has been successful, but Haack said actual wins, losses or grades were not that bit a deal for her.
"She's not really into grades." Haack said.
"She just wants to be a good student. She is going to do her best in whatever she does. If she loses games, gae, she's not happy, but
"She never gets rattled.No matter what happens,she maintains her composure."
Kansas softball coach on senior pitcher
Stenbain Williams
she doesn't let it bother her."
This is William's philosophy, but she said she might have fallen slightly from it last season.
"Last year, I sort of adopted the philosophy that winning is everything." Williams said. "Winning and losing became a focus. I need to get out of that thinking this year."
Williams' energy and enthusiasm off the field
Williams says she tries to lead by example "I'm more of a person that goes out there and does it." Williams said.
Despite William's lack of a cheerleader personality when she pitches, she is definitely vocal off the field. She said she finally realized that she talked a lot her freshman year
"We were on a road trip, and I was taking the whole time." Williams recalled. "I was
telling everyone what each road sign said.
Finally, I realized I wasn't talking to anybody. Then, after about an hour, everyone told me to just shut up."
Another thing Williams does is eat nonstop — but she won't be seen munching on hamburgers or French fries, she prefers snacks on the healthier side. Haack said he wished he had the 5-foot-7, 145 pound pitcher's metabolism.
"She's always eating on the bench between innings," Haack said. "She eats sandwiches, fruit and drinks. When we're on the road we'll send Coach Luede and her to the grocery store to fill up her bag."
Williams said she was always worried about losing energy when she did not eat.
"I always eat stuff before the game," Williams said. "I need energy, especially when it's hot and humid. Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches are good."
As fall practices and games start, and Williams prepares for her senior season, she said she miss playing softball at the end of this year, but was anxious to get a job.
"Coach demands you to work hard," she said. "That has a lot to do with me being successful. I also glad that I had a lot of good classes here."
"I'll miss it, but there will be other things to take its place." Williams said. "If I had a choice, I would be a professional student. Those other things may not replace the competitiveness of softball, though."
"It's been a learning experience. I will never forget the people I've met or winning the championships with them."
After it is all over at Kansas, Williams said she will be grateful for Haack's instruction, the University's academics and the people she has met.
S
Senior Stephen Williams works up during practice at the jamaican field. Last year he pitched 41 of the 57 runs in his debut season.
12
Monday, August 30,1993
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WEEKEND GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS
William Alix / KANSAN
The Kansas women's golf team practices at the Alvamar public golf course. The team will play in its first tournament Sept. 10-12 in Las Cruces, N.M
Women's golf tees off new season
Team expects to improve on 93 showing
By Kent Hohlfeld
The Kansas women's golf team will try to continue its long climb through the Big Eight stands that began last year, when the team finished in a tie for fifth in the conference.
Kansan sportswriter
"We had a bad final day, otherwise we could have placed fourth," Kansas women's golf coach Jerry Waugh said.
last spring hampered a practice schedule that was already shorter than many of the team's warm-weather competitors in the South.
Waugh said that overall he was pleased that the team had played up to its abilities. He said bad weather
Waugh said that an especially bright spot for the team last season was the play of junior golfer Holly Reynolds. Reynolds, now a senior, was selected to play in the regional competition and finished 15th in the nation.
"We have really good freshman recruits," Reynolds said. "That combined with the people returning should give us a lot of depth."
"I was really pleased with the way I played." Reynolds said. "I don't really expect anything; I just go out every day and do the best I can. Ending 15th was just frosting on the cake."
Reynolds thought that last year's team played to its ability, and the experience and maturity the team gained would help this year's squad. She said the team had improved its depth over her previous years at Kansas.
This year's golf team will return all but senior Cathy Reinbeck. With almost the entire team returning, Waugh said he hoped to see the consistency of experienced players combined with the talents of newcomers.
Three such newcomers with high expectations are freshmen Missy Russell, Lori Lauritsen, and Tara Donnelly, a transfer student from Mississippi. Waugh said he expected all three newcomers to challenge for spots on the five-person travel squad.
Waugh said he hoped the increased depth would translate into lower averages for his team.
"We shot a lot of 330's and 340's last year" he said.
Waugh said that a team needs to shoot between 305 and 315 to be competitive in the Big Eight. He said this year's team had the ability to accomplish that and compete for an upper-division finish. Waugh said that he would be able to evaluate his new players better during the fall season.
Junior Anne Hobrook said that she thought this year's team had the potential to post a top-three finish.
"This year's team is closer going into the season" Holbrook said. "We all know we have to do better than last year."
Holbrooksaid that golf was a mental game and that she thought her improvement in that area last year would help her this season.
"If we could finish in the top three that would make my season," she said.
Single in 12th inning leads Royals to 5-4 win
Associated Press
He let Greg Gagne hit.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Most managers might not consider doing what Kansas City's Hal McRae did to beat Boston 5-4 in 12 innings Sunday.
Gagne, who struck out five times in a 2-1, 11-inning loss the day before, was 0-for-27 against Boston pitches this season when he stepped to the plate to face John Dopson with one out in the 12th. Wally Joyner, who had singled and been sacrificed, was on second.
On a 2-2 pitch, Gagne singled up the middle for the win.
"I have confidence in him when he's at the plate," said McRae, who originally gave Gagne the day off but brought him in for defense in the late innings. "So he struck out five times. I still had faith in the guy. He's my guy and I go with him."
It was a gesture Gagne appreciated.
"Definitely," Gagne said. "I wasn't too happy with yesterday, real frustrated and a little angry. But you have to tip your hat to them. They have some good pitchers over there."
"It was a long, long day," Boston manager Butch Hobson said. "We battled as hard as we could like we have all year. I'm proud of these guys. They just got the ground ball that got through."
Dopson, 7-9, the sixth Boston pitcher, gave up
a leadoff single to Joyner and Gary Gaetti sacrificed. Gagne's hit made the Royals 1-5 at home against the Red Sox this year.
Mark Gubicza, 4-6, shut out Boston on two hits for two innings.
The Red Sox took a 2-10 lead in the second. Mo Vaughn led off with his 21st homer, and Scott Cooper walked and eventually scored on David Cone's wild pitch.
Cone allowed 10 hits and four runs in 8 2-3 innings, striking out six and walking two.
Joyner's third triple of the year and Gaetti's sacrifice fly produced a run in the Royals second. Chris Gwynn doubled leading off the third and eventually scored the tying run on Danny Darwin's wild pitch.
Darwin pitched seven innings, allowing four runs on eight hits. He walked two and fanned six
George Brett stole second base in the third inning and joined Willey Mills and Hank Aaron as the only major leaguers with 3,000 hits, 300 homers and 200 steals.
Brett, who went 4-for-5, hit a high bouncer that went over second baseman Scott Fletcher's head for a double in the fifth and Mike Fetcarline's single made it 3-2.
Mike Greenwell and Andre Dawson singled in the sixth, then the Red Sox took a 4-1 lead on RBI singles by Cooper and Hatcher. McReynolds' ninth homer in the sixth made it 4-1.
The Associated Press
Brett's 300th steal earns honor
KANSASCITY, Mo. — George Brett scaled a height yesterday only achieved by Willie Mays and Hank Aaron.
With a stolen base in the third inning against Boston, Kansas City's designated hitter joined Aaron and Mays as the only major leaguers with 3,000 hits, 300 homers and 200 stolen bases.
Brett, 40, was walked by Danny Darwin with one in the out third inning of Kansas City's 5-4, 12-13 victory over Boston. A moment later, he stole second ahead of catch Tony Pena's throw.
"It's not like 300 homers or 3,000 hits," Brett said. "But it's nice to be in the same company as Hank Aaron and Willie Mays. Let's be realistic. You play 20 years, get 10 a year, that's 20. But when you combine it with the 3,000 and 300 hits, it's pretty special."
Lind signs 2-year deal with KC
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Second baseman Chico Lind has signed a two-year contract extension that binds him to the Kansas City Royals through 1995, the club said yesterday.
Lind, who won a Gold Glove in his last season with Pittsburgh in 1992, is currently the top fielding second baseman in the American League with a .992 percentage. He has committed only four errors. He went into yesterday's game with a .251 average. His lifetime mark is .254.
Terms of the contract were not announced.
"Jose Lind is an important part of the nucleus of players we have worked hard to put together the past few years," said general manager Herk Robinson.
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Monday. August 30.1993
13
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
VENETIAN
Jackie Vogel, Chicago graduate student, tackles London Seely, Chicago senior. The Kansas Women's Rugby practiced yesterday at Shenk Complex, the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The drill was designed to teach skills required for the rugged sport.
Women tackle game of rugby
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Rugby, defined as a form of football in which forward passing, substitution of players, and time-outs are not permitted, usually does not connote women.
Yet women are participating in this traditionally rised sport.
Kansas's first women's rugby team formed last year under the direction of graduate student Jackie Vogel, a former player with the Boston Women's Rugby team, and senior Mendell Frohlin, a newcomer to the sport.
Vogel contacted Norm Chase, a 16-year rugby veteran, to coach the team.
"I've loved what I've gotten out of the game," Chase said about why he was coaching. "And I wanted to give back what I've gotten out of it."
Chase played rugby at Kansas State.
Yesterday's practice at Shenk Complex
the playing field at 23rd and Iowa streets, was the team's second practice of the new season. Chase had the 10 players doing drills for ball handling and conditioning.
One drill was similar to the child's game "duck-duck-goose." One player would toss the ball to the next person in the circle, then take off sprinting to return to her spot before the ball could be tossed around the whole circle.
Another drill focused on tackling. Chase would call out a player's name in random order to have her run straight across the circle of players. The player in the middle had to take the runner down and recover before the next runner bound across the circle.
Frolio said this year's team had about five or six returning players. She said some of the new players had experience and some had no clue about rugby.
"I know I had no clue when I started." Frol-
io said. "They just threw me in a game and said 'go.'"
First year player DaVonne Zentner learned about the team through its information booth set up at the Kansas Union during Hawk Week. She said had never played rugby before.
"I always wanted to play football," said the almost 6-foot tall junior. "But not with men because I thought I would get killed."
She said she enjoyed the game because it was the only women's contact sport.
Chase characterized a woman rugby player as someone fit — not big and bulky, very athletic and a woman dedicated to self and group improvement.
The women's rugby team practices Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6 p.m. The team will take on Northeast Missouri State and Kansas State in the Heart of America Select Side Tournament Sept. 11 in Kansas City, Mo.
Seles makes appearance at U.S. Open festivities
Tennis stars honor Ashe
NEW YORK — Monica Seles made her first public appearance at a tennis event since her stabbing in April, returning yesterday to the scene of her 1911 and 1922 U.S. Open triumphs to join the tennis world in remembering Arthur Ashe.
The Associated Press
Seles, smiling at court side the day before the Open began without her in the draw, waved to 13,000 fans who gave her a standing ovation. She sat beside Ashe's widow, Jeanne, and daughter, Camera, signed autographs and, at one point, leaned over a railing from the president's box to exchange a kiss and hug with Jennifer Capriati.
"It's a very special day," said Seles, who asked Saturday to attend this exhibition. "I wanted to be here because I love Arthur and I want to support his Foundation for the Defeat of AIDS."
Still unable to practice because of the back wound from her attack in Hamburg, Germany, by an obsessed Steffi Graf fan, Seles was interviewed shortly afterward at Vail, Colo., where she has been undergoing physical therapy. She also appeared in a televised interview last week. But this appearance at the National Tennis Center marked the first time she has come back to the crowd, back to a court and back to public life.
"New York loves Monica Seles," Alan King, master of ceremonies, said after the crowd's long ovation.
"I thought she showed a lot of guts coming here," said J. Howard "Bumpy" Frazer, chairman of the U.S. Open committee.
Seles, who flew up from her home in Sarasota, Fla., sat in a United States Tennis Association office until the exhibition began. Then as she started up the stairway in the stadium, she hesitated a moment as if afraid of going further Tournament director Stephen DeVoe reassured her.
"I said to her. 'Monica, there are a lot of people up there who want to pour a lot of love on you.'"
DeVoe said.
Men's No. 1 Jim Courier and No. 2 Pete Sampras played the first 12-point tie breaker exhibition but won't start for real until tomorrow or Wednesday.
As Seles stepped from the stairway shadows into the sunlight, gaily dressed in a cherry-red blouse, a white ribbon in her dark hair, fans shouted her name and applauded warmly. She smiled,iggled and appeared almost embarrassed. And she looked, even in sunglasses, as if that applause was some of the best therapy she has received.
Seles plans to hold a news conference today, shortly after her successor at No.1, Graf, begins play against Robin White.
When Ashe won the U.S. Open 25 years ago,
the disease that would lead to his death last February wasn't even known. Yesterday, some of the game's greatest players gathered in his name to help wipe out the virus.
The exhibition, which raised $114,000 for the Ashe Foundation for the Dreat of AIDS in its inaugural last year, drew retired four-time champion John McEno and Andre Agassi among other players, plus New York Mayor David Dinkins, heavyweight champion Riddick Bowe and former champ Evander Hollyfield.
"Arthur Ashe was a great man and someone I always looked up to," Sampras said, summing up why all the players appeared in the televised exhibition.
"I think in the past the players could have done more in their support of charities," said McEnroe. Ashe's longtime friend who is helping to lead one of Ashe's other charities. "It's really sad that it took Arthur Ashe dying to do something. But if that was where it started, maybe it'll all be worthwhile for everybody."
Among today's featured U.S. Open matches are four-time champion and No. 8 seed Martina Navratilova against Gloria Pizzichini; No. 4 Conchita Martinez against Sandrine Testud; No. 9 Anke Huber against Karin Kschwandt; men's No. 9 Per Korda against Wayne Ferreira and No. 14 Alexander Volkov against Jonathan Stark.
McEnroe, a television commentator at this year's Open after 16 straight years as a player, said he thought only five men — Courier, Sampras, Agassi, Stefan Edberg and Boris Becker—have solid shots at winning.
"Stefan is probably the longest shot of those five," McEnroe said. "He's won it two times in a row and the pressure builds up."
McEnroe was one of only three players to win three in a row, along with Ivan Lendl and Bill Tilden, winner of six straight during the 1920s.
"To me, it's a great opportunity for Andre and Boris," said McEnroe, who is close friends of both. "Jim and Pete are fighting for No. 1 in the rankings. It would make it so much more exciting if Andre or Boris won."
Agassi has been training with new coach Pancho Segura, a former great player and a pivotal figure in Jimmy Connors' career. The switch from longtime coach Nick Bollettieri has given Agassi more confidence and a stronger sense of what he should be doing on certain points.
"There's no question that since Wimbledon I've made some big improvements," said Agassi, who has gone back to his old full-swing serve instead of the tomahawk chop style he branded at Wimbleton while recovering from tendinitis in the wrist. "I feel very solid about my game, about my match play, my competitiveness.
"The serve is not determined by your backswing, it's determined by your execution. But using the full range of motion gives me more of a rhythm, something I can count on as the match progresses."
Winning Braves stay close to Giants
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Tom Glavine and the Atlanta Braves have made a habit this season of getting into trouble and then escaping
David Justice hit two-run homer, his fifth in five games, and Ron Gant drove in three runs with a pair of singles yesterday to back seven strong innings by Glavine as the Braves kept the pressure on the NL West-leading San Francisco Giants with an 8-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
The victory, Atlanta's seventh in eight games and 16th in 18 contests, kept the Braves four games behind the Giants. San Francisco beat Florida 9-3 at Joe Robbie Stadium later in the day.
The Braves, idle today while the Giants and Marines close out a three-game series, play host to the Giants for a three-game set beginning tomorrow.
The Braves, 10 games behind the Giants five weeks ago, have suddenly caught fire, making a race of it by sweeping three games from San Francisco earlier in the week.
"I don't think many people realistically a week ago — 10 days ago — gave us a chance," Glavine said. "But we took care of business in San Francisco to get back in this thing."
"It's going to be a big series, but there's still a lot of baseball left when that series ends." Atlanta Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "It doesn't stop there."
Glavine, 16-5, pitched seven innings for the win, giving up seven hits and five walks and striking out three batters. Glavine was helped by his teammates who made three double plays as he won for the sixth time in his last seven decisions.
"My best pitch was the ground ball when I got in trouble," Glavine said. "I've had the uncanny ability this year
to get into trouble and with one pitch get out of it."
The Braves turned the three double plays in the first four innings as Glavine struggled with his control.
"He put some runners on base, but the thing about Glavine is he knows how to get out of jams." Chicago manager Jim LeFebvre said. "He had the double-play pitch going today, and that's all he needed."
Atlanta broke open a scoreless game in the fourth off Greg Hibbard, 10-11, with four runs, keyed by Gant's two-run single and Justice's two-run homer, his 34th.
The Braves added three runs in the fifth on Jeff Blauer's third hit, an RBI triple, Gant's run-scoring single and an error by right fielder Glenallen Hallen.
The Cubs scored twice in the fifth on a solo homer by Hill, his second, and an assist by Kane. Justice drove in his third run of the game with an RBI single in the eighth.
Tar Heels bury Trojans in Pigskin Classic
The Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Two players named Johnson boosted North Carolina's football fortunes with a 31-9 victory over Southern Cal in the Pigskin Classic on last night.
Leon Johnson and Curtis Johnson helped the Tar Heels. No. 20 in the preseason poll, spoil John Robinson's return as coach of the No. 18 Troians after a 10-year absence.
Leon Johnson carried the ball 10 times for 94 yards and caught four passes for 35 yards. Curtis Johnson gained 78 yards on 17 carries.
Coach Mack Brown won his fifth season opener in six years at North Carolina, and the Tar Heels have won 20 of their last 24 opening games.
Robinson's plan to reinstitute the Trojans' famed running game ran
into an immediate snag. Dwight Mfcadden, the team's best rusher, broke his left ankle late in the first quarter. The sophomore gained 44 yards on seven carries.
His backup, Scott Fields, managed just 16 yards on seven carries. Converted tailback Deon Strother caught five passes for 50 yards and rushed for 13 yards on four carries.
Another Trojan left the game in the first quarter. Safety Mike Salmon, California Angels outfielder Tim Salmon's brother, brushed his left shoulder and did not return.
After the Trojans dominated the first quarter behind MFadden, the second half was all Tar Heels. Fields fumbled on a hit by Ray Jacobs, who recovered. Marcus Wall then scored a touchdown and the Tar Heels led, 21-3.
Trip Pignett kicked a 26-yard field goal on the first play of the fourth quarter and William Henderson scored from 8 yards out as North Carolina took a 21-13 lead.
Tyler Cashman gave Southern Cal a late touchdown when he caught a 5-yard pass from Rob Johnson. Cole Ford's point-after was blocked by Troy Barnett.
Leon Johnson scored from 19 yards out early in the second quarter for a 7-0 lead.
The Trojan loss was reminiscent of Robinson's debut as Southern cal coach in 1976. Missouri trounced the heavily favored Trojans, 46-25, resulting in immediate criticism. Robinson eventually had the last word when Southern Cal went on to win their remaining 11 games and the Rose Bowl.
Is your student organization
LOST...CONFUSED...WITHOUTFUNDS??? then don't miss the Treasurer's Workshop Presented by STUDENT SENATE and The University Comptroller's Office
Tuesday, August 31 7:00-8:30 p.m.
Pioneer Room, Burge Union
Topics will include:
* How to receive Student Senate funding *
* How to spend state funds *
* How to keep accurate records *
* Creating University accounts*
ComputerLand
841-4611
W3 Studio B6 Pro
W3 Studio B6 Pro
W3 Studio B6 Pro
ComputerLand 841-4611
SOFTBALL
KU
MANAGERS'MEETING
There will be a MANDATORY MANAGERS' MEETING on MONDAY, AUGUST 30 at 7:00pm in Robinson, Room 115. Rules will be handed out and league procedures will be discussed. All managers attending the Meeting will have first opportunity in signing up for league play. NOTE: Entries are accepted on a 1st come, 1st serve basis beginning at 8:30am thm 4:00pm on Tuesday, August 31 and Wednesday, September 1st. All team managers who do not attend the Managers' Meeting will not be allowed to sign up until September 1st at 2:00pm.
DIVISIONS
MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CO-REC Open, Greek, Residence Hall Club, Jayhawk
ENTRY DEADLINE:
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1st @ 4:00PM
ENTRY FEE:
- $25.00/TEAM
SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES, 208 ROBINSON, 864-3546
14
Monday, August 30,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Africans study KU legal services Cameroonian women aim to learn how to finance free counseling
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Four African professional women met with KU law officials and students Friday as part of a program sponsored by the United States Aid Agency for International Development.
Florence Arrey, a judge from Cameroon, said they were impressed by the U.S. legal system.
"We've learned very much about nongovernmental organizations and how they are funded," she said. "The process of democracy is practiced well in the States."
The four women, members of the Cameroonian League of Women Lawyers, are on a three-week tour of the United States. The purpose of the tour is to exchange ideas about legal programs and program funding.
Dennis Prater, director of Douglas County Legal Aid, said that the women were interested in his organization, in which KU students and professors provide legal services for people who can't afford legal help.
*Their questions dealt with how our student program is set up, funded and
Angie Hubbard, Overland Park senior, said that the women visited KU because of the law school's student volunteer program.
"KU is one of the only organizations in the area that provides volunteer legal aid while involving law students." she said.
taught," Prater said.
Arrey said that the problem of financing legal services in Cameroon lay in the nation's failing economy.
"Our economy is based on agriculture, and the past three years have been difficult for us," Arrey said.
In Cameroon, attorneys are still in the process of establishing law clinics, especially for students' use.
The women came to the United States to take a U.S. perspective back to their nation on the tactics and programs designed to aid poor communithis particular competition," said Donald Gyorog, mechanical engineering professor and team advisor. "What we're building is a rather sophisticated small racing car that can go up to 60 to 65 miles per hour—mostly from scratch." he said.
Arrey said she wanted to learn how to encourage lawyers to give free legal aid.
The Cameroonians spent three tours touring and studying the U.S. legal system in New York, Washington, D.C., and Cleveland. Kansas and Missouri were their final stops.
THE ROLLING STONES
William Alix / KANSAN
The Lawrence band Spamskimmer plays at the Union's Plaza as part of Student Union Activities "Tunes at Noon." Drummer Bill Colburn, singer Jeff Wright and bassist John Cutler entertained passers-by, Friday.
Union band
Formula race car design challenges engineering students
Success in summer competition is goal of new group
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
The blueprints are being drafted by a team of 22 KU engineering students who plan to build a miniature racing car for a national competition next summer.
Steve Grupinski, Lawrence senior, said that it was a trip to last year's Formula racing car competition that got him interested in gathering a team of KU students to design a contest car for the 1994 summer event, sponsored by the Society of Automotive Engineers.
"This is the first time in KU history that a group of students has entered
The society is a professional organiation that sponsors activities for people with an interest in all phases of mobility from mechanics to aerospace.
"We heard a lot about the Formula racing car competition and it sounded like something great to do," Grupinski said. "Four of us went up to the contest to get a feel for it and to see the caliber of the cars and the teams competing."
Grupinski said what they saw at the 66-team competition was incredible.
"There were actually teams there tuning their turbo-charged engines
with laptop computers so we were thinking, 'Wow, we really want to build one of these things?'
For Gyorog and the student team he advises, the Formula car race will be a brand new experience.
Gyorog said that the society sponsors events such as the Formula race car event to promote student interest.
"This year we're the rookies, so we have our work cut out for us," Grumpi-ski said. "That's why we're getting a good start on this whole thing."
his friends interested in the society. "It's one of the best learning experiences you'll ever come across."
John Patchin, Geneseo, III, senior,
said that Gyorog got him and many of
The main problem the team is facing now is financing. Patchin said that the more money each school has, the more options they can consider.
Gyorog said that of all the types of student engineering competitions he has seen, the racing car contest is the most elite. Every team will start with the same size engine, comparable to a motorcycle engine. It is the job of each team to decide on the full design of the racing car from aerodynamics
to suspension.
"It's a big commitment as far as money and time are concerned." Gyorogsaad.
On the average, students spend more than 100 hours a week in the engineering labs perfecting the vehicles.
"We have to build a frame, steering system, transmission and everything
— from whatever we can come up with through donations from companies and contributions from individuals," Grupinski said.
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How will Tae Kwon Do help you?
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MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
The Jaytalk Meeting Network is a smart, easy way to meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner. Call now to check out our new classifications and place a free ad!
10 LINES, 10 DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREE!
This week only...
Here's how it works...
To place an ad:
1. Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytalk Meeting Network section of the Kansan and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people to listen to your ad.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
2. Call the 900-number (you need a touch-tone phone) and listen to the message.The charge is $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own so the two of you can set up a meeting.
CALL 864-4358 TODAY TO PLACE AN AD
New classifications include sports, hobbies, and religion. STARTS SEPTEMBER 13TH
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, August 30, 1993
15
Athlete's The Foot.
PENGUIN
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE
DUMM SIZE REFRIGERATOR
FOR RENT
2 cubic ft $45
4 cubic ft $85
FREE DELIVERY!
926 MASS 843-4170
H
Laser Logic Sales·Supplies·Rentals
Don't sink this low...Recycle.
If everyone in America recycled only 10 percent of their newspapers, 25 million trees would be saved every year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
GRAS
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs
Classified Directory
TOUR
immunizations
108 Personal
110 Business
112 Personnel
130 Entertainment
130 Entertained
140 Lost and Found
100s
200s
1 LOUIS
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
335 Typing Services
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person of color, gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan 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 and any other applicable federal regulation. Imitation of discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, imitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
1
Announcements
100s
110 Bus. Personals
KU Women* Mary Kay Cosmetics free face and makeup services. No obligation to purchase. Personalized selection.
120 Announcements
CALCULUS Workshop. Learn skills for the success in Math 115 & 116 FREE! No registration required. 7:50pm, Monday, Aug. 30, 4032 Wesco Presented by the Student Assistance Center
BAPSTH STUDENT UNION. Thursday 6:30pm at The American Baptist Center, 1209 W. Rock Rd. Westerville, OH 45701. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, intramural sports, mission projects, friendships A
DANCE AUDITION TUXEDO Jazz Dance Ensemble seeks dancers with strong jazz, ballet or modern bigband. Mon Aug 30th 5:30m. Lawrence Arts Center 200 W. ball Call 749-6400 for info
JAZZ DANCE CLASS for beginning and experienced dancers. Lawrence Art Center Call 843-275-6011
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program
Help for student in any language
Study skills program to help with the comprehension and conversation skills. Tues Aug. 19-5pm.
402 Wescoe. Presented by the Student Assistance
learn techniques for success in Math 115 & 116
CALCULUS WORKSHOP
FREE!
Monday, August 30,
7-9 p.m.
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WORKSHOP
4035 Wescoe Hall
for students of any language FREE!
Tuesday, August 31, 7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall offered by the Student Assistance Co
FRATS! SORORITIES!
STUDENT GROUPS!
$100...$600...$1500!
Market Applications for the hottest credit card ever - NEW GM MASTERCARD. Users earn BIG DISCOUNTS on GM CERT! Quality for HIRTR!
Ralse as Much as You Want in One Week!
Call 1-800-932-0528, ext.65.
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING WORKSHOP
learn the Correll method
FREE!
400s
REAL ESTATE
www.400s.com
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
340 Real Estate
Wanted
370 Want to Buy
Wednesday, September 1,
7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
NOTETAKING Workshop. Learn how to listen more effectively and take useful notes using the Cornell Method. FREE Wed. Sept. 7, 1:30pm 6035 Wescoe. Presented by the Student Assistance Cen
130 Entertainment
MONTO DISCO Industrial, Alternative. Techno
DR R150 48VDC 100W 16&18 & over®
120VDC 100W 16&18 Near Park I48
140 Lost & Found
LOST-Thin navy blue sweatshirt w/rinsed white stripes & circular emblem. Lost between Law and Beverly Hills. One pair black wiredrimmed men's glasses on Jayhawk, bld. on 8-25. Sweet reward. call 865-237-9000.
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Accounting major familiar with Macintosh and BD accounting program. Blue Heron 837 Mass Apt.
Alamanda illumi center needs AM PM Dishwasher,
Bathroom, Kitchen, Laundry room, phone no, no phone call. Address 1204 Grace Ave.
Part-time position available for individual interested in working with laboratory animals in a stationary room. Full time position available in cages. Morning hours M-F - every other week. If interested contact Mount Powder Temporary Service Centre.
Aerobics instructor needed for 6m. class. $10.00
hr- experienced instructors only. 864-356.
Aerobics instructor need for b.a. class $10.00
Experienced instructors only 436-5346 Ask for
email: aerobics@univ-of-maryland.edu
Small design firm needs part time help 24-30 hours.
Good communication skills a must. Ask for RM $400
or RM $500.
SOTHAPIL UMPIRES. Recreational Services is looking for students interested in officiating in Intra-mural Sports. No experience necessary $40-$70 hr 9:00 am - Monday, 8:30 at 10:00 pm HR 9:00 am - Sunday, 8:30 at 10:00 pm
STUDENT TRAINER/CONSULTANT-MICRO-
COMPUTER. Deadline/9/14/93ALary: $550-
$650 monthly 20 hours-week Duties include use of
microcomputer, use of MS-DOS,
Windows and Macintosh computers. Provide
microcomputer support. Develop and maintain
experience in applications packages commonly in
application design, development, and materials, course descriptions, and mailing lists.
Other duties as assigned. Apply submit a letter of
application, a current resume to Barnes &
Barkley Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
66445. Applicants may be asked to give a short
instructional presentation and compare topic of
EMPLOYER.
Application Procedure. Contact the Graduate School at (013)-864-3301 for an application form and position announcement. Send completed application form, current resume and three letters of recommendation to Virginia Saylor. The Graduation Department Hall, University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66545
Duties: Assisting Graduate School dean in day-to-day operations; keeping track of fellowship applications; reviewing program reviews; carrying on correspondence with faculty; preparing job description and application form availablgift for staff tuition /lee rates. In addition, a
gift card may be sent to the student to
Apply: For a complete job description and application
materials, contact the Department of Stu-
dios Business Administration at
September 6, 1986. EEO/AA Employer
Required qualifications: Master's degree, organizational and administrative ability, superior interpersonal skills, good writing skills. Good word work ability. Preferred: Ph.D. and a knowledge of KI.
Part time position. The KU Printing Service is taking applications for work assist in UDK press production. Hours are 7 to 9 each morning the paper is printed. Fees are $240 per hour. $5.67 per hour. Apply at the KU Printing Service. 2425 W. 15th to 4. EOE
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-
nership. IAM and FIM, Bucky's drive in shi and sawa
Christian daycare needs reliable/enthusiastic
aftermilers. Experience preferred
Deadline: September 1,1993.
Child care and cook wanted from 3-4 M-F $6 an hour. call 842-6122
Children Learning Center in now hiring I am and 2
moms, Dr. Karen Bloom and Dr. Dawn Bloom. Through Friday weekends, Apply at
www.clearly-learningcenter.com
CRUISE SHIP NOW HURRY! Earn up to $1000 + / mo. + 10 word travel Summer & career employer benefits. Earn up to $250 more information call 1-866-614-0948 for ext. C7976. Drivers need for a fun job. Meet jobs like making water the Most Revenue Bus Carrier. Drive an old vehicle and have a good driving record. 82 hrs per week.
Established Lawrence band seeks female vocalist. Must have desire, creativity, and groove. We have an established vocal ensemble to acclimatize us. If you we always wanted to be on that bar stage and not just watching it the call for us, please send us a message.
Faculty family in Lawrence requires after school care for 10 year old boy and 7 year old girl, 10 to 12 years a week. Must have own bank. Salary negotiable. Call 843-3394
Child care wanted last November
meden evening. ~ Thur 32 Hours per week call
BQS
Full-time live in nanny needed for 3 active children (toddler, 4) L. Reliable, non-smoker, have own car. Housekeeping duties incl R/B + salary + go benefit. Previous exp. refs. Call 702-8325
EARN EXTRA CASH on weekends. Friendly cash needed for presents. Demonstrations in the KC
**Help Wanted:** Relable, responsible person to help create a job for an age range threes and seven. Call 841-6067 for an interview.
Ideal part-time position for mature graduate student in HDFL or related field: design, art, architecture (usually moms) and their children ages birth through five 2-3 hours per week (1 morning): $10 to $20 per hour. For more info call 843-8212 or send resume to "The Family Center" 6092 Orchard Drive.
Kansas and Burge Unions hire part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodian with varying schedules. Completion of Kansas University Kansas Union job specify, ROR
Needed before and after school child care for 2 students who have been in a removable contact Jackie 865-7127. Leave a message.
Office help needed 11:30-20:30 MWF 4:11-5:05 TJH must be a business major, be enrolled in at least 12 lbs. at KU have GPA of at least 2 and be a Kansasasant Call 841-693-9:M- F
Now accepting application for quality minded dependable individual for part time banquet service. Willing to train the right people. All Shirts are available. Apply at Adams Alumni Center, 1268 McKinney Drive
Outgoing, friendly, dependable person needed at local clubry club 1809 Crosgate
Part-time sewer needed. Would like some experience. COMCLAS, Inc. 2000 E, 2381; or call 865-748-9280.
FARTHE TIME SUPERVISOR M. Mass Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokhouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start up to $25,hr 20-30rs. e.w. and wendhs at $6-25,hr 20-30rs. e.w. and wendhs at Schumann Food Company. Business office at 719摩斯 (upstairs above Smokehouse). M-F. 9-4.
PHILLIPS 66 weeks cashiers to work the following
times, 6am-12pm, 1pm-12am, 12am-6am. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with public. Apply in person to PHILLIPS 66 - 900 Iowa.
Part-time telephone market needered noexperience. Incorporated, inc. 2200 E. Wheaton St., Akron, Ak. #436.
Nainteire Montessori School is interviewing for 3 positions. Spanish Teacher-must be native speaker. have experiencing working 6-12 yr olds. Experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children required. Hrs. 3.15-3.40 M. Junior-Flexible hours. 20 hrs/wk Call 843-8800
Phoenix City is now hiring part-time cleaners. Must have transportation and phone call 843-762-1900.
Read Books for Pay. Earn $100 per liter. Free Box 12 Gainesville FI. S2904
Box 12 Gainesville FI. S2904
Reliable responsible person to drive to my house to
have lunch three and seven. Call 864-275-3900
for an appointment.
The Resident Assistant (RA) holds a 10-month, 40% live-in position with the RA as an administrative, programming, and paraprofessional advising/facilitating patients with whom the RA lives on the floor and for the resident hall in general, working under supervision of the Complex Director. Required: At least one year of experience in the job or 30 or more credit hours. 1993-94 KU enrollment Compensation: The RA is paid 15% office openly the RA is emblematic.
Responsible highly motivated individual to work
10 to 30 hrs a day and obtain management
experience. Apply in person. University Photography,
2448 N. Iowa Suite 1
Sitter Solutions Inc. In is need of siters. Must have
business, be responsible and love children. Flexible
to work with any age group.
KU Students
MICRO SOURCE
MARKETING INC
management profession and make money doing it! Flexible hours, start at $5/hour + bonuses. Office work, we provide full training. Day and evening positions available, 100 Riverfront Rd. at Riverfront Square in North Lawrence. Apply between 9am and 8pm.
Learn the records
- construction needs part-time help.
Laboratories will亦需. Must be able to work mornings or afternoons.
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Fast growing company. Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth.
Now Taking Application
PYRAMID
No experience necessary. Flexible full and part time schedules. No canvassing or telephone sales.
Call 842-8025
STUDENT WORK
225 Professional Services
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate students to support the education of $841.66 per month. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU materials, and experience as a teacher (Maucoch). solid research skills, leadership experiences, organizational skills, sense of humor, communication skills. KU Info 420 Union for an application. Application must be received at 420 Union by 5pm, Friday.
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
various hours prior to 3 courses in chinchong cuisine).
TRAVEL HOURS: Sumitomo & Kishen & Kishen is accessible
TRAVEL HOURS: Sumitomo & Kishen & Kishen is accessible
SUB TEACHERS
prefer 3 courses in child develop
TIMES DAILY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the lawoffices of
For interview now!
SUB TEACHERS
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
Hospital quarterly Coordinated center. C-Commerz train-
ing office. Counseling center. C-Commerz train-
ing office. Counseling center.
235 Typing Services
Full & Part Time
The law offices of DONALDG STROLE
DONALD G. STROLE
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
der Women Word Processing. Former editor
der Women Word Processing in accurate pages of
letter type 882-453
Lindal G Stroke Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Are you Makein' the Grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makein' the Grade at 865-2855
Criminal Defense
VOLUNTEER NEEDED
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1978 Toyota Corolla, 5-speed, very reliable $285.00 or best offer 481-3713
108. mercury Cougar, wagon, AT 65, good shape
107.00 mei $1090/offer 846-8033
1984 Volkswagen Rabbit Wolfsburg, dependable,
low mileage, neon signable 429.333曼
186 1470 mobile home 2 brs. 3 baths. CA, cared
186 1470 kitchen equipment 2 brs. D call 841-
759-6600
1986 600R Ninja, New tires, chain, batt, tune
1/1800 B4-7620
1990 Schwins Suirra min. bike 21 spd. .21 in $330
386 IBM Compatible Computer 40MB 3.3 & 5
min disk drive 10GB board 14 gi mcu harmonic
386 IBM Compatible Computer 14 gi mcu harmonic
386 IBM Compatible Computer 14 gi mcu harmonic
$ for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5269
Body Boutique membership $10/mo. 2 window
bedding wedding gown,
Berry's Hotel, age 6-7, 372-3789
Bridgestone ME-4 Mountain Bike for 15 inch
Bicycle. Please call between 3:00 and
8:22. 842-1698
Double bed with bed shelf headboard #65. Color TV $295
STRIKE $1.00 Bed, Call 815-645-3151
Fender JP-60 Bass Guitar for sale *body body &
black pickups* Perfect con-
fected guitar for 2.5 & 5 mm.
(www.fender.com)
For Sale 23 in. 1990 Miele爬车 Shimano, Look and Profits components. Equiped to race
triathlons $235.00 B.O. $C. Call Dave! @ 843-2824
For Sale Fender Predators Bass Jazz Special.
$1,999.00
For Sale Fearless Freless Jazz Bass specni, also
Pewsey MMP A. P Head 749-248
For Sale: man 30 inch 8 inch Raleigh 12 sp
touring bike. Good shape. Good ride. Great price
TREW 399 all the extra. Brand brent was a giftjrnd twice. Leave message, along with offer.
TREW 400 (20) all the extra.
Gray contemporary love seat. Light gray with
daylight illumination. 48H x 20H x 19H for 50cm³. Call
@ 823-272-6888 at 823-272-6888.
GEBEAT RUQ = $ 8 x12^2 dark graun w / patiellenbale
GBEATR UQ = $ 8 x12^2 dark graun w / patiellenbale
400s
405 For Rent
Real Estate
Compact Discs
$5.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
3 bdr 2 bath apt for rent Campus Place Very close to campaion. Reasonable rent. Smoker please Call
5 or more, $4.95 each
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9:5:30
Huyundai 386XM SX M Ram 84 MHD SVG, mouse
dial happy. HJKD is k ideal for Work Processing
system.
---
IBM PS/ 720 (6/17) #286 expanded to 4 megabytes
IBM PS/ 720 (6/17) expanded to VGA graphics. Excel
Codebook. Phi 8441-5443
DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS
Full & Part-Time Openings.
like new 89-90 Puji dollar $00 28" frame, red call
Susan at 749-7421
Lizar for sale, 2½ foot black and gold Tegu.
Lizar for sale, 3½ foot black and gold Tegu.
good eater, gO. B O. B (913)-1271
Lizar for sale, 4½ foot black and gold Tegu.
1. Busperson $4.75/hr
2. Line Cook $7.25/hr
3. billing $5.25/hr
4. banquet Server $6.85/hr
5. Engineer $9.00/hr
6. Dishwasher $5.25/hr
7. Laundry Attd. $5.25/hr
8. Phone Operator $5.50/hr
9. On-call Security $6.00/hr
One meal provided per shift.
Nearly new two '19 i8 = 12 speed Fuji road like 8166 each, less than the original 8167 weekly internet. Call 845-823-9021.
Advance opportunity
One-way ticket, K-C to Miami. Fly anytime between new andSep 15, $100; hire bicycle between new and Sep 24, $80.
Packard Bell and Best Data 2400 bpmods, $285 each. Courter high speed modem, $285-$385.
Patrick Nageil limited edition framed prints for sale on www.nagesil.com at 843-6728 leave a message if interested.
Queen H2D Bed w/rails, int & access $400 Mqstress,
& acces $600 Mqstress
Beds WB 81-344 BW 81-344
Starburst blue Weston (Spectrum six-string guitar)
Two dual side pickups, and one center guitar.
Rockabilly rainbow tone rails and rebel controls. Comes with a locking hard carry case and a Crate G-64 amplifier with a 11in. Celestion speaker $500, 700/600 or 840/500.
Guitar standmate taken in 2019 '19, yr. old, model #840-3480.
840-3480
Apply in person, M-F. 9-4 p.m.
10100 College Blvd.
Overland Park, KS
E.O.E.
340 Auto Sales
$ for your HP-160 box flap with bar code. Leave
message at 865-9289
Full Quiet Boxed Fyre premium 865-313
Looking for a Mountain hike, good condition
includes waterproof cover
Reliable transportation 80 Ford Pinto $500/Best
call. Call Terry at 841-276-766
370 Want to Buy
3 BR 2 bath apt. for rent, Campus Place. Close to
Campus. Reasonable rent. Smoker 842 6089
Excellent location, close to RI, town 2 HI apart
Location: CA, no pets, bb at 114 Tennessee
Call 642-492
NITE 2 #3 FCIRC @ CIRCAM @ STREET停车, no parking
749-191-091 or 842-8007
NICE 1BZ, close to campus, off-street parking, no
3d. Btr 2 bdr. New $680 beds, spreads, plush carpet. Graduate engineers preferred. No PWD Wait. If you want a place to crash or call, Call 747-1921 1492 bet. 6am - 6am & 1925 $250 per room.
Remodeled 1 bld apartment available at Brady
Catering, 430 N. 12th St., building, water
heating are paid, $24, M71-1989.
430 Roommate Wanted
2 male, NS roommates needed to share dh室
2 female, NS 315/mi. utilities * cable paid call v1
841- 846- 905
How to schedule an ad:
Roommate to share house $250/mo * 1 utilities
large yard, hard wood floor
LEASE NO. 14258
3 bdr 2 bath hath for rent Campus Place. Close
Room. Requestable rent. Smoker please. 842
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ads shown in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
150 Student Flat
Female. Non-Smoker for 2 BLE 2 Bath Condo Alloys 11th, Apts 800-9912 on Bus Route $210/month. 864-735-4012
Female roommate to share a two bed room
one person. Close to campus $16 per month
equity. Roommates only.
Roommate needed. Gas and water paid on the KU has route. Call 8 am to 843 6777
- Bv Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Female non-smoker to share 2HR Apl I block from crossing newly redemption $25 + / utilities. Please
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom at Ohio & Ith4
complete kitchen, W/D hookup, mostly furnished
$190 month + util. Smokers welcome. Call 841
6107 leave message
Stop by the Kauan 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.
Wanted: Roommates for 2 BF, BR, AC, cable CHEAP! Will go fast call FAST. 806-8528!message White male seeking non-smoking male student to share big room for a low $13/room and $17/room.
- B Main. 1 $19 Starburst Print, Lawnette, KS. 605-3
You may print your classified form 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 Vacc account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
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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 to publication.
rates
Classifications
140 last & wait
147 first & wait
235 professional services
235 professional services
365 miscellaneous rooms
436 roommate wanted
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-XX
2.05 1.55 1.05 .65 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .90 .70 .85 .45
1.90 1.15 .90 .70 .85 .45
1.75 1.05 .75 .60 .55 .35
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The University of Dalian火警安防 119 Staffer Flint Hall, Law enforcement KS.68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1987 TAYMOR, INC. CONTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
5-8
"Well, look who's excited to see you back from being declawed."
16
LAKE MENDOTA. THE PROJECT CONSUMED HALF THE STUDENT BUDGET FOR THE YEAR AND CAUSED A CAMPUS FUROR.
Monday, August 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A RADICAL GROUP CALLED THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY TOOK OVER THE
Statue of Liberty at high tide.
University of Wisconsin
You see some weird things on college campuses.
Like the COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. At 9¢ a minute, its late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate is certainly unusual. Not to mention the GREAT STUFF you get just for using your calling card.
Moonlight MachineSs
Sprint.
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD™
816 854 1198 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial O + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FONCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY, IT'S WEIRD.
two friends in two different places at the same time? Strange, huh? That's PRIORITY PARTY CALL. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. We're working to MAKE COLLEGE LIFE EVEN EASIER.And that's the
Free goodies? That's weird. And how about talking to
weirdest thing of all.
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Sprint. Be there now.
1.800·795·5971
SIGN UP AT OUR BOOTH AND GET OUR SIX-CAN COOLER AND 30 MINUTES OF CALLS--ALL FOR FREE.
HOW'S THAT FOR WEIRD? Aug. 26th, 27th, & 30th at the Kansas Union, Level 4 Aug. 25th, 31st, Sept. 1st & 2nd at Wescoe Beach
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. © 1993 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
ERECTED A STYROFOAM REPLICA OF THE STATUE OF LTBERTY ON FROZEN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. DEDICATED TO THE PURSUIT OF SILLINESS, THEY IMMEDIATELY
√
KU LIFE: Playing in an up-and-coming Lawrence band may not be lucrative, but it's still rewarding. Page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.8
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Real world is classroom for education students
Program lets students teach By Kathleen Stolle
By Rutheen Oster
Kansan staff writer
After her first two days of student teaching, Lawrence senior Cristi Boyer was exhausted.
"I must have rubber-cemented 1,000 lions today," she said with a weary smile.
Boyer is one of 175 education majors currently getting a peek at the real world by working in area schools.
boyer, who helps teach 60 first-graders at Deerfield Elementary in Lawrence, said she was most surprised by the fatigue and long days of teaching.
"There's no way KU' could prepare you so that you walk in and go. This is a snap, I've got it," she said.
During the first semester of their fifth year, education students typically student-teach for six weeks at schools in Lawrence and surrounding cities, said Judy Hills, coordinator of field experiences for the School of Education. Graduate classes fill the remaining 10 weeks of the semester.
For the second semester, students intern for 14 to 16 weeks in a different classroom. They assume more responsibility and implement new models of instruction.
These field experiences supplement several hours of hands-on credits the
students already earned during their undergraduate studies, Hills said.
"We want the students to have as many experiences as possible with as many different kids," she said.
Hills said that when in 1982 KU added a fifth year to its education program, it was one of the first universities to do so. After four years, education students who receive bachelor's degrees and plan to teach continue for a fifth year to receive graduate credits.
Boyer lauded the five-year program because she will have completed about half of a master's degree by May, That, in turn, puts KU graduates on a higher rung on the pay scales at most school districts, she said.
As part of a new program. KU sho
dents also may gain field experience by working in teams with teachers. A dozen such KU students are working with teachers in the Turner School District in Kansas City, Kan.
Lawrence senior Kristen Bays taught at New York Elementary in Lawrence last spring. She said her cooperating teacher eased her into various responsibilities, from taking lunch count to teaching spelling and other subjects.
This fall Bays is interning at Broken Arrow Elementary in Lawrence. She said she planned to apply the philosophy of real experience with her own students.
CITY
"You can't learn about it in books or whatever, you've just got to do it," she said.
Susan McSnadden / KANSAN
KU student teacher Heather Butler, who is working on her fifth year certification in the school of education, helps Amanda Dinnidwie, a fourth grader at Baldwin Elementary in Baldwin City, circle spelling words found on her word search puzzle.
1
ONE
1
1
CAMPUS FEES
You pay $174 in campus fees every semester. Where does that money go?
Intramural sports, health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center, Kansas Union renovation, student organizations and more campus lighting are all financed in part through money from the campus fee. One of the most important functions of Student Senate is to make sure these funds are used to serve students. The Kansan researched the campus fee to show how students' money is being spent.
A DOLLAR OF YOUR FEE
Of the $174 total, $146 covers services available to all students. These are called restricted fees. That amount is broken down here, showing how many cents per dollar go to each service.
49c
Services provided by Watkins Memorial Health Center
Washington
6c
10
Student recreation (including Recreationa Services and facilities
Upkeep and renovation of the Kansas Union
28c
QUARTER DOLLAR
2
10c
Women's and nonrevenue sports
4c
STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE
Educational Opportunities Fund (including scholarships, need-based grants and work opportunities)
2c Student media
Of the $174 total, $28 is given to student organizations and projects by Student Senate. This money is known as the student activity fee.
1c
1c Campus lighting
Funding per student
Here are the groups that receive at least a dollar from every student.
Campus transportation $7.63
Legal Services for Students $3.12
Chamber and Concert Music Series $2.24
Graduate Student Council $1.92
KU Bands $1.88
Student Senate $1.73
Safe Ride $1.61
University Theater $1.43
HOW FUNDS ARE DISTRIBUTED
Student activity fee $28
Restricted fees $146
TOTAL CAMPUS FEE $174
Used to insure that useful services are available to students. These fees tend to stay the same every year. Student Senate allocates this money, but does not oversee its distribution. The University, through the State of Kansas budget, is responsible for spending this money
Restricted fees
Student activity fee
REVENUE CODE
These projects and
organizations apply for a
block of money every two
years. Student Senate does
not decide how the
organization can spend that
money.
REVENUE CODE
BUDGET GROUPS
Every year, budget groups must submit a line-item budget covering all expenditures to Student Senate for its approval.
Donella Hearne, Dan Schauer / KANSAN
Lawsuit in works against KU police
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence attorney said yesterday that he intended to file a lawsuit today against the University and members of the KU police department.
Attorney Donald Strole said he would file the lawsuit in Topeka federal court on behalf of three KU graduates who were stopped and handcuffed outside Robinson Center in April.
Stole's clients are Jonathan Jasmine, Chad Clark and Teddy Newman.
According to the account by Jasmine last April, the KU police stopped Jasmine and his companions in a parking lot behind the center, where the three men had been playing basketball.
The police had responded to a 911 emergency call that said three African-American males in a brown car were pointing a handgun at bystanders in Lot 90. a parking lot
behind the center, said Lt. John Mullers of the KU police.
The officers stopped Clark, Jasmine and Newman, all of whom are African-American, as the three exited the lot in a maroon Honda Accord, Jasmine said.
The police made the men kneel down with their hands behind their backs while an officer pointed a gun at the detained men, Jasmea said.
the police searched the vehicle, but no weapon was found. No arrests were made or charges filed.
KU officials said before investigating the incident that they thought the officers had followed standard procedures.
Saying that the detaining officers had deprived his companions and him of their human rights, Jasmine alleged that the officers had prejudicial attitudes that led to the detained men's treatment.
men's cadetate
Strole said that his clients' detainment violated their Fourth Amendment rights.
Kansan Staff Writer
'Haqua' — bottled water with a twist of Jayhawk
By Traci Carl
He calls it "Haqua."
Mike Cerney has a new product to quench a Jayhawks' thirst.
Cerney, president of Collegiate Water Co., said the idea began when the company looked into producing a private label.
"It'll just be a local product, obviously," he said. "I think it will be a lot of fun."
Source: Student Senate
appropriate."
Cernay had Haqua was available at Checkers Grocery Store, 2300 Louisiana St., and at KU football games. He said he expected other grocers to start stocking Haqua this week.
A 12 oz. bottle costs $45 and a 23 oz.
bottle costs $79 at Checkers.
Jim Lewis, owner of Checkers, said the product was doing well.
"We sell a lot of bottled water anyway," he said. "We thought something with the Jayhawk on it would be
Cerney said that bottling the water was delayed because the company had to bottle water for cities where water was contaminated during the flood.
Cerney said he thought the demand for purified water was increasing
Stacy Anderson, Rolling Meadows, ill. senior, said she didn't normally买 bottled water. But the fact that the company pays Ki for the logo and that the money is for student scholarships impressed Anderson.
"If it does benefit KU, I might buy it," Anderson said.
Carlos Palmitesta, Caracas,
Venezuela, junior, said he thought the
water was a good idea.
"There are a lot of brands out there that are more expensive," he said.
Cerney said he thought Haqua would be something that would do well.
"We hope it becomes a mainstay in KU vocabulary." Cerny said.
INSIDE
Hand to hand
A University-run challenge course near Lone Star Lake teaches members of campus groups to work together as a team.
Page 3
GABRIELA BARNES
Minister gets students' attention
Idol sins provoke travelling ministry
Brother Jed Smock's "Christianity 101" class did not earn him much praise from students for his fundamentalist preachings yesterday on the lawn east of Wescoe Hall.
By Chesley Dohl Kansan staff writer
But he did accomplish one of his goals. He got their attention.
Students who congregated around the minister from Ohio said that it was their curiosity that urged them to stop and listen.
"This is by far the most entertainment I've had in a long time," said Brad Farbia, Wichita senator. "I'd have to rank this right up there with David Letterman — except this guy is a whole lot funier."
For many KU students like Farha.
Smock belted out his interpretation of the Bible to students for about four hours until rain showers drove students away shortly after 4 p.m.
Smock's preachings, which criticized abortion, prenatal sex, drugs and rock and roll, meant a time of fun listening.
"Christ sent me here to save you," Smock shouted. "My message is, 'Repent of your sins and follow Jesus, or you'll burn forever in a fire.'"
William Arnold, associate professor of sociology, said that campuses are a prime target for field preachers because they know they will have a captive audience.
"College students are at a stage in their lives where they're trying to find out what they're all about," he said. "They've rejected a lot of ideas already, and they're trying to establish their own philosophies about life and beliefs."
"it's the same preaching approach
used by Jesus in the Bible."
Cindy Snock, Jet's wife, also spoke to the crowd. She said that the main goal of their two-week tour to universities around the nation was to get student attention and interest.
Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism, said that Smock's harsh anti-homosexual and anti-feminist public speeches on college campuses were legal.
"What the law says is that if a public institution lets a facility be used by one group it is to be used by all," he said. "A university is a public forum—the Gideons can hand out Bibles, and fundamentalists can yell at people."
"We can't go out on the street corners and say 'Smile, Love loves you,' and expect anyone to stop," she said. "Instead, we come out like the prophets of old and speak against the four main idol sins — sex, booze, drugs and rock and roll."
ST. PAUL'S CATHOLIC SCHOOL
Valerie Bontrager / KANBA
Evangeline Smock,7, reads from the Bible book of Isaiah to an attentive crowd of students at Wescoe Hall.
2
Tuesday, August 31. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
842-3232
CARRY OUT DELIVERY or
EAT AT THE WHEEL
ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON
KU Men's Fall Soccer Club Fall Season Practice
WHEN: Tues., Aug.31 5:30pm Thurs., Sept.2 5:30pm
WHERE:23rd&Iowa Shenk Complex
QUESTIONS:
KIPPER HESSE 841-6472
BRIAN ROBEY 842-6971
Make That First Impression a Lasting One This Fall!
SCHNEIDER
Quality Professional Services for Men And Women!
the total look!
9th & Mississippi 842-5921
ON CAMPUS
OAKS Non traditional Student Organization will hold a brown lug banlet at 11 a.m. today in the Rock Chalk Room at the Burge Union, For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
KU Gamers and Role Players will hold a meeting at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
Amnesty International will hold a meeting at 6 p.m. today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
The Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals will hold a meeting at 6 p.m. today in
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will hold a meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Octavio Hinojosa at 864-4256.
the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kristi Holdsworth at 832-1751.
KU College Republicans will hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Centennial Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, Leigh Smith at 832-8565.
The Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes will hold a meeting at 7.30 tonight in Alcove A of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Dong Hesse at 814-8250
ON THE RECORD
Fifty dollars was taken from the Murphy Hall box office Wednesday or Thursday, KU police reported.
pole
A student's radar detector valued at $100 was taken from a car in the 1300 block of West 24th Street between Thursday and Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's purse and its contents, valued together at $37, were taken from the third floor of the Burge Union on Thursday. KU police reported.
A student's parking permit valu-
ate at $83 was taken from a car in
KU parking lot No. 72 Thursday,
KU police report.
A student's purse and its contents, valued together at $150, were taken from the Wescoe Cafeteria on Thursday, KU police reported.
A student's car was damaged Saturday or Sunday in the 1500 block of Sigma Nu Place, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $500.
A student's saxophone and
A student's scar was damaged in the 1100 block of Louisiana Street on Friday or Saturday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $150.
case, valued together at $505, were taken from the McCollum Hall Elevator Friday. KU police reported
A student scar windshield was broken and a purse and credit cards valued at $65 were taken from the car at 14th and Vermont streets Friday or Saturday, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the windshield was estimated at $85.
A student's car was damaged and a stereo, sunglasses, a watch and compact discs, valued together at $1,120, were taken from the car in the 1300 block of West 24th Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car was estimated at $100.
A student's car was damaged in the 1500 block of Sigma Np Place on Saturday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $700.
WEATHER
Omaha: 76°/49°
LAWRENCE: 75°/50°
Kansas City: 75°/54°
St. Louis: 75°/51°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 89°/70°
Chicago: 72°/55°
Houston: 88°/68°
Miami: 89°/76°
Minneapolis: 73°/55°
Phoenix: 90°/43°
Salt Lake City: 82°/59°
Seattle: 80°/56°
TULSA: 77°/63°
TODAY
Cloudy and cool, 70%
chance for rain
High: 75°
Low: 50°
Tomorrow
Clearing and cool
High: 77°
Low: 52°
Thursday
Clear and warmer
High: 80°
Low: 57°
Source: KU Weather Service, 864 3300
Man takes first steps after self amputation in accident
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — It was only six weeks ago that Donald Wyman cut off his left leg in a desperate effort to save his life. Yesterday, he walked without crutches for the first time since.
Wyman recalled that he used to be on the run from sunup to sundown, either driving a buildozer at the stripming company where he works or building his family a house.
But that all changed on July 20 when he went into the woods northeast of Pittsburgh to cut timber for the house. As he was collecting logs, an oak tree fell on his leg and smashed two bones.
Trapped and thinking he would bleed to death, the 37-year-old outdoorman was a tourniquet from a chainsaw cord and used a pocketkiffe to sever his leg below the knee.
On Monday, dressed in casual shorts, Wyman took his first steps on his new artificial leg.
"The walking part is kind of like being a child right now," he said. "I've done only just a few steps here and there before. I had become too dependent on the crutches."
He walked with him across the floor of one of the center's labs. On the second try, Wyman was eager to go it alone with only silent support from his wife, Janet, and son Brian.
John Sobolich, a certified prosthetist and president of the Sobolich Prosthetics and Research Center, helped Wyman fit into the $15,000 artificial limb, which was donated by the center.
Additional Watkins parking will aid in student service
Kansan staff writer
By Brian James
Watkins staff pharmacist Cathy Thrasher said students who drive to Watkins now must park in the northeast corner of Lot 90, the parking lot south of Robinson Center.
Students who need to make a stop at Watkins Memorial Health Center may be in and out a little bit ouiker.
CAMPUS in brief
Watkins is adding a new row of parking stalls on the south side of the building and expanding the existing staff parking lot on the east side of the health center, said Jim Boyle, associate director of Student Health Services at Watkins.
"I expect the new stalls will make things easier for people who just want to come in and pick up medicine, or especially for those people who need medical care." Thrasher said.
Doug Riat, construction administrator for Design Construction Management, said his company would complete the Watkins lots after it finished the construction behind Robinson in about mid-October.
Boyle said Watkins needed the additional parking because parking lots often were full on weekday afternoons.
"It's always a tight squeeze and sometimes a real mess," he said. "We think these lots will help improve our overall service."
The new parking row will consist of 12 metered stalls and three handicapped stalls. Eighteen new stalls will be added to the east parking lot.
Former KU basketball player granted continuance in case
Former Kansas basketball player Terry Brown's attorney requested a continuance yesterday during Brown's hearing on theft and burglary charges.
Scott Stockwell, Brown's attorney, asked District Court Judge James Paddock for the continuance, which was accepted without protest by Assistant District Attorney Gayl Armstrong
Brown was arrested
Aug. 13 and charged with
one count of burglary,
count of felony, befri
PETER M. HENRY
Terry Brown
Brown's next hearing has been set for Sept. Kansas Fulbright scholar to study at Helsinki college
Helmig, a student in clinical psychology, will study contraceptive technology and decision-making
Linda Helmig, Lawrence graduate student and winner of a Fulbright Research Scholarship, left Friday to study in Finland.
one count of rosty and one count of misdemeanor theft. The charges stem from two incidents in August 1992 and one in December 1992.
hacking While studying at the University of Helsinki
School of Public Health in Helsinki, Finland's capital. Helmig will compare social trends between the Scandinavian nation and the United States.
One received one of seven grants given this year to students in the United States. Fulbright scholarships finance the studies of American students overseas. Helmig also won a $1,000 Leis Roth Endowment grant for her research in Finland.
Students report shots fired
Three KU students said they were shot at early Friday morning as they were entering their house, Lawrence police reported yesterday.
agt. Mark Warren gave the following account: Jason Carrier, Lawrence senior, Jason Jabara, Olathe senior, and Travis Jabara, Lenexa senior, were returning to their home at 1247 Kentucky St. They were crossing the street and a driver slammed on his brakes. The three men in the vehicle challenged the others to a fight following an argument. But Carrier, Swords and Jabara went into their home. They heard a loud noise but went to bed. In the morning, they found a hole in the wall and a piece of metal. Police were unable to confirm whether it was a bullet.
The men in the vehicle were described as three white males age 20 to 25. The vehicle was described as a 1990 to 1993 Ford Bronco or Explorer. It was described as tan or light colored on top and blue or dark on the bottom.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
oo
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
DIVA LAST RES
Amy Drussel, Garden City junior, left, Kim Hobbs, Plattsburg, Mo., senior, and Chrisy Campobasso, Kansas City, Mo., junior, wrap themselves up with other members of Alpha Chi Omega in a human knot. Untangling the knot, an exercise that helps groups interact, was part of the Adams Campus Challenge Course.
KU challenge course creates group unity
AXA
Activities let students learn about themselves
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
It was a hot summer day at Adams Campus Challenge Course where nine executive board members of Alpha Chi Omega diligently worked to free themselves from a massive human knot.
"Kim, could you step over your arm?" asked the leader.
The board members were participating in a warm-up exercise Sunday, part of a three-hour challenge course near Lone Star Lake. The program is designed to bring their group closer together through a series of physical and cognitive challenges.
The program is run by the department of health, physical education and recreation.
kolly McQueen / KANSAN
Allan Heinze, director of physical education and recreation facilities, and Christine Janssen, Tonganoxie senior, were acting as facilitators for the day's outing.
After 15 minutes, the group was still entangled in the knot.
"Sometimes they get pretty tough," said Heinze, who studied the knot.
Finally, the knot became a large circle and nine events, smiling faces emerged.
sweaty, smiling, need more This exercise, along with others, challenges the group to work together as a unit with each of its members trying to accomplish the same goal. Safety is emphasized at all times and the facilitators always stand near the group as back-up. After each exercise, the facilitator will ask the group questions about how the exercise triggered interaction and consideration among others.
Heinze said the course allowed groups to know each other a little better, to learn about problem solving by using the strengths of the total group and to work together as a team.
Groups that have participated have ranged from KU's baseball team to church groups.
Janssen explained that the course would take participants on a journey to a far away place and that completing each element would bring them closer to home. In one activity, group members use one 10-foot long pad
Libby Swed, president of Alpha Chi Omega, leads members of her executive board on a pair of land skis during an imaginary journey at Adams Campus Challenge Course near Lone Star Lake.
of skis to make an imaginary trek down a mountain to a resort.
oogetern.
"If one person doesn't pick up their foot, the board
"and Hejya."
In this element, Heinze said everybody had to work together.
The group got off to a slow start. But within a few minutes they had picked up speed.
dies they had picked out. "She's a good leader," said Janssen, referring to the sorority's president, Libby Swed, Washington, Mo., junior, who was at the front end of the skis.
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Black Student Union meets, stresses unity, remembers past
Group celebrates 25 years of unity
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Uniting to be Heard
During an icebreaker at the first Black Student Union meeting last night, Terry Bell, president, asked members to identify themselves by their majors.
"It's so when you're in a class with 300 students and five Blacks, you'll get to know each other," said Bell, Tampa, Fla., senior.
BSU, the University's oldest and largest minority organization, began its 25th year last night. The group serves as an umbrella group for several African-American organizations, including the Black Panhellenic Council and the Black Poets Society. But Frank Williams, the group's parishianian, said it served a more important purpose.
"It's a unity," the said. "It gets us all together in one capacity."
Williams, Kansas City, Kan., senior,
said the group provided a sense of
belonging for African-American students,
whose numbers have yet to
return to the 1,000-plus level of the
'70s and '80s.
In Fall 1902, 686 African Americans were enrolled at the University's Lawrence campus.
"You may be the only African American in your class all through KU," he said. "Without this, there wouldn't have been anything I would have been lost."
Despite a perception of unity, African Americans need to organize to keep together. Williams said.
"One of the stereotypes is that Black people talk only to each other," he said. "But when I came up here nobody spoke to each other."
The group formed in the fall of 1968, when racial tensions were at a national high, Marshall Jackson, administrative associate at the Student Activities Center, was a junior when he joined the group at its creation.
"Black students didn't feel their needs were being responded to," he said. "They felt as if they weren't accepted."
Jackson said the mood of the era
helped the group grow quickly.
"We were pretty successful in getting students to respond," he said. "The Civil Rights Movement was very much in front of everybody's minds."
The real boost for the group came at the 1969 Homecoming ceremony. Jackson said the group protested the election of a white Homecoming Queen by electing a Homecoming Queen of its own. They celebrated Homecoming away from the main campus celebration, angering KU alumni.
"They thought that a Black female was necessary because of the contribution of Black athletes," he said.
Bell said that because KU's African Americans still did not have an equal voice, he felt no pressure to live up to the accomplishments of the group in past years.
"The recommendations for change in the past need to be checked on to see if they are still in order," he said.
Camille LaFleur, Topeka freshman, said she was grateful for the presence of such a group.
"I came to get involved," LaFleur said. "I come from a predominantly white high school, so this is the largest number of Black people in one room I've seen in a long time."
Hungry hall residents endure long lines at the new Mrs. E's'
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
10
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Andy Zimmerman, Topeka freshman, adds his tray to the stack of dishes at the new Lenoir Eidkahl Dining Commons at Lewis Hall. Students have waited up to 20 minutes in the dinner line at the cafeteria during rush hours.
Martin Klein and Dan Ricke have not eaten breakfast since school began.
The Ellsworth sophomores have found, like most other Daisy Hill residents, that to eat during peak meal hours at the new Lenoir Ekdahl Dining Commons at Lewis Hall, they must endure long lines in the food court.
"At the rush time in the morning when everyone wants to eat, you can't get breakfast quickly enough before class," said Ricke, Rose Hill sophomore. "So I don't have breakfast."
Students who have meal plans but live at GSP-Corbin or Oliver are also permitted to eat at the new dining hall.
Long lines at the food counters are worse at peak dinner hours, between 6 and 5 p.m., they said.
The new dining hall is responsible for feeding the 2,134 residents from the Daisy Hill halls, including Templin, Lewis, Hashinger, Ellsworth, and McColum.
Several factors contribute to the lengthy lines, said Peggy Smith, director of student housing dining services.
"You have to base your schedule around rush times. At least that's what smart people do," said Klein, Elgin, Neb, sophomore. "It shouldn't be like that."
On Mondays through Thursdays during the last two weeks, the dining hall, commonly known as "Mrs. E.'s," has been averaging over 2,000 students for each lunch and dinner.
Students had not adjusted to their new daily schedules yet, she said.
"Once students find a time to eat that makes sense for them, traffic in the food court will even out."
"Every fall we've found that students come to eat at the same time, and that makes it tough," said Smith. "Last Thursday we had 2,300 students at dinner, and we know over 300 of them drove in different groups from GSP and Oliver.
the new dining hall also needed more student workers to run smooth-
ly, Smith said.
"Typically we need about 220 student workers in food services," she said. "We're not there yet."
"Lately, we've not only been hiring students, but putting aprons on them, saying, 'Here, you can be doing the dishes while the paperwork is being done.'
Mindy Pendreigh, unit manager at the new dining hall, said everyone on the food services staff had been working overtime to meet the demand. Most workers had 10 to 15 overtime hours last week. One manager had 33 overtime hours.
Many students wait until mid- September to apply for positions in food services,Smith said. Some international students were waiting for their social security cards to begin work.
"It's been pretty stressful for the staff" she said.
Staff from the dining halls at GSP Corbin, Oliver and even student housing officials had often come over to help, Pendreigh said.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said he spent a morning last week helping in the dish room.
"Everybody in the department has pitched in," he said.
Stoner said managers at the new dining hall had gotten a late start in training the rest of the staff because of construction delays.
"Most of the staff could not get in the new hall until August 9," he said.
The first meal was a brunch on Aug.16.
Stoner said the food services staff did not have ample time to test the new equipment and practice food preparation before students arrived.
"We went from stop to the fast lane overnight," he said.
Although students said they were frustrated with waiting for food, they appreciated the variety in the food court.
"You can always find something you like," said Klein. "You always have pizza."
KANSAN ADS GET RESULTS
864-4358
The University Daily Kansan
4
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
At the end of the spring semester the decision was made to move the department of computer science into the department of electrical and computer engineering.
The Background
After many years of problems, including department politics and the installation of an outside chair, a decision was reached to eliminate the computer science department in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Even the decision to merge the departments has met with disagreements. Most importantly, only seven of the original 11 faculty members are moving with the department to the school of engineering.
The Opinion
KU must keep promises to computer science
The decision to merge the departments of computer science (CS) and electrical and computer engineering (E&CE) is both regrettable and unfortunate.
Close attention now must be paid to the forthcoming University decisions to ensure a commitment to rebuild the computer science program at all levels including the continuation of a bachelor of arts degree.
There are still several questions that need to be answered about the merger process, including reasons for the merger; accommodating faculty members who have not moved to E&CE with the merger; and physically merging the resources of CS and E&CE.
One stated reason for the merger of computer science and computer engineering is their overlapping disciplines. One nation-wide survey, though, reports 100 computer science programs in liberal arts and science schools for every one merged program in engineering schools.
As Sally Frost-Mason, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, admits, the consultation phase failed. The various committees handling the merger could not reach a consensus on how to rebuild the CS department.
Ultimately, the administration of the University decided to merge the two departments. Before embarking on future excursions of this kind, the University needs to re-evaluate the purposes of each committee and ensure that this situation does not happen again.
There have been serious problems in the past in relations between faculty members. Of the original 11 faculty members, seven were invited to E&CE.The four remaining faculty each have different reasons for not being invited or wanting to join the other seven. Currently they are in a state of limbo where Frost-Mason is responsible. The University and the CLAS need to focus and resolve this unhealthy situation.
A question has been raised about the teaching and researching ability of some of the seven instructors who have moved to E&CE. The chairman of E&CE, James Roberts, is confident that procedures are in place to ensure quality in the CS program.
One hope is the promise of the University to stabilize the program after many years of bickering, politics and shenanigans. Those involved with the program will benefit from finally staying on course in the new department.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM ELBEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor .. J.R. Claiborne
News .. Stacy Friedman
Editorial .. Terrifyn McCormick
Campus .. Ben Grove
Sports .. Kripti Foster
Photo .. Klip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features .. Erra Wale
Graphics .. John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
MAINDAPLE
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr...Ed Schagher
Regional sales mgr...Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr...Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr...Blyth Theo
Production mgr...Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director...Shelley Smith
Creative director...Brian Fuso
Classified mgr...Janice Davis
**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 hometown, or faculty or staff position. **Guest columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be contacted. 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 Fint Hall.
MKANELEY Chicago Tribune
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RIO GRANDE
Honors class battle of the brains merits an emcee, play-by-play
I remember now. I hate honors classes. Nice idea. Probably even a good one. Problem is the people. Isn't it always?
"Iswear, I have zero time. Last night I only got two hours of sleep. I had to read three books for Russian Literature, write two papers, and work for four hours."
This is the conversation at my side of the table. Support group for poor, overworked honors students. It's like Alcoholics Anonymous, only these students make heartbreaking, teareyed confessions about the 10 minutes they took this morning to eat or the fact that they didn't actually read the assignment, they just skimmed it. It enough to make a grown man cry. I listen until I can't stand it anymore, then I turn my attention to the other side of the table. Something much more interesting is going on over there.
STAFF COLUMNIST
"Where'd you have your tutorial?" Ah. Textbook beginning of an honors student-to-honors student conversation. Identifies the initiator as an honors student, challenges the other participants to be one, (not something important in an honors class, but great anyway), and even gives a topic of conversation. Not bad for five words.
RYAN
McGEE
"Up there. You?"
must now strain to laugh, (and laugh the loudest, so to be recognized as more intelligent and witty than the person adjacent). Almost all of them look naturally unnatural, trying too hard to beat that dang stuffed-shirt stigma. No one is really sure how long they have to keep this up, so they just keep going ...
Hmm. Dull response. Perhaps intended to convey aloofness and superiority without sounding disinterested. If so, interesting strategy. Unfortunately, we don't get to see the outcome. Someone on the other side of the room breaks in with a joke that strains not only to break the tension, (Tension) What tension? Doesn't he know we're not competing here? We're not tense. No sneeze Bob), but to be highly witty and only appreciable by those who are extremely intelligent all at once. The rest, of course.
Luckily, the professor comes in,
(and not a moment too soon – fake
laughter is strenuous stuff), to get
things started. This person is, of
course, wackyeccentricstrangelove,
and everyone will have to discuss
how "neat" he or she is at the
beginning of the next class. The
advantage? The laughter competition
is over. Disadvantage? The discussion
starts, and a new competition
begins.
This time, though, the goal is not to be the wittiest, but the one with the most insight. In a discussion of Whitman's poetry, then, it is quite a coup to come up with something like this: "I'll make bookends out of poems, I would use 'The Mending Wall' as one and 'Mowing Grass' as the other." The fact that this doesn't at all relate to the
poem being discussed is irrelevant.
Also to be ignored is the fact that the professor looks utterly pained by such comments. What is important is whether anyone else comes up with something better.
"I think the punctuation of this particular passage mandates that the message be one of regret, especially if one takes into consideration the use of the semicolon followed by the lack of a capital letter at the commencement of the following stanza."
He comes close, but it's not quite as illustrative of a creative abstract thinker as the book ends thing. Better luck next time. Thanks for playing. We have some lovely parting gifts for you.
Moving on to Langston Hughes, some babblebabs about how they can almost hear jazz playing as they read the poetry, and I lose interest. I was looking forward to a discussion of Whitman and Hughes, but these people spoiled it. Isn't it always the people? Lucky thing I'm not one of them.
Ryan McCee is a Wortand, Wyo., sophomore undecided on a major.
Being a homosexual on campus doesn't have to be lonely or scary
Remember when you first came to campus and experienced the simultaneous rush and fear of new people? How about elementary school? Did you dread lining up to be chosen for dodge ball, because you were always one of the last to be chosen and one of the first out? What about the first time you were at an event or place where you were in the minority (race, gender, whatever)? Have you experienced a class in which you felt totally out of place and unable to get into the subject like everyone else?
Imagine that when you experienced these things you could not articulate how you felt or find anyone else who, like you, was in a place where they felt very uncomfortable. Add to this a perception that everyone else was really having a good time and a fear that, because you were different, the others would hate you.
STAFF COLUMNIST
PATRICK
DILLEY
gays, lesbians and bisexuals. It can be lonely and frightening. It can be unbelievably unlike anything a straight person experiences.
This is close to what life can be for
Last Thursday, I attended the first meeting of the year for Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas. At the meeting, we did some diversity exercises. Such exercises can be very patronizing, but these were different. We stood up after statements such as "I self-identify as a person of color." "I
am in a relationship," and "I am a graduate student." While we stood, we had to make eye contact with the others who were standing, and if we were not standing, we applauded those who were.
It sounds kind of hokey and new age, and it is, but the interesting thing is the effect it had on us. Those who stood at first did so shyly, but eventually did so with pride. The applause, lukewarm at first, grew into cheers of encouragement and recognition. People who go through each day acutely aware of their differences from the audience of the world could see they had much more in common than just sexual orientation.
I was terrified the first time I ever attended a meeting like this. I waited months before I finally, one night, pretended to go to class but instead snuck off to a building on the far side of campus. I remember the next
group I went to with a friend. Everyone stared when we walked in. We ran out of the room as soon as the meeting was over. Both times, I was terrified. Years later, at my first such meeting at KU, I still felt nervous, unsure of myself and what I might find.
I am confident that many students who went to the meeting felt the way I had, but I think they felt differently when they left. Now they know that there are other bisexual and homosexual people here who go to classes, relate to ethnic groups and have learned and loved and even graduated.
I hope they have found true friends with whom to share their college years. I hope straight students, especially those who are lousy at dodge ball, can find such friends.
Patrick Dillay is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in higher education.
University of Mars
UNIVERSITY OF MARS
Not available in a 3 record collection-"J of M" comic strip is available to you now,onlyin bike sized tasty segments! Let's take a look at the first Segment and meet our heroes.
Billy $ ^{2} $ Cor "Billy x Billy" for the mathematically Challenged).* The happy go-lucky, local yokel.
I want to play god
MONROE Rodriguez.
More than just a token minority, this leading man has an edge...
I need to get in touch with my masculine side.
by Joel Franke
In the tradition of "Garfield the Cat &
Seinfeld's Kramer", he's got that
Classic: "Last name for a first
name "thing happening.
AND A CAST OF LOVEABIA
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I WERE JUST
EXTRAS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
5
1980
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
That's the ticket
Marcus Baker, Overland Park freshman, picks up his football season tickets from Melanie Moore, temporary worker for the Athletic Department. Students will be able to pick up their tickets on the south side of Memorial Stadium this week. Workers encourage students to pick up tickets on their designated day because Friday will be the busiest day.
Royalties from KU logos proving to be lucrative
Licensing calls for KU paraphernalia demand full-time administrator
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff write
20 Paul Vander Tug likes the Jayhawk better than the Golden Gopher.
But as he sits in his new office in the administrative area of the Kansas Union, he admits he is sort of biased.
Vander Tug became the University's first full-time trademark licensing administrator Aug. 2. Vander Tug was in charge of the trademark program at the University of Minnesota before he came to Ryder.
Mike Reid, manager of the KU Bookstore and part-time trademark licensing administrator before Van
der Tuig, said an increased demand for the use of KU's name and logo created the need for a full-time position.
"When I started, royalties were only $19,000 a year," Reid said. "Last year they made about $461,000."
PETER WELKINS
Reid started in January of 1987. He said the increased success and popularity of college athletics and professional sports created the demand for logos.
"It's more of a fashion statement than a show of team loyalty." Reid said.
Paul Vander Tuig
Vander Tug said he received about five to ten licensing requests a week from all over the nation. Each manufacturer is required to pay an annual fee and a percentage of the manufacturer's selling cost, he said. That money is then divided between the Kansas University Endowment Association, the
Vander Tuig said he wants to make sure all KU logo uses are approved through his office. There are unapproved uses of the Jayhawk and other trademarks, he said.
"It certainly exists," Vander Tung said. "I wouldn't say it's rampant, although there are a few designs out there where I'm looking for the source."
He said it was important to use the Jayhawk correctly. All uses of the Jayhawk must follow the guidelines of a 1979 federal registration, or the University could lose the registration, Vander Tug said.
When approving licenses, Vander Tug said he looks for the quality of a product and the use of the logo.
Vander Tuig said he liked the Jayhawk better because it was more colorful than the Golden Gopher.
"Maroon and gold is very tough to sell," he said.
State insurance draws fire from head of SenEx
Blue Cross and Blue Shield's policies may not be best for all KU employees
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
T. P. Tirmasvan, head of the University Senate Executive Committee, is getting sick of the health insurance policy for KU employees.
"I think it's a scandal the way the insurance monopoly has operated in Kansas," he said. "And it is about time that somebody makes them listen to the grievances of the consumers."
Srinivasan, and other University officials, wants to improve the University's employee health insurance plan with Blue Cross and Blue Shield. Even though KU employees do not like the plan, state officials do.
"Corporations across America would give an arm and a leg for a contract like that," said Dave Charay, health benefits administrator for the state.
The majority of University employees live in Douglas County and have Blue Cross and Blue Shield's blue select program.
The goal of KU's Faculty Benefits committee is to improve the insurance policy, said Dick Tracy, head of the committee and associate professor of educational psychology and research. The committee should begin meeting in September.
Srinivasan said he would like for the nation to increase these ways.
Allow competitive bidding for all insurance companies.
"The present bidding process has been monopolistic and severely detrimental to the faculty and staff at Regents institutions," he said.
The state's employee health insurance policy is with Blue Cross and Blue Shield, but other insurance companies can try to contract with the state. But Blue Cross and Blue Shield has such a large network in Kansas, it is nearly impossible for other companies to win the contract, Srinivasan said. State employees can go to hospitals not signed on with Blue Cross and Blue Shield, but they will have to pay for the difference that Blue Cross an
a. 11
b. 12
c. 13
d. 14
e. 15
"I think it's a scandal the way the insurance monopoly has operated in Kansas."
T. P. Srinivasan head of the University Senate Executive Committee
Blue Shield does not cover.
- Allow self insurance among KU employees.
Self insurance would keep all University employee insurance payments within KU and not spread to all state employees
123
Stop putting all state employees into one consumer risk group.
Srinivasan said the health-conscious lifestyles of the majority of University employees would put them in a low-risk group and allow employees to pay lower premiums.
Yet, Blue Cross and Blue Shield does not classify insurance holders as low-risk and high-risk.
"The state has nothing to do with that "Charav said.
He said that 50 percent of overall policy costs were determined by policy holders' lifestyles and that he thought KU employees had a good insurance policy.
Charay said that during the last three to four years Kansas state employees had paid, on the average, an increase of about 6 percent a year. On the national level, the yearly increase was 20 percent.
"There is no other organization in the United States that has lower rates than we do." he said.
Convenience spurs campus job board's recent move to Burge Union
Kansan staff writer
By Shan Schwartz
Looking for a job?
The campus job board, which lists on-campus and off-campus jobs, including work-study positions, is reorganized in a new office this year with new services.
The job board was moved earlier this month to the University Placement Center, 110 Burge Union. It previously was maintained by the Office of Student Financial Aid in the basement of Strong Hall.
Mike Hearing, assistant director of the placement center, said that the move was initiated by his staff. It turned to us that the people who
a seemed to us that the people who
work with employers and are concerned with students finding jobs should be coordinating the job board." Heuring said. "We thought it made sense that it was here."
Heuring said that the move also was aimed at getting students exposed to a new set of lessons.
"One of the problems we often wrestle with is seniors coming in during their last year or last semester at KU."
The board is outside the placement center, so students can view job openings anytime Burge is open. A separate reception desk, Hearing said, will be set up inside the office to take questions and answer phone calls on the student employment phone line, 864-4725.
Hearing said. "They say, 'What do I do to get a job?'
Heuring said that changes in the Placement Center would further accommodate students looking for employment.
"By getting more freshmen and sophomores in here to look at the job board, they'll become accustomed to the services of our office so graduation won't be so traumatic for them."
"We will try to encourage students to find jobs that are related to their ultimate career plans," he said. "We're trying to give them something to build their resumes with." Heuring said. "For a computer science major, it a lot better to work in the computer science department or down at the Com
Heuring said that the job board was now computerized in a job database, which was more efficient and easier to maintain than the previous system of typing out job cards and filing it all by hand.
puter Center than in a kitchen flinging hamburgers."
Although some students might be unhappy about the job board's less central location, Heuring said that Burge was probably a better location than Strong.
"There's a big parking lot right outside our door, and it's closer to the dorses," he said, "and a lot of freshmen and sophomores, who use this job board, live right up there on the hill."
Rademacher said that the move eliminated one position from her office a receptionist in a branch office that worked with student employment and the scholarship search program. That position was no longer needed, she said, because the scholarship search program also had moved to the University Scholarship Center.
Rachel Rademacher, assistant director of the financial aid office, said that the job board's move coincided with changes in the office and aid办公室.
Rademacher said the rest of the Financial Aid Office would be consolidated when it moved into new offices in Strong next month.
"We will try to encourage students to find jobs related to their ultimate
careerplans."
career plans
Mike Hearing
assistant director of the placement
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LAWRENCE ATHLETIC CLUB
SOON TO BE
University Dance Company Audition
Wednesday, September 1st
7:00 p.m.
Robinson Center. Studio 242
Robinson Center, Studio 242
Ballet, Modern and Jazz
No Solo Material Required
music
Bands love the limelight
P
By JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
Above, Mark Rasmussen, keyboardist in the band "So What," performs at Paradise Cafe.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
The work isn't steady, there are no guarantees, and the hours are long. Nevertheless, the people who do it enjoy it and keep coming back for more. They are the members of the band.
Lawrence resident Sean Cruse is one such member and admits he is addicted.
and he is about to give it up.
"I grew up in music," he said. "I could have a job making 80 to100 grand a year and it still wouldn't compare to the feeling I get when I play."
Cruse plays with Slainjammy, a Lawrence funk, rock and alternative band. It's a far cry from the music he played as a child at church. Then he played bongos. Now he showcases his talents on guitar.
Cruse has played with bands for the past 12 years. He estimated that during time that he had spent $2,500 on equipment. It's an expensive habit, but worth it, he said. "I'm struggling, but not starving."
10 help defray costs of his performing habit, Cruse, like many musicians, works a day job at Party Pak Ice, 920 Delaware St. He views this as a temporary situation. "I'd like to record and put out my own music and eventually produce other bands," he said. "I'm not so consumed with myself that I can't work with other people. I'd like to write for other bands."
In the meantime, Cruse said he performed for the personal satisfaction of it. "It doesn't coincide with corporate America, but I play what comes from the heart. I'm
"So What"
looking for exposure, but mostly I'm doing something I want to do."
Valerie Bontrager/ KANSAN
I can't describe the feeling of being in front of an audience," she said. "I get to do something I love, we get paid, and everyone has a good time."
However, Russell points out that performing is not as glamorous as many people think. "The hours are rough, and sometimes we don't get to bed until three or four in the morning, and for those of us who are students and have to get up and go to class the next day it can be hard," she said.
Unlike Cruse, Russell does not plan to make music her career. "I don't think I can make a living playing the club circuit," she said. "It's physically and emotionally exhausting. It's something I enjoy, and I think of it as a hobby."
Russell said the best performances happen when the audience participates by dancing and having fun. "We also have bad performances," she said. The worst gig Russell recalled was a wedding reception where the parents of the couple kept asking the band to turn down the music.
"I don't think they realized how loud live music is," she said. The final fiasco came when the mother of the bride asked if she could sing "Amazing Grace" with the band.
"For local bands we book bands we know will draw well," he said. "If we're not familiar with a band, then we listen to the demo and if the sound is tight, then we book them." Roberts books bands as far as four months in advance.
Local bands will usually play for a variety of events, but prefer bookings in clubs. Dave Roberts, manager of Hockenbury's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St., is in charge of booking local and national acts for the club.
]
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. goes through the same process, said employee Joel Stuart.
a new band is trying to get regular bookings, they usually play open mic," he said.
Open-mic performances helped Russell and Soul Shaker when they started three years ago. "It takes a lot of persistence to get a gig," Russell said. "Our guitar player does our booking. Some bands have a manager to do it, but it's an expense we can't afford."
Don Mumford, drummer in 'So What,' added emotion to the music as he plays at Paradise Cafe.
For many amateur and professional bands who want to play for a live audience, it is not the money or the chance to make it big that keeps them playing. It is that feeling they can't describe: the experience of being onstage.
Jazz is musicians' incentive as band enjoys music's rush
JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
With the precision of a painter applying strokes to a canvas, Don Mumford brushs his drums. Just when the beat becomes a whisper, he rocks back and rounds the skins full force. Bassist
pounds the scars fun tore*; Balsam
Star Sheldon and keyboard Marks
The jazz that fills the air at Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St., draws a steady Thursday night crowd. Many of the patrons just listen to the music and have no idea just how far the musicians in the band "So What" have come.
"Music has literally taken me all over the world," said Sheldon, Lawrence sophomore. "I've played with hundreds of bands, touring and doing studio work."
During the 1970s, Sheldon played
other obstacles to success include bills. Keyboardist Rasmussen said he sometimes had to pawn his gear to nav bills.
For every band there are perks, but also a down side.
"The worst part about being in a band, especially a big one, is the drug addiction." Sheldon said. "I lost my best friend to it."
with Peter Frampton's band. Music was his career. Now Sheldon still plays, but in smaller venues. Education is now his career. He is a full-time student and plans to pursue a graduate degree.
"I also have to drive a bus in order to make money," he said. Rasmusm hopes to one day support himself
"There is no way to plan a music career," he said.
"It not always steady work."
Music has literally taken me all over the world. "
from his music
Stan Sheldon Passist
"I have to decide how I want to package myself," he said. "I might do a solo record."
If a musical career doesn't work out for Rasmussen, he would consider working on the corporate side of the music industry, but he said his greatest satisfaction came from performing.
"I create music to speak to people's hearts," he said.
"So What?" has a growing audience of jazz appreciators, Rasmussen said. "We're not as popular as rock bands, but people tell us what they think. Sometimes they'll come up to us after the show and say, 'Man, you goused good tonight,' or, 'I'm glad you added some new stuff. I was gettin' tired of the old stuff."
the members of "So What" don't mind taking the slower road, at least for the time being. The rush isn't in the glory, the fans or the fortune. It's all in the music.
Get a feel for history from foreign films
Editor's Note: Beginning this week, the features page occasionally will publish video reviews. This week's review focuses on foreign films that portray community change. Susanna Loof is a Vesteraf, Sweden, freshman.
"Europa Europa" is one of those films you don't forget. The story, based on Solomon Perel's autobiography, is absorbing and true.
Solomon is a jewish boy living happily with his family in Germany when World War II breaks out. The family moves to Poland to escape persecution. When the war approaches Poland, too, Solomon's father sends his two sons away. The boys head for Russia, but on the way, Solomon and his brother are separated.
"Europa Europa," Germany,
1901. Directed by Agnieszka Holland.
115 minutes. German and Russian with English subtitles.
REVIEWER
Solomon ends up in a Russian orphanage where he survives by denying he is Jewish. When the Germans later attack the orphanage, he claims to be an Aryan German and is sent to a Nazi youth
SUSANNA LOOF
camp. Swearing loyalty to a government that is trying to destroy his people confuses Solomon. He has trouble distinguishing his friends from his enemies and hiding the fact that he is circumcised.
The hero of "Europa Europa," Solomon, is a survivor with a strong will to live. The film offers a moving insight into the insanity of war and racism, but is also highly entertaining.
Nikhil, a man with modern ideas, lives in Bengal, India, around the turn of the century. He speaks English and breaks Indian
"The Home and the World." India, 1984. 130 minutes. Bengali with English subtitles.
Viewers of "The Home and the World" are not allowed to see much of the rebellion against the British. Those events painfully are portrayed by long-winded discussions rather than dramatizations. A snail's pace characterizes the movie, and the uninvolved performances by the actors and actresses make the movie tedious.
Life is pleasant for the duo until one of Nikhil's childhood friends shows up. He is a politician working against British leaders who want to divide Bengal into two parts. Nikhil's wife is attracted to the charismatic man and starts to support his protectionist views. Nikhil is vehemently against them.
tradition by encouraging his wife to get an education and develop opinions of her own.
If you have a hard time falling asleep, give "The Home and the World" *a* try; otherwise, skip it.
"The Cranes are Flying," USSR, 1957, black and white. Directed by Mikhail Katalazov. 96 minutes. Russian with English subtitles.
"The Cranes are Flying" has the potential to be a really bad movie. The subtitles are terrible. The translators have chosen to translate only what they found important. To make matters worse,
they are saying all the time. You can feel it.
The "Cranes are Flying" tells us the beautiful and tragic love story of Boris and Veronica, whose tender and close relationship is interbe better. A crackling noise con continues throughout the movie.
"Despite the technical problems,the movie is expressive."
rupted by World War II. Boris voluntises to fight for his country, leaving Veronica behind. Even though she is on the front, the dangerous war is brought close by bombing
Yet, "The Cranes are Flying" is one of those movies I gladly would see again. Somehow, the crackling is charming, just like the fact that the film is black and white. The actors and actresses, especially Tatiana Samolowia (Veronica), convey their feelings so well that it does not matter that you do not know exactly what
raids. When both of her parents are killed in a raid, Veronica's will is broken. She marries Boris' cousin, who treats her miserably, but she cannot forget her one and only love, Boris.
Despite the technical problems, the movie is expressive and touching. A thrilling cinematography is created by lights and shadows.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
JANUARY 12, 1993 PAGE 6
JANUARY 12, 1993 PAGE 6 KU Li
Li
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Childbirth happens in hospital,in jail or near third base
■ Among the births recorded in July: a son, to Mesa, Ariz, teacher Janie Burke, delivered on the floor of her fifth-grade classroom shortly after the beginning of a math test, a daughter, to St. Joseph, Mich., inmate Jennifer Zandarski, delivered in a jail cell in which she was housed after being accused of stabbing her boyfriend; and a son, to a 16-year-old El Paso, Texas, softball player minutes after she left her position at third base during a state tournament in Alabone.
Elephant Addicts
In July, the government of Thailand started a hospital program to treat elephants addicted to amphetamines. The elephants were given the drugs to make them work harder and to withstand injury in hauling logs out of jungles.
in a July article on Northern Ireland's aggressive tourist industry, Newsweek reported that despite its long-running, bloody civil war, the country has a crime rate that is one-fourth that of Sweden and a murder rate one-fifteenth that of Washington, D.C.
In the first seven months of the year in New Delhi, India, at least 58 people were killed in bus-related accidents. Officials attribute the problem to increasing bus competition following government deregulation: Bus drivers frequently run buses through crowded intersections to beat competitors to bus stops. The governments's only remedial program so far has been a driver's test that only a few of the several thousand drivers took and which only one driver passed.
Holy Radiation, Batman
■ Russian scientists investigating unusually high levels of radiation at a children's camp in Siberia announced in July that the radiation is being caused by bats that feed from Lake Karachi (where a chemical plant dumps its waste) and then hang out at the camp.
■ In July, zoning officials in Virginia Beach, Va., began investigating neighbors complaints against Anthony and Teresita Rodriguez, who have turned their modest home into a church and built an air-conditioned chapel in the backyard, where only a woodshed was authorized. The couple said God told them to build the chapel so that Teresita could conduct healing services. As many as 50 people at a time come from as far away as California and Cana-
See WEIRD, Page 7
2019-06-15
ENTERTAINMENT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
WEIRD:
Perot glitch
Tuesday. August 31. 1993
Continued from Page 6.
da to attend, and the Rodriguezes' neighbors complain that noise from along the street is caused by worshippers.
The Syracuse Herald-Journal reported in January that its telephone hot line, featuring excerpts of last fall's presidential debates, was successful except for one glitch: Ross Perot's voice sometimes hit a pitch that mimicked a certain telephone tone that automatically shut down the system.
■ In June, a Baltimore Sun report on odd philanthropical organizations included the Anna Emory Warfield Memorial Fund, which dispenses grants "to try and keep elderly women in independent living status in the style to which they were accustomed." (Translation: to women who, without support, could no longer afford to stay in their posh homes in well-to-do neighborhoods).
One Size Fits All
A June Boston Globe story on the Sooire strip joint in south Boston disclosed that one dancer has inflatable breasts, the result of a "valve and hose" implantation that allows her to inject or extract a saline solution to vary the size of her silicone breasts between a minimum 40-D and a maximum 96.
In July, Donald Wyman, 37,
gained notoriety when he rescued
himself from underneath a fallen tree
near Punxsutawney Pa. by amputating
his own leg at the knee with a
pocket knife and then driving for
help. A few days earlier, a 31-year-old
Tacoma. Wash, man cut off his arm
and nose with a knife because he was
depressed. And the family of a 15-
year-old in Elkton, Md., is sung the
board of education for $3 million
because a dog stepped on the boy's
groin before school one day, result-
ing in the need to amputate a testicle.
The chief Vatican spokesman, Joaquin Navarro Valls, in a June public statement said the "real culprit" in the Catholic priest sex scandals is a "society" that is so "irresponsibly permissive" that it can induce even priests to commit grave moral acts.
1993 Universal Press Syndicate
Letterman begins reign on CBS with 'Late Show'
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A relaxed, happy-looking David Letterman brought his late-night hunch to CBS yesterday in the most publicized television event since . . . since . . . well, since "Cheers" signed off the air.
"This is CBS1" exclaimed beady-eyed actor Calvert deForest, a regular on Letterman's old NBC show as Larry "Bud" Mellman. He was the first viewers of the new show saw, just as he was on the opening "Late Night" more than a decade ago.
Taped Monday afternoon for broadcast in his new 10:35 p.m. slot, the premiere of "Late Show with David Letterman" brought on surprise well-wishers Tom Brokaw and Paul Newman along with scheduled guests Bill Murray and Billy Joel.
Then Letterman, trim in his double-breasted charcoal blazer, strode out to a standing ovation onto the stage of the refurbished Edd Sullivan Theater, site of 23 years of edaily variety that included the Beatles' first American TV appearance.
"My name is Dave, and I checked this now with the CBS attorneys, and legally I can continue talking." It was
a reference to the rancorous turn in NBC's relationship with the departing show. NBC had threatened legal action if the CBS show appropriated any "Late Night" comedy schick.
After wishing his friend Letterman well, NBC anchor Brokaw cracked up the crowd when he snatched two cue cards.
"Those last two jokes are the intellectual property of NBC," he said, quoting the network's legalese.
Before spray-painting Letterman's brand-new desk, a wired-up Bill Murray arrived on stage breathless, claiming to have mistakenly showed up at NBC before running cross town to Letterman's new Broadway location.
it was the summer's most-hyped television event, but CBS banned reporters from the taping. Three audience members, including an Associated Press staffer, provided details to the AP.
Another big event in late night — Jay Leno's ascension to Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show" throne — may be forgotten, but Leno is primed for a midnight melee with an ever larger group of competitors, soon to include Chevy Chase on the Fox network.
The game of musical chairs was not
over until well into spring. Comics Dana Carvey and Garry Shandling both had been considered a shooo-in to replace Letterman on NBC at 11:35 a.m. Both declined the offer. Finally, unknown comic Conan O'Brien signed on for a show he starts in two weeks.
Theories abounded as long ago as mid-1992, when *Advertising Age* magazine said ABC wanted to give Letterman its 11:35 slot and banish "Nightline" anchor Ted Koppel to Sunday morning, where he would succeed David Brinkley. Like Brinkley, Koppel remains firmly in place, and his ratings sometimes beat the rest of the late-night pack.
It was in January that NBC made its agonizing decision not to give Letterman the 10:35 p.m. berth he demanded and relocate lion who swore he'd jump ship if the network pushed.
Even before CBS deal was done, the network was proclaiming itself winner in the Letterman sweepstakes. "We're going to get him," CBS Entertainment President Jeff Sagansky told reporters. "He's our guy."
Their guy, but theirs to the tune of $14 million, according to trade paper accounts.
Friends and family support Jackson; deny allegations
The Associated Press
The officers left empty-handed,
however, after spending about 30
minutes searching the Michael Jackson
Lanai, a three-bedroom apartment
at the Mirage Hotel, hotel
spokesman Alan Feldman said.
LOS ANGELES — Hours after Michael Jackson postponed a Singapore concert because of illness, his family defended him Monday against child-molestation allegations and police searched his Las Vegas hotel room.
Searches conducted earlier this month at Jackson's two Southern California homes netted videotapes and
photographs, though the Los Angeles Times has quoted unidentified police sources as saying nothing incriminating was found.
Jackson's private investigator has said a Beverly Hills dentist accused the entertainer of molesting the man's teen-age son and demanded $20 million to keep quiet. The dentist hasn't commented.
In Singapore, Jackson was about to go on stage Monday when he fell ill as a packed stadium crowd anxiously waited nearby. The audience was told to keep their tickets and that he would appear Wednesday night.
"You can imagine how he feels. How would you feel if you have these allegatons against you? said Elizabeth Taylor, who arrived in Singapore during the weekend to comfort Jackson.
In Los Angeles, the Jackson family defended their superstar member.
"We wish to state our collective, unequivocal belief that Michael has been made a victim in a cruel, obvious attempt to take advantage of his fame and success," his brother Jermaine said, reading from a statement.
Los Angeles police and the Los Angeles County Department of Children's Services were notified by a therapist after the teen-ager told of alleged sexual encounters with Jackson at his homes and during excursions to Las Vegas and Florida.
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HALO
Welcomes You
First General Meeting
to its
Hispanic American Leadership Organization
Where: Kansas Union, Big 8 Room
When: August 31st,6:30 p.m.
Bring a Friend!
BIRD MEDICAL OFFICIAL
ATTENTION
Pre-Med Students!
Including dental optometry and veterinary students
Informational meeting
Wednesday, September1, 7:00pm Kansan Room-- Kansas Union
Representatives from the KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
- Application Procedure
- Admission Requirements
- MCAT preparation
For more information call the Office of Pre-Med 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall.
8
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEW GREEKS ON THE BLOCK
Congratulations New Associates!
Ryan Wiesehan Sean Harris Brian Bateman Joel Butler Jay Newland Rick Roberts Eric Lowell Paul Kolenda Chris Comfort Heath Sigg
Brett Stauffer
Eric Leonard
Scott Burns
Scott Sedlak
TJ Clark
Sean Quinlan
Chris Swingle
PhilLarsen
Matt Cloud
Andrew Kuenneke
Panda
We love our
AOΠ
Pledges!
You all are great!
ΦMX
Congrats
to all sororities on an
excellent rush!
If everyon only I newspap would TRAS
The Women of A $ \exists \Delta $
Don't sink this low...Recycle.
If everyone in America recycled only 10 percent of their newspapers, 25 million trees would be saved every year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
would like to welcome and congratulate our terrific new
The men of Delta Upsilon would like to congratulate their new members.
members!
A $ \Xi\Delta $
would also like to congratulate all of the sororities on a great rush!
-The members of $ \mathrm{A}\Xi\Delta $
Bill Richards Nick Neilson Tim Newkirk Dave Jilek Troy Haines Josh Yost Jacob Fitzgerald Matt Engmann Jake Wassenberg Rod Barleen Trent Hardman Simon Cooper Ryan MacPherson Ryan Froman Brian MsKasson
help save a tree
Recycle your Daily Kansan
Jeremy Wright Cameran Parker Tim Hommertzeim Dave Kinnan Jeff Anderson Jeff Thomas Jeff Pritchard Tom Smith Brandon Williams Bryan Fisher Jeff Ravenzahn Jereme Soto Joe Vosberg Matt Tolby Kent Hupp
$$
\Delta Y
$$
♦
Congratulations
to the Newest Members
of Kappa Alpha Theta You're the Best!! We Love You, The Actives
Melissa Allen
Lisa Anderson
Cara Arensberg
Melinda Bennet
Angela Clerc
Kristen Coler
Colleen Cooney
Amanda Cox
Kasey Dalton
Jennifer Davenpor
ongratulations to the New Gamma Phi Beta Pledge Class
Love, the Actives
Kristen DeCoursey
Kerri Dobbins
Tara Donnelly
Julie Eaton
Christine Ebert
Britny Fix
Amanda Foster
Joy Franklin
Kathrine Frazier
Kelly Frazier
Heidi Garren
Sarah Gregory
Stephanie Guild
Alyson Johnson
Adri Jones
Bethany Kline
Julia Krueger
Kimberly Lischer
Amy Lopez
Cortney Lucas
Shana Maynor
Christina McDaniel
Gwen Meitner
Jenni Miller
Sara Necessary
Anna Newcomer
Shannon North
Mandy Norwood
Regan O'Rourke
Nicole Seltzer
Tiffany Sharp
Tami Stephens
Kristen Stomp
Reagan Tracy
Lisa Van Hoozer
Keli Weltmer
Jaime Westin
WELCOME NEWMEMBERS OF ALPHACHI OMEGA
XQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQAXQ
Deedra Allison
Stephanie Baker
Tiffany Ball
Samantha Barrett
Teresa Browning
Sarah Carson
Jennifer Collins
Amiee Crawford
Debra Dolleck
Anne Dreskin
Amy Dweethman
Trisha Edelman
Carrie Emert
Jayme England
Jennifer Fisher
Bridge Forsberg
Kimberly Forsythe
Julie Goodman
Sacha Hales
Christine Hughes
Alena Keaton
Krisiss Killoy
Gina Kim
Denise Kinne
Mary Letter
Sarah Linville
Greta Matzen
Kristen McCoy
Amy McVey
Tracy Michaelis
Carrie Michie
Amy Monson
Tonia Owens
Meredith Phillips
Michelle Robben
Tracy Ryan
Karen Sager
Kasha Schankie
Natalie Schwarz
Jennifer Smitka
Heather Stoehr
Stephanie Sueper
Julie Sunny
Melissa Vancrum
Angela Weir
Mist Westfall
Amy Winn
Sunny Young
Julie Palmer
AX $ \Omega $
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE NEWEST MEMBERS OF DLRETA PHI
AXQ AXQ AXQ
Kendra Binford
PI BETA PHI
Adrienne Bouilly
Lindsay Brittingham
Maggie Brophy
Jennie Burke
Carrie Campbell
Lea Chediak
Audrey Clarkson
Corey Evans
Alana Farrar
Steph Fleisch
Erin Gogel
Emily Guthrie
Emily Guthrie
Amy Hagenhoff
Lindsay Jenson
Katie Jones
Karen Kelly
Shannon Kinney
Julie Kirkham
Sara Knuff
Amanda Lentz
Meredith Liescheidt
Megan Lowdermilk
Betsy Lucas
Annie Mattingly
Allison McConachie
Allison McCurry
Kim Neighbors
Janell Nellis
Monee Neville
Leslie Norton
Kendall Nowlin
Leah Pedersen
Alison Pomeroy
Cathe Pooler
Annie Reising
Ashleigh Roberts
Ashleigh Roberts
Ashley Ruzicka
Amy Sammons
Flo Scagliotti
Stephanie Schmidt
Dana Sidwell
Brandy Smith
Heather Stancliffe
Carey Storey
Abby Westlund
Christina Wilson
Kay Yarnevich
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
9
V1. V2.
NEW GREEKS ON THE BLOCK
Congratulations To The Sigma Kappa Pledges!
Shannon Adamson Erin Appenfeller Amy Baguyos Maureen Bittinger Autumn Casserotti Kimberly Crabtree
Trace Edlin
Lucinda Foreman
Jeannie Holland
Sarah Juhan
Lori Kennedy
JoAnne Longsdorf
Sarah Loring
Robyn
Marcinkiewicz Stephanie Mertens Melissa Morgan Shelby Neece LucyRidgway Kristen Schutte Christine Sechrest Ginger Swagerty Amy Wecas Rebecca Wick
Darcy Coles
Alexandra Collins
Wendy Eichel
Loura Friedman
Heid Huber
Can Kennedy
Ali Ketchamp
Sarah Lonsdale
John Lowe
Susan Yager
Stephanie Albin
Jennifer Ayres
Carrie Benton
April Broussard
Alison McKee
Karen Mohler
Amy Murphy
Brooke Pickett
Suzanne Schmitz
Kelly Schwark
Tami Spero
Elizabeth Thornton
Rebecca Wennihan
Tamara Wiens
Congratulations new members!
Ellen Babbitt
Dana Bass
Deborah Berman
Rebecca Berns
Danielle Bernstein
Michelle Block
Ami Brenner
Jaime Dolginow
Julie Dubrow
Lesley Freed
Keri Frischer
Marcy Goldfine
Amy Golzar
Stacy Grabiner
Joanne Jacobsen
Brenda Kaplan
Erin Korogodsky
Stacy Kuluva
Jill Lederfine
Annette Lown
Jill Misler
Rochelle Mollen
Donna Oved
Jennifer Pick
Kira Pinsky
Cortney Sachs
Aimee Sandler
Laura Schultz
Amy Schwartz
Elise Snower
Rachel Sterling
Jill Strauss
Erin Weiss
Rachel Wilneff
Congratulations New Members!
Amanda Abney
Whitney Ace
Cynthia Adams
Dana Adams
Kelly Beckley
Kimberly Biedler
Anne Black
Christy Brown
Amanda Brueck
Kelly Burness
Cheryl Cage
Leslie Cameron
Angie Conaghan
Annabelle Dang
Molly DcourseMegan Denton
Barbara Drumm
Rebecca Duffy
Holly Emmot
Krystal Francis
Kara Gardner
Courtney Glennon
Jennifer Goode
Kimberly Harden
Heather Herbin
Allison Hobbs
Brendi Houston
Susan Iliff
Sara Jarrell
Emily Justus
Ginger Kelly
Andrea Kobler
Amy Lingenfelter
Cara Nelson
Anne Peressin
Mandy Peters
Elizabeth Pfuetze
Tracy Philp
Cassie Roth
Amy Ryding
Anna Speckman
Alicia Vause
Sarah VinZant
Megan Workman
Amy Younger
Congratulations
Congratulations Tri-Delta Pledges Love,
the Actives
Heather Austin
Lisa Bartling
Amy Beaman
Dawn Bennet
Molly Black
Tisha Brady
Joanie Debiak
Jennifer Foerster
Jessie Fry
Susan Gordon
Tiffany Hanes
Jessie Harbrecht
Brittany Harrel
Laura Harrison
Stephanie Haug
Jennifer Hestwood
Ashleigh Hofmeister
Holly Hoy
Jennifer John
Crissy Jordon
Kelly Knubley
Kristen Krueger
Kelsie Lanie
Jennifer Laughlin
Ashly Law
Megan Levey
Phoebe Lewis
Megan McCall
Missy McCall
Katie Meehan
Miny Meidinger
Kim Myers
Melinda Nowlin
Buffy Peschka
Dabney Pope
Teresa Prisinzano
Emily Redmond
Nicki Reno
Cara Richey
Becky Sapinsky
Mandee Schaaf
Kim Schlie
Lynn Schneider
Natalie Spencer
Courtney Smith
Cyndi Taylor
TinaThibault
Tricia Wendling
Susie Wilcox
Welcome Aboard
Would Like to Congratulate
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA
KKΓ KKΓ
Nikki Aliber
Lindsey Billman
Emily Bock
Heidi Bowen
Megan Carson
Lindsay Clemons
Cary Cosgrove
Laura Criss
Kate Downey
Nikki Ecklund
Alyssa Foster
Sarah Fox
Susan Porter
Stacey Povirk
Sarah Ramsey
Jennifer Rardin
Julia Rashid
Suzanne Razzano
Kristine Rose
Sheryl Smith
Brooke Stainton
Suzanne Stebor
Lori Stone
Courtney Tuggle
Ashley Udden
Lacy Wells
Angie Wozniak
Stacey Barker
Laura Behnke
Jennifer Berson
Rebecca Brandstedt
Merry Brook
Katherine Buchanan
Danielle Burgess
Rachel Cahill
Lea Cheyney
Monique Clumsky
Anne Cononer
Melanie Darter
Eileen DelCore
Virginia Evans
Sara Goerke
Jennifer Johnson
KKΓ KKΓ
New Members
Sarah F. Johnson
Sarah L. Johnson
Carolyn Klapp
Anne Laurenzo
Lisa Limanni
Ana Lochmann
Heather McCracker
Molly McCary
Karen Miley
Laurie Miltek
Nan Mullen
Mymdee Newhouse
Amy Oderiek
Devon Patterson
Elaine Pavlow
Kristin Pedroja
Katy French
Jana Gardberg
Mandi Glenn
Courtney Gordon
Amy Grill
Ayelish Guifoile
Gertie Gurera
Barbara Hamil
Ashley Hammerschmidt
Dani Hersma
Sara Jacobsen
Sophie Johannes
DELTA GAMMA
Beth Kennedy
Kristin Knightley
Kristen Kuntscher
Cory Matthews
Jinny May
Kate McKim
Leigh Mische
Susan Oxler
Janee Phillips
Sam Ploese
Renee Redmond
Sara Rose
Allison Saylor Elizabeth Scott Ann Shelton Kim Smith Rebecca Taylor-Hinds Brooke Thompson Brie Van Hon Siri Vik Susan Warden Gretchen Welbaum Christy Wimberly
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10
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
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CANOEING
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This adventurous weekend at Mountain Creek Resort in Eldridge, MO is filled with two days of canoeing and two nights of camping under the stars. The trip is designed for both the
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(*reflection on action)
You can be involved in one of 45 organizations in the following areas aging, youth, cross-cultural, education/tutoring, prison mental/physical health, hunger, shelter, environment.
What is Required?
*Attend 2 Reflection Group meeting during the spring semester to discuss your experience and public policy, classroom "application," etc. arising out of your placement.
- Choose an agency of organization (descriptions are available)
* Make contact with placement site (with our assistance) and volunteer at least 1-2 hours/wk.
* Be reliable and dependable
- Fill out Praxis volunteer application form during Registration Fair at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread (1 bl. north of the Kansas Union) or Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana (1 bl. south of Corbin)
f. choose an agency/organization (descriptions are available)
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REGISTRATION FAIR MONDAY, AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER 3 10 am - 4:00 pm ECM CENTER, 1204 OREAD OR CANTEBRUY HOUSE, 1116 LOUISIANA
Who sponsors the Praxis Project?
The Praxis Project is sponsored by the Eumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian, Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ) and Canterbury House (Episcopal) at KU. Membership or previous participation in ECM or any of their denominations is neither expected nor required for participation.
Need more information?
Contact: Thad Holcombe, ECM Campus Pastor, 843-4933 or Joe Alford, Canterbury Chaplain, 843-8202
THE NEWS in brief
Warrensburg, Mo.
Johnson County mother charged with murder, assault of her children
The mother of three young children was charged yesterday with murdering her youngest and seriously injuring the other two in an attack at the family's rural home.
The Associated Press
Angela M. Booker, 27, was arraigned on one count of first-degree murder and two counts of first-degree assault in the Sunday night incident at their home in Johnson County, about 50 miles southeast of Kansas City.
The petite woman cried throughout the brief hearing, at which she also requested a public defender. She responded, "I don't know," to several questions posed during the hearing.
Ricky Bryant, 16 months, died Sunday night at an independence hospital after he'd been shot in the head. Four-year-old Dennis Bryant was in critical condition yesterday afternoon with a gunshot wound to the head, and Brittany Bryant, 6, was in serious condition with stab wounds from scissors, said a spokesman for Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City.
Moscow
Russia to pull troops from Lithuania
Russia has agreed to complete its troop withdrawal from Lithuania, possibly ending a 50-year-old military presence this week.
The Associated Press
Lithuanian President Aligirdas Brazauskausk said the last troops would be out by today. Yeltsin representative Anatoly Krasikov said the troop withdrawal "will be resumed and completed soon," but did not give a date.
"There has been compromise on both sides," Brazauskas said in a nationwide radio address yesterday. Russia stopped the withdrawal on Aug. 18, complaining that Lithuania suddenly had demanded $146 billion in payments to compensate for Soviet occupation.
Brazauskas said he and Yeltsin will meet next month, and compensation "will be a subject for further negotiations." Russia maintains it is responsible only for damages since the Baltic states regained their independence in 1992, after the Soviet collapse.
LAGOS. Nigeria
Union workers strike for democracy
---
The Associated Press
Gas stations ran dry and most air traffic was grounded nationwide yesterday as a 3-day-old strike by unions demanding democracy intensified.
Military air traffic controllers were pressed into duty at Nigeria's 17 airports to replace striking civilians, but only a few airliners were able to operate. A walkout by workers in the oil industry has shut off fuel shipments.
The protest was by far the broadest and most effective protest action since Gen. Ibrahim Babangida abruptly annulled June elections he apparently lost. But it is unclear whether the level of participation can be sustained long enough to pressure the interim government to accede to the opposition's demands. Previous protests have faded after a few days.
New York
ATF faulted in report on Waco raid
The Associated Press
A review of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms' raid on the Branch Davidian cult faults top agency officials for mistakes in planning and execution The New York Times reported yesterday.
The Treasury Department's internal inquiry found that senior ATF officials put agents with no paramilitary training in charge of the raid near Waco, Texas.
The findings cast doubt on the future of Stephen Higgins, the director of the ATF, a division of the Treasury Department, the Times said.
The 51-day standoff ended April 19 when a fire killed most of the cult members, including 17 children.
The Times said investigators also found that senior officials were "too detached" from the operation, and that Higgins and others made misleading statements about what had occurred. Four ATF agents and at least six cult members were killed in the Feb. 28 raid.
San Francisco
Officers denied later imprisonment
The Associated Press
The two policemen convicted of violating Rodney King's civil rights will go to prison in four weeks, a federal appeals court has ruled.
In an order made public Monday, the Ninth U.S. Court of Appeals refused to delay the scheduled Sept. 27 imprisonment of Officer Laurence Powell and Sgt. Stacey Koon, saying each was convicted of a "crime of violence."
Those convicted of violent crimes are normally ineligible for bail during their appeals. The court said the Los Angeles police officers had failed to prove that their circumstances were exceptional enough to warrant release on bail.
The white officers were sentenced to 21/2 years in prison after a federal jury convicted them of violating the civil rights of King, who is African American, during a 1991 beating that was videotaped by an amateur camera operator. Their acquittals in a California courtigned rioting in Los Angeles during which 54 people were killed.
Winder. Ga.
Train crash forces evacuations
The Associated Press
A train carrying hazardous materials crashed into a tractor-trailer rig at a railroad crossing yesterday, setting some train cars on fire and prompting authorities to evacuate the surrounding quarter-mile area.
At least two people were injured in the wreck, which occurred about two miles west of the north-central Georgia town, said Buddy Hardigree of the Barrow County Emergency Management Agency.
Authorities were evacuating a trailer park and other residences within a quarter-mile of the accident because one of the cars was carrying a flammable, hazardous substance, said Tom Bell, a volunteer with the Barrow County Fire Department.
The car with the hazardous material was only a few cars away from those that were on fire, he said.
A highway between Winder and Auburn was closed. Winder is a town of 7,300 northeast of Atlanta.
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11
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
Chiefs trade running back to Minnesota
Kansas City gets '94 draft pick for Word
The Associated Press
back.
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. — The Kansas City Chiefs no longer needed former 1,000-yard rusher Barry Word, and the Minnesota Vikings, with Terry Allen sidelined for the season, desperately needed a quality running
So the Chiefs, whose new-look offense features Joe Montana directing a short-passing attack, sent Word to Minnesota for a 1994 fifth-round draft pick.
"I was just never convinced that you could be business-as-usual losing a player the quality of Terry Allen," Vikings coach Dennis Green said yesterday.
Robert Smith, the team's top draft choice in April, and Charles Evans, a 1992 draftee who missed all last season on injured reserve.
The Vikings were down to three backs. 33-year-old Roger Craig, who was used as a spot player last year to complement 1,200-yard-rusher Allen;
"We have a guy with speed outside like Robert Smith. We've got Roger, a great warrior who's been around for a long time. And Charles Evans, who can play halfback or fullback." Green said "The one thing we didn't have, that we probably need to make up for Terry, is a guy who can wear a defense down early in the game and late in the game.
"We really feel Barry Word fits in
with us."
The Chiefs obviously didn't feel that way. The 6-foot-2, 245-pound Word battled Christian Okoye for playing time most of the 1990s.
Harvey Williams, the Chiefs' top draft choice in 1991, was added to the mix. And when Marcus Allen signed as a free agent in June, the backfield simply became too crowded.
Though Okoye will miss this season with an injury, Kansas City felt the 29-year-old Word was expendable.
"Once they drafted Harvey Williams in the first round two years ago, it's
been tough for him." Green said. "This was a chance for him to get more playing time.
"Kansas City got a fifth-round pick for a guy they felt they didn't have to have. And we only gave up a fifth for a guy who will make a big contribution."
Word contributed greatly to the Chiefs in 1990, gaining 1,015 yards. But he created ill will with a long hold-out the following season. He held out again this preseason — signing so late, in fact, that the Vikings won't be able to use him in Sunday's opener
against the Los Angeles Raiders.
In three seasons for Kansas City,
Word rushed for 2,306 yards.
Word has only 21 career receptions and probably won't be used in passing situations by the Vikings. Craig, once one of the league's top pass-catching backs, may handle that role.
Craig was one of 14 players Minnesota cut Monday. But while Green wouldn't say the 11th year veteran definitely would be re-signed today, the coach made several references to Craig playing against the Raiders.
Injuries hinder Jayhawk offense
Bv Matt Dovle
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Coach Glen Mason said throughout spring practice and preseason practice that this season's Jayhawk offensive line would the best in his six years at Kansas.
Saturday's contest against No. 1 Florida State was not the type of performance that Mason or his offensive linemen could look back at with pride.
The Seminoles sacked Jayhawk quarterbacks Fred Thomas and Asheki Preston five times. Last season, the Kansas offensive line allowed only 16 quarterback sacks.
Despite having 15 plays inside the Seminole 10-yard line in the first half, the Jayhawks could not put any points on the scoreboard, which left Mason frustrated.
"Be tell me you something, that was embarrassing." Mason said about Kansas' inability to score when it had eight consecutive plays inside the Florida State 2-yard line in the second quarter.
"I'm an old offensive-line coach, and offensive-linemen should live for moments like that."
"They are a good defense and you have to expect that a good team can stop your offense." Schmidt said. "We
Senior center Dan Schmidt lives for those moments as well. But a sprained left ankle suffered in presa-
sion practice kept Schmidt on the sidelines Saturday so he could only watch Florida State's goal-line stand.
need more work. That's all there is to it."
Sophomore Jared Smith replaced Schmidt in the lineup, but left in the second quarter with a sprained ankle, which moved sophomore Joe Hornback into the center position.
Schmidt was not the only starting member of the offensive line that was out of the game during Florida State's goal-line defense. Starting sophomore left tackle Rod Jones left in the second quarter with a sprained right knee.
Hornback earned praise from Mason for his effort against the Seminoles.
"He played darn well." Mason said. "He played better than some of the veterans we have on the line."
Schmidt thought he could play with the sprained ankle, but the coaches decided to hold him out of the game, which broke his string of 26 consecutive starting assignments.
"The ankle wasn't 100 percent, and I didn't think I would be able to give 110 percent." Schmidt said. "It gets frustrating missing the first game of the season, but I understand the coaches' perspective that the regular season is what is most important for us."
Mason said he expected Schmidt to return to the line-up for this Saturday's home opener against Western Carolina. Schmidt said that he hoped the offensive line could turn in a better effort this week against the Catamounts than it did against the Seminoles.
The Associated Press
Brewers take Royals in 9th
MILWAUKEE — Cal Alaukeed pitched a four-hitter and John Jaha doubled home the winning run in the ninth inning last night to give the Milwaukee Brewers a 2-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
With one out in the ninth, Kevin Reimer singled off the glove of first baseman Wally Joyner, Darryl Hamilton ran for Reimmer and Jaha hit a line drive off Tom Gordon (8-6). The ball skidded past shortstop Greg Gagne into shallow left. Hamilton came around from first, beating the throw to the plate.
The loss dropped the third-place Royals six games behind the AL West-leading Chicago White Sox, who beat Minnesota 4-1.
Eldred (15-12) took a two-hit
shutout into the ninth before allowing Joyner's one-out home run, his 14th, which tied it 1-1.
Eldred had retired 14 straight Royals after allowing consecutive two-out singles in the fourth inning to Gary Gaetti and Jose Lind. Eldred struck out seven and walked two for his sixth complete game. His previous best low-hit games were also four-hitters, achieved twice last season.
Milwaukee scored its first run off Gordon in the sixth innning. Robin Yount opened with a double to left-center and moved to third on Kevin Seitzer's infield single. Greg Vaughn followed with a sacrifice fly to right, scoring Yount.
Gordon, making his eight start in 12 appearances, allowed seven hits in his first complete game of the season. He struck out eight and walked three.
KANSAS
Senior tennis player Abya Woods won a volley during a practice session; Woods received All-Big Eight honors for her doubles play last season.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Walking on air
Work ethic leads to tennis star's success
File Photo
LEAGUE TENNIS
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The smile on his face gave away Chuck Menzbach's opinion of Abby Woods before words were even spoken.
Woods' teammate and doubles partner last year, Kim Potter also trained Woods.
"When you think of Abby, you think of someone with a big heart." Roers said.
Merzbach, Kansas women's tennis coach, said Woods, the squad's captain, was a great leader. He served for last year. Kim
Prior to college, she said she had played just as much basketball at tennis. She said that she was not a ranked player in high school, and that coaches just did not look at unranked players.
Woods, in her fourth year as a Jajawk, said she had risen through the tennis ranks from the very bottom.
ion of Abby woods before words were ever spoken. Mertzbacher, Kansas women's tennis coach, said Woods
Kansas men's coach Michael Center, the women's coach when Woods came to Kansas, took a chance on her, she said.
"He knew I was a good athlete, and he knew I could develop
Last season. Woods played No. 4 singles and received first-place All-Right bipolar for No. 2 doubles.
Merczbacher said Woods was a self-made player who was still learning to play at the collegiate level.
Woods said she now understood what it took to be successful at tennis. When she arrived at Kansas she did not really have an understanding of the way college tennis was played.
Woods began competing in tennis when she was 14 years old. She said Vince Westbrook, the Tubsa tennis coach, saw her in a tournament and began coaching her. It seemed like a lot at first to drive an hour and a half for coaching, but now it was the best thing she could have done.
He took me from an athlete to a tennis player, "Woods said.
Now, as a Jayhawk, Woods said Merzhacher has helped her become an even better player. If she asked for help, he always puts in extra time.
"He keeps a fresh, positive attitude, and he gives me an extra sense of drive," she said. "He wants us to win for ourselves and for him."
serves and I will be grateful to you.
Noting her Kansas experience, Woods said she would always remember how she came in as a "nothing" in tennis and became a top college player.
"I'll always remember walking in my freshman year and not being ready to compete at a national level and four years later leaving Kansas knowing how much I improved as a person and a tennis player."
There are two main challenges to tennis, Woods said.
First, she said tennis was an endurance game where the player must be physically fit to play the way he or she wanted to play.
Second, she said tennis was a mental game. While she is playing, she also must have complete concentration on the match
"There is no better feeling than competing in one of those four-hour matches in 100-degree heat where you have to win for the team to win, and winning it," she said.
Merzbacher said he never would forget one of her matches last year.
"Woods was down 3-6, 2-5, and the match was not going her way, and we needed her to win." Mertzbacher said.
"That is one of the greatest comebacks I have ever encountered." Morzacher said.
Rogers, who also received first place Big Eight honors as Woods partner, said her teammate went after every ball, and that to Woods, the match is never over until the last point is played.
Lake practice boosts 'Hawk swim teams
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
While most people are just beginning their day, Kempf has his swimmers at Lone Star Lake, south of Lawrence, working on a variety of techniques for upcoming meets.
Most college swimming coaches don't worry about thunderstorms, weekend fishermen or other swimmers when they schedule practice. But those are a few of the things Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf has had to schedule his practices around twice a week for the past three years.
Kempf started the tradition of having the team practice at the lake three years ago. He said bringing the team out to the lake kept practice from becoming tedious as well as it provided a good workout for his swimmers.
ed a good workout for the swimmers!
"I started bringing the team out to swim when we changed the program to more aerobics," Kempi said.
"There are no lines or clocks on here so they have to focus more on their stroke." Kempf said.
He said that bringing the team out to the lake for practice had a variety of benefits. He said the biggest benefits were that it put variation into the practice routine and that it gave the swimmers a better aerobic workout than ordinary pool work.
"With the clocks and lines at the pool, it lets me know my pace more than out here," said Hansen.
Frankie Hansen, junior distance swimmer, agreed that swimmers focus more in the lake than in the pool. Hansen said that although the lake trips did break up the boredom of practice, she still liked the pool workouts better.
"We spend seven or eight months a year in the pool. This really helps break up practice," Townsend said.
Scot Townsend, a senior sprint swimmer, said that he loved the weekly trips to the lake. He said lake swimming was excellent for building endurance.
Townsend said that given a choice, he would much rather swim in the lake than in the pools he normally swims.
Townsend's feelings are shared by sophomore distance swimmer Ryan Lowe. He said that the lake work helped the distance swimmers a lot. He said the lake allowed the swimmers to go further distances without having to turn around. Lowe said the lake forced swimmers to change their strokes to be effective.
"The lake allows you to go for a long time," Lowe said. "It also forces you to use a longer stroke."
Senior sprint swimmer Ronda Lasty said that besides adding variety to practice, the lake trips also added to the team's sense of unity.
"Being out here all together helps bring the distance and sprint swimmers closer," Lusty said.
Outdoor swimming is not just catching on at Kansas. The United States Swimming Corporation, the governing body for swimming in the United States, has recognized long-distance, open-water swimming as an official event. However, there are not many outdoor events at the collegiate level.
Kansas hopes to become one of the few schools to host an open-water meet in mid-September.
"All we're waiting for is clearance from the county commission for use of the lake." Kempf said.
He said that he expected that clearance to come sometime early this week.
Southern Illinois and Western Illinois will be the first two schools to send participants to what Kempf hopes will become an annual event.
Kempf said that he expected both the number and popularity of the outdoor events to grow. In the meantime, the Jayhawks will continue to practice at the lake as long as the weather permits.
if the weather stays like it is now, we'll be out here until early October," Kempf said.
12
Tuesday, August 31, 1997
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Brett forever in Royal history
Brett joins ranks with Aaron, Mays
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — As far as herk Robinson is concerned, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Brett misnamed their baby boy 40 years ago.
"George Brett has been the Kansas City Royals," said Robinson, the general manager of the team George Brett has starred for since 1973. "He has been this franchise. Everything that he's meant has been invaluable, in every respect."
As Brett's Hall of Fame career winds down, milestones have been popping up like highway signs along Interstate 70
timg titles in three different decades.
His .390 average in 1980 made him the player closest to hitting .400 since Ted Williams hit. 406 in 1941.
His first hit came in 1973 at Chicago His 3,000th hit came last September in Anaheim, Calif. against the Angels.
Brett is the only player to win bathe's in uniform or out, he apparently will be welcome to remain a part of the club.
Sunday, however, the home fans got to share a special moment, one they had anticipated for weeks. After drawing a walk from Boston's Danny Darwin in the third inning, Brett stole second, joining Willey Mills and Hank Aaron as the only players with 3,000 hits, 300 homers and 200 stolen bases. Very exclusive company.
"I thought to myself ... it's not like 300 homers or 3,000 hits," said Brett, who had his 65th four-hit game and helped the Royals beat the Red Sox 5-4 in 12 innings. "But it's nice to be in the same company as Hank Aaron
Betweeninnings,thebasewas removed discreetly.
"Let's be realistic," Brett said. "Lots of people have 200 stolen bases. You play 20 years and get 10 a year, that's 200. But when you combine it with the 3,000 and 300, it's special. What pleased me the most was No. 1, the win, and getting my stroke back."
"I didn't want to show any disrespect for Danny Darwin," he said. "He's been around a long time and I've always had a lot of respect for him."
When ballboys ran onto the field to retrieve the base for Brett's trophy case, he waved them back.
Will the Royals get Brett back next season? He admits that some days he is leaning toward playing a 21st season, other days he is not. Whether
"We have had a brief discussion," Robinson said. "I think George is fully aware that we want him back, either as a player or a non-uniform person. We hope he will remain with us beyond his playing days. He will become a vice president and perform various duties, some of which may not be completely defined at this time.
"I don't think there's any question he wants to do that when he's finished playing."
If Brett wants to return for another year on the field, Robinson said, "We will be fair in our dealing with him, and he is welcome to do so. Ultimately the decision will have to be George's."
Some NFL players find team cuts last for only one day
Just because they're cut, it doesn't mean they're gone for good.
In the past, all players released were placed on waivers, meaning they could be claimed before being-signed by their teams. Now any player with more than four years' experience is simply "terminated," so his team doesn't risk losing him unless he chooses to negotiate a contract and learn a new team's system.
NFL teams had to trim their 60-man rosters to 47 yesterday, but they may increase the number to 53 today. Thus, 168 players will return after what amounts to a day off.
Many teams released kickers and punters for the day, so they could keep younger players they didn't want to subject to waivers.
You're nausea to see a lot of 'name' guys out there because of the way the system is set up now," said Ken Herock, Atlanta's director of player personnel.
Dallas reserve quarterback Hugh Millen was cut, apparently losing the No. 2 job behind starter Troy Aikman. Maybe not. Millen's equipment remained in his locker next to Aikman's.
into Johnson's office and told he was being cut for a day. Also giving a 24-hour vacation were backup fullback Tommie Agee and long snapper Dale Hellestra.
"Jason Garrett just outperformed him," Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson said. "We'll have to see."
"It just gives me a day to play golf," Bates said. The Falcons cut Tim Green, one of coach Derry Glanville's favorite defensive players and author of a recently published novel about pro football called. "Ruffians."
Veteran safety Bill Bates of Dallas was called
"We'll bring back at least a half dozen," said Johnson, who cut to 45 so he could look over the waiver wire.
New York Giants coach Dan Reeves cuteper Johnson, an All-Pro linebacker in 1990, when the team won the Super Bowl. Reeves also released defensive end Eric Dorsely, a first-round draft pick in 1986, and Lamar McGriggs, the starting safe safety most of last season.
Johnson, who led the Giants in tackles last year, reported late and had complained about being taken out on third downs in the new defense.
Todd Marinovich, who had a history of drug problems, was waived by the Los Angeles Raiders.
Johnson was to make $1.2 million. He will be replaced by Carlton Bailey, who signed as a free agent for $550,000 more than that during the off-season. The other inside linebacker, Michael Brooks, signed for $1.8 million.
---
Three Big Eight teams are ranked in the top 25 college football poll.
Last Week
Rank School '93 Record Votes Week
1. Florida St. (47) 1-0-0 1,531 1
2. Alabama (11) 0-0-0 1,469 2
3. Michigan (2) 0-0-0 1,415 3
4. Miami 0-0-0 1,245 5
5. Texas A&M 0-0-0 1,241 4
6. Syracuse (1) 0-0-0 1,195 6
7. Notre Dame 0-0-0 1,120 7
8. Florida 0-0-0 1,043 9
9. Nebraska 0-0-0 1039 8
10. Tennessee 0-0-0 1004 10
11. Colorado 0-0-0 977 11
12. Washington 0-0-0 824 12
13. Arizona 0-0-0 748 14
14. Georgia 0-0-0 732 13
15. Stanford (1) 0-0-0 670 15
16. North Carolina 1-0-0 628 20
17. Penn St. 0-0-0 584 16
18. Ohio State 0-0-0 487 17
19. Brigham Young 0-0-0 366 19
20. Boston College 0-0-0 319 21
21. Oklahoma 0-0-0 304 22
22. Clemson 0-0-0 265 23
23. Mississippi St. 0-0-0 176 24
24. N. Carolina St. 0-0-0 158 25
25. Fresno St. 0-0-0 90 —
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
13
Welcome Back KU
Men and Women
$400 off haircuts with Marlene
Haircuts regularly $1200
RIVER CITY HAIR CO.
1021 MASS 842-0508
Offer expires 9-11-93
DIVERSITY CITY
HARTFORD
1021 MASS 842-0508
EAGLE
ComputerLand
841-4611
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2.10' Pizzas with two toppings AND
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New New New
- 100% Cotton Poet Shirts
- Rayon Blouses
- Leather Hats
- Sunflower Pins
- Hair Bows
- Jewelry
Barba Vintage Rose
927 Mass.
841-2451
Free for life.
(Offer expires only when you do.)
AT&T Universal
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Get an AT&T Universal MasterCard and you'll be eternally grateful. Because it's more than just a credit card that's free of annual fees forever. It's also an AT&T Calling Card that currently gives you a 10% discount on already competitive AT&T Calling Card rates. It's all part of The i Plan."
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Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
642 Mass
749.
1912
642 Mass 749
1912
Much Ado About Nothing (Pg-13) Today (4.45) 7.15-9.30
Hardboiled (NC-17) Today (4.36) 7.20-9.45 ENDSOON
Diskin
DICKINSON
THEATRE
Dickinson 6 3239 W. Bridges St.
Rising Sun $^{*}$(4:15) 7:10:9:50
Secret Garden $^{*}$(4:30) 7:00
Hard Target $^{*}$(4:30) 7:20:9:45
Father Hood $^{*}$(4:35) 7:15:9:5
The Fugitive $^{*}$(4:10) 7:05:9:55
Man Without Face $^{*}$(4:20) 7:00:9:38
Jurassic Park $^{*}$(4:35 only
520 W. 23rd • 841-5885
$3 Primetime Show (➤) *Hearing Dolly*
Saint Gilen Aviation *Imagine Surveys*
KMS
Beauty WAREHOUSE
141-3889 10100
Procath
Salon & Supplies
20 W. 23rd. 841-5885
REDKEN
IMAGE
S
NEXUS
V CENTER
frames PHOTOGRAPHY
Athlete's The Foot.
914 Massachusetts
841-6966
TOLLENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUR FILMS
- EL MARIACHI
- Tues., Aug. 31, 9:30 PM
Wed, Sept. 1, 7:00 PM
Thurs., Sept. 2, 9:30 PM
- ROADSIDE PROPHETS
Thurs., Sept. 2, 7:00 PM All shows in Woodruff Auditorium
Wed., Sept. 1, 9:30 PM
Thurs. Sept. 2, 7:00 PM
vs in Woodruff Auditorium.
All seats $2.50
Free admission with SUA Movie Card For information, call 864-SHOW.
HILLCREST 825 IOWA
BEFORE 6 PM- ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 3191
Crown Cinema
Needful Things $ ^{\mathrm{R}} $ 5.00
7.20 9.45
Heart and Souls PG-13 5.00
9.25
Son of the Pink Panther R 6.00
15.00
In the Line of Fire R 7.00
7.25
Sleepiness in Seattle PG-13 7.25
14.25
The Thing Called Love PG-13 11.25
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841-5191
ALL STATS
$1.25
11 SEATS $1.25
Aladdin G 5.99
Dave PG-13 7.90, 9.40
Last Action Hero PG-13 7.20, 9.40
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
Uphold a KU Tradition-
Visit the Wagon
Wheel Cafe
$2 DAILY LUNCH $2 SPECIALS
Monday-Hamburger & Fries
Tuesday-3 Tacos
Wednesday-Taco Salad
Russian Salad
Russian Salad
Thursday-Grilled Cheese
Thursday-Grilled Cheese
8 Fries
Friday- Cheeseburger & Fries
Football Game Breakfast Special
Breakfast Special
Eggs, Hashbrowns, Toast Bacon or Ham
$2.50
Love beat the Wizard
Bad of course
14
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Many evacuate as hurricane nears
Many Emily threatens North Carolina
The Associated Press
NAGS HEAD, N.C. — More than 150,000 people on North Carolina's barrier islands and coast were ordered to evacuate yesterday as Hurricane Emily meandered on a path toward the central East Coast. A hurricane warning was issued for much of the North Carolina coast.
Surf reached 3 to 4 feet yesterday, although surfers enjoyed waves up to 9 feet Sunday, and forecasters warned waves would begin to build all along the East Coast. Gale-force winds also could reach North Carolina today.
"Nobody's going to be arrested for
not leaving, but they're probably going to be asked for their next of kin," said Dare County spokesman Ray Sturza. "Use common sense — and then go."
Few people were left on Ocracabe Island, accessible only by ferries that ran through the night. The sky was blue with light clouds, and water along the coast was relatively calm, although people knew that might not last.
"You get the feeling nothing's going to happen," said Jean Fletcher, who was waiting for a ferry to get to the mainland. "But a good run is better than a poor stand anytime."
A Dare County state of emergency covered an estimated 150,000 residents and tourists on the mainland and the county's share of the Outer Banks, the chain of fragile islands off
North Carolina's coast, county officials said. A similar order was issued for about 10,000 people on Currituck County's stretch of the islands just north of Dare, and for 2,500 on Ocracoke Island. To the south, some 12,000 people were urged to voluntarily leave the Bogue Banks islands.
If the storm alms at Virginia, about 200,000 people in flood-prone areas of Hampton Roads could be evacuated, said Mike LaCivita, a representative for the Department of Emergency Services. The Navy said it was moving at least 18 ships from their piers at the Norfolk Naval Base as a precaution.
"I think the odds favor it getting a little stronger because of coming over warmer water, traversing the Gulf Stream," meteorologist Joe Pelissier said during an emergency management meeting in Raleigh yesterday.
"The upshot is that, yes, it will probably get a little stronger, but, no, it won't become a Hugo or an Andrew."
Hurricane Andrew tore through South Florida and Louisiana last year with sustained winds of 145 mph. Officials are using their experience in those two hurricanes to prepare for the arrival of Emily.
Before briefing Clinton, Federal Emergency Management Agency Director James Lee Witt said his department had learned from its mistakes in the aftermath of Andrew. "I think there's a tremendous change from years past," he said.
President Clinton met yesterday with federal disaster-relief planners and pledged a quick government response if help is needed.
Brazilian police accused of massacre
The Associated Press
RIO DE JANEIRO Brazil — Dozens of hooded men stormed a Rio shantytown yesterday, setting fires and shooting to death at least 20 people. Residents blamed police for the killings.
"It was a massacre," said Col. Abilio Faria, a representative for the Rio de Janeiro state police.
He said that as many as 24 people may have been killed.
Faria said it was too early to tell who was responsible for the shootings, which were the latest in a series of mass killings throughout the country.
domly.
Many residents said the killings were in retaliation for the murder of four policemen in the same area four days ago. Those deaths were blamed on drug traffickers in the slum.
Witnesses said dozens of men invaded the Vigario Geral slam around midnight. They set fire to vendors' stands and burst into homes, shooting ranof Aidid's lieutenants. He conceded that they had been wrong and that the mission missed its target.
"We were sleeping in bed and heard a noise of somebody trying the door," said Angela dos Santos Ferreira. 41, whose husband was killed.
"My husband went to see, and I heard the shots. I've been hearing them ever since," she said. "I found him on the floor, his body covered with blood."
Residents blocked the slum's body-strewn main street with tires and tree branches to protest the killings.
Police cars that tried to pass the barriers were pelled with stones and forced to retreat.
Col. Celso Pinto of Rio's Ninth state police battalion visited the shantytown and was received with chants of "killers" and "justice."
"Everybody knows it was the police," said 16-year-old Rosangela dos Lemos, who lives in the slum. "We who live in a poor part of the city depend on the bandits for our welfare. The police here are our enemies."
"When there's a massacre, everyone blames the police," said Francisco Duraes, a Rio city councilman and state police colonel. "It's an urban war out there."
President Itamar Franco gave the case high priority by ordering Justice Minister Mauricio Correa to follow the investigation.
Franco gave Correa similar orders following the July 23 killings of eight street children who were killed as they slept in the shadow of a Rio church. Four policemen were arrested as suspects.
Eight more children were killed late last week in the northeastern cities of Recife, Olinda and Salvador. Police blamed the killings on extermination squads, which human rights groups say are made up of off-duty policemen hired by local shopkeepers.
Also last week, the government's National Indian Foundation said that at least 73 Yanomami Indians were killed by gold miners who invaded the tribe's reservation in the northwestern Amazon.
U.S. 'textbook' raid nabs the wrong people
The Associated Press
For Larry DeBoice and eight other U.N. employees, it was a night in hell.
MOGADISHU, Somalia — For the U.N. military command in Somalia, yesterday's pre-dawn raid on a two-story villa in southern Mogadishu was a text book example of how a proper raid should be run.
For Larry DeRoice and eight other U.N. employ
In Washington, a Defense Department official who spoke on condition of anonymity, said military intelligence officers had expected to capture some
Fifty helicopter-borne elite U.S. soldiers raided the house and an adjoining office early yesterday, apparently believing that the buildings were serving as a command and control center for fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid.
They weren't. They were the residence and office of DeBoice and three other foreign employees of the U.N. Development Program, one of many U.N. agencies operating in Somalia.
DeBoice and his colleagues were awakened around 3 a.m. by the roar of more than a dozen helicopters overhead.
"Then we got some concussion grenades and shots in the house," DeBoice said. "At that point we knew something was going on right here."
DeBoice, 45, a Canadian, said he and his colleagues had their hands bound behind their backs with plastic cuffs and were told to keep their heads down and not look at anybody.
"I don't think there was any doubt in anybody's mind that if we said anything, looked at anybody, I would have known."
help were all U.N. employees, he said.
More than half an hour later, DeBoice was finally allowed to talk, and he explained that he, his foreign colleagues and five Somali guards and household
Despite that, he said: "We were literally thrown on top of each other into a helicopter and off we went. We asked where we were going, and we were told to shut up."
DeBoice said they were flown to a U.S. army hospital, then driven to the detention center at U.N. headquarters.
They were questioned separately for about 30 minutes, he said. Finally, the handcuffs were removed from their wrists.
Half an hour later, about four hours after their ordeal began, "a colonel came by and said, 'I'm sorry,'" DeBoice said.
Maj. David Stockwell, the chief U.N. military representative, later called the raid a success and an example of the soldiers' lightning speed and overpowering force.
Israel considers Palestine self-rule
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israel's Cabinet met to vote on a rule plan for Palestinians in the occupied territories yesterday after Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said "the time has come" to take a chance for peace.
Proponents saw an approval as the first significant sign of progress since the Middle East peace talks began 22 months ago.
The plan would clear the way for self-rule to start in the Gaza Strip and West Bank bank of Jericho, perhaps by year's end. Months of detailed negotiations would be needed, however, to work out details of self-rule in those areas and elsewhere.
Palestinian and Israeli negotiators were to sit down today for the start of a new round of peace talks expected to finalize the self-rule plan.
"There is no doubt that we have a big breakthrough here," said Yakoub Tzur, the immigration minister. "This is the start of a new
"Every change has its risks, but the time has come to take a chance for peace." Rabin said in a speech before the Cabinet vote. "We stand on the verge of a great opportunity.
"There is movement along the whole Arab front in readiness for peace. There are obstacles. There are difficulties, but I'm convinced the horizons for peace are open."
In Washington, President Clinton said he was "very much encouraged" by the apparent breakthrough in the peace talks, but said it was too early to say whether it would lead to renewed dialogue between the United States and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
As the 18-member Cabinet met, more than 2,000 Jewish settlers and other opponents of the plan hurled eggs, then stones, and called Rabina a "traitor." Some scuffed with leftist demonstrators who held signs saying "give peace a chance."
Police used water cannons and horse-mounted officers to force the protesters back. Two police officers were injured, along with a photographer.
Benjamin Netanyahu, leader of the right-wing Lakud opposition, accused Rabin's government of "going behind the back of the nation and setting up a bridgehead of a Palestinian state," which he
argued would threaten Israel's security.
He called for opponents of the plan to go "in the streets, with all the legitimate means, in order to block these dangers."
In Jericho, 20 right-wing demonstrators, including two members of parliament, moved into an old synagogue on the northern outskirts of the town and staged a sitin, Israel radio and television reported.
The army declared the town, scheduled to be the seat of the self-rule government, a closed military base. A group of the squatters to leave voluntarily.
On the Palestinian side, there were also bitter divisions over the plan.
"I am very enthusiastic that the process continues. I hope to be able to work with the Laborites (Rabin's party) in Israel toward peace," Bassam Abu Sharif, a top aide to PLO leader Yasser Arafat, told French television.
Arafat started a trip to Arab capitals to urge leaders to back the Gaza-Jericho accord and called it a "historical turning point."
Rabin portrayed it as an agreement that would exclude Jerusalem from discussions, prevent settlements from being uprooted and keep security in the hands of the Israelis.
In the Gaza Strip, Islamic fundamentalist groups issued leaflets and wrote wall slogans denouncing the self-rule plan. Hamas demanded a complete strike Tuesday, saying over loudspeakers circulating in Gaza that it would "cut the throat" of anyone who dared even use a car.
There was a clear difference of interpretation between Israeli and Palestinians on the self-rule plan.
In Israel's view, the plan to implement autonomy in Gaza and Jericho was a test of the Palestinians ability to govern themselves without posing a threat to Israel.
Palestinians, however, emphasized that autonomy was only a temporary stage en route to statehood or at least confederation with neighboring Jordan. They said international observers would be present and said Israel troops would withdraw — not merely deploy as Israeli officials said.
Rabin indirectly confirmed reports that the plan had been worked out in a series of secret meetings in Oslo, Norway.
JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY Some CD's as low as $4.00!!
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1804 W. 6th 749-1919
Networking for Career Enhancement
September 9 - 10, 1993 • Kansas Expocentre • Topeka, KS
Women's Issues Related to Science Careers
Career Management: Your Professional Image and Tomorrow's Opportunities Attitudes and Abilities: A Look at the Gender Issues in Pre-collegiate Science Education
Grant Funding and Proposal Writing
K
Upward Mobility: The Glass Ceiling
University/Business Partnerships: What are the Possibilities?
Career Planning: Long Term Career Development
K STAR
Entrepreneurialism: No Guts, No Glory!
Two Career Families - Blending Careers and Family
NATIONAL SCIENCE
FOUNDATION
Early Intervention Programs
For More Information Contact: Pam Hicks, The University of Kansas, (913) 897-8522 • FAX (913) 897-8540
Hosted By The National Science Foundation and the Kansas KYSTAR NSE FPSCoR Program.
Hosted By The National Science Foundation and the Kansas KSTAR NSE PSCOR Program. KSTAR - Kansas Science and Technology Advanced Research - represents a coalition of Kansas State University, the University of Kansas, and Wichita State University to increase Kansas' competitiveness for federal research grants.
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
ATTENTION KU STUDENTS!
SPORTS COMBINATION TICKET DISTRIBUTION IS AS FOLLOWS:
READ THIS BEFORE PICKING UP YOUR TICKETS DO NOT THROW AWAY
YOU MAY PICK UP YOUR TICKETS ONLY NOT ANOTHER STUDENTS! PLEASE BRING YOUR CURRENT I.D. WITH FALL FEE STICKER
WHERE: Gate C, South End Memorial Stadium
TIME: 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
DATE: See Schedule Below
A-E Monday, August 30th
Tuesday, August 31st
L-R Wednesday, September 1st
L-R Wednesday, September 15
S-Z Thursday, September 2nd
S-Z Thursday, September 2nd
(Make-up) Friday, September 3rd
If you miss your assigned pick-up date, you have from September 6th until October 15th to pick up your tickets in Allen Field House (East Lobby).
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, August 31. 1993
15
PENGUIN
STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE
MN SIZE MATCH
FOR ENTRY
2 cubes $45
1 cent $25
FREE DELIVERY:
920 MASS 843-170
Kansas Classifieds Work
Classified Directory
100s
2005 Employment
2025 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Service
The Kanasan will not knowingly accept any安防装置 for housing or employment that discriminates against any person on group or person based on nationality, race or nationality of nationality. Further, the Kanasan 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 the newspaper are paid.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1868 which makes it illegal to advertise any preflicted allegiance. It may be color, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limited or disallowed.
II
100s Announcements
120 Announcements
APPLICATIONS for the University Scholar Program, open to first semester sophomores with a GPA of 3.8 or above, may obtain in the Acala Library at 905-474-1200, Deadlines for applications is September 21st, 2015 @ 10:45AM.
FRATS! SORORITIES!
STUDENT GROUPS!
Raise as Much as You Want In One Week!
$100...$600...$1500!
Market Applications for VISA,
MASTERCARD, MCI,
AMOCO, etc. Call for your FREE TRIP to NV.
SPRING BREAK 14.
Call 1-800-590-1039, ext. 75.
-Kansan Classified:864-4358-
BAPSTH STUDENT UNION Thursday 6:30pm
Cockram, chef Adam Cook. Scott Lee, BSI president.
Small groups, music and drama, retreats, interships.
A Christian campman open to students.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program.
Help for students of any language
in the U.S. and abroad. Compression and conversation skills Tues. Aug. 31 9:30pm,
4:30 Wisconsin. Presented by the Student Assistance
Tuesday, August 31,
7-9 p.m.
1025 W. Hollman
4035 Wescoe Hall
FREE!
LEARNING A
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
WORKSHOP
JAZZ DANCE CLASSES for beginners and experts dancers LAWRENCE Arts Center Call 645-827-3900
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING WORKSHOP learn the Cornell method
FREE!
NOTETAKING Workshop. Learn how to listen more effectively and take useful notes using the Cornell Method FREE! Wed Sept. 7; 1:30pm 6035 Wesley Presents by the Student Assistance Center
Wednesday, September 1
7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
offered by the Student Assistance Center
headquarter Counseling Center. Center训养师
provided INFO meeting, Sum. # 2/8 or Wed. # 1
from 6:30 to 9:30 a.m., Tuesday through Friday.
140 Lost & Found
LOST-Thin navy blue sweatshirt w/rised white stripes & circular emblem. Lost between Law and Macdonald. One pair black rimmed men's glasses on Jaywalk brown, on 8-25. Sweet reward, call 865-744-1000.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
*Accounting major familiar with Macintosh and
computer program, Blue Heron 979 Musts*
*No phone calls please.*
- persons to share and/or live in as care give a s for Managed professor. Requires max. assist. given by Master's degree or equivalent. * experience preferent, will train. Separate living room, bedroom, and kitchen. * plus salary. Work permit necessary. School required.
hours Emergency Screener. Part-time for pre- admission training for psychiatric hospital staff. Req Master's degree in psychology, week and 1 weekend req. Master's in psychology, social work or nursing with 2 years' exp. Must be a graduate student. Send resume and letter of interest to hirn Nash CMCH 358 Missouri, St. Louis, Lawrence KS 60605
*Akamai allihi center needs AM-MP Dilwashar. Cook & serve. Apply in Amani Center, Addison. Address 1804 South Boulevard.
ANIMAL CARETAKER
Part-time position available for individual internship with laboratory animals in a sterile environment. Participate in case management cages. Morning hours M-F & E every other week. *interested contact Manpower Temporary Sergeant*
Aerobics instructor need for 8a. m class $10.00
hr- experienced instructors only 846-3546
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply to bucky.bcm at 8AM or bucky.mc@bcm.com.
Child care and cook wanted from 3-4 M-F 46 an
hour. call 844-012-012
Child care wanted early late. November
evenings Mon. Thur. 32 Hours per week call 842-
1956.
Children Learning Center is now hiring 1 am and 2 pm teacher aids for infant and preschool class, Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 311 Maine, 841-2185.
Christian daycare needs reliable/enthusiastic aftermothers. Experience preferred.
CURE SHIPS NEW HURRY Earn up to $5000 per ship for a 2-week stay. Shipping available. No experience needed. For more information call 1-206-634-9468 or ext. C9786.
Drivers needed for a fan job. May need driver's license and certification. Needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a driver's license
Sitter Solutions Inc. is in need of sitters. Must have one, be responsible and love children. Flexible schedule.
Small design firm needs part time for 24 hours
Good communication skills a must. Ask for R$ 450.
STUDENT TRAINER/CONSULTANT-MICROCOMPUTER. Deadline 9/14/83 Salary $550-$600 monthly 20 hours-week. Duties include teach students computer skills in applications commonly in DOS, Windows and Macintosh computers. Provide microcomputer support. Develop and maintain expertise in applications packages commonly in DOS, Windows and Macintosh computers; materials, course descriptions, and mailing lists. Other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a letter of interest to Angela Barnett, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 66045. Applicants may be asked to give a short answer to questions leading to their topic choice. EO/AE EMPLYER
STUDENT WORK
No experience necessary. Flexible full and part-time schedules. No cavassing telephone sales.
Lancaster County Department of Corrections seeks individual to perform responsible technical training and supervision for a computer frame system, a Prime 2850 using PICK operating system, including an associated personal computer network, i. Locus, Word Perfess and Network Minutes. H.S. grad or equiv, supplemented by vocational or college level course work in system analysis and programming with 6 months of experience. Knowledge of "Primos" and "Novel" is strongly desired, 2-4 years experience as described desired. Must possess MS Office Pro, Supplemental Questionnaire and an application postmarked on or before the closing date, September 10.1998. Apply at City/CO Employment Center, Lancaster, PA 17623, Lincoln, NE 68503, 402-423-7100, EOE/AA
Varied Hours pref 3 courses in child development and experience. Sunshine Acres 842-2233
Terraver Construction needs part-time help
with construction work on site.
morning or afternoons Call days 442-8829
TRAIL SALES • Sunshine Skiff & Beach is accept
travel.com/app/sunshine/us/top_15/
FREE TIPS • sunshineUSA
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the
building. Applicant must be a 64-bit
computer. Apply to 55 Summerfield field or call 867-2910.
Tumbling, Aerobatic instruction needed. Must be able to spot aerial dance *Dance Worship* 841.0215.
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks high-energy, motivated, super-organized graduate students with experience in the following: Salary $641.66 per month. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU experience (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership experiences, organizational skills, sense of humor, social skills, and ability to work in KU Info, 420 Union, for an application. Application must be received at 420 Union by 5pm, Friday.
Chef
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Now Taking Applications
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Home-based Therapist. Part-time. Fee-for-service. To provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents, and families. Requires master's degree with reimbursable medical health services to SED children and families. Send resume and letter of interest to Nerr Nash CMIC 365 Missouri, Ste. 200, Lawrence, KS 65044. Prairie Tract, Beach. Ountil position will be EOE
Full & Part Time
THOUGHTLEARMS
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
Kansas and Burge Muniers work part-time hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodial with varying schedules. All Burge Muniers are Kansas Union Building for job species, EOE
Established Laurence band seeks female vocalist. Must have desire, creativity, and growth. We have a strong emphasis on the art of cuesiology and cessation we need. If you ve always wanted to be on that bar stage and not just watching it then call for us.
Needed before and after school care for kids in school age children. Sales negotiate contract with local education agency.
Full time live in nanny needed for a active child
toddler (toddle 4.7), Reliable, non smoker, have
own car. Housekeeping duties med. IU/B + salary
+ good benefits. Previous exp, res. Call 748-0322
Help Wanted Reliable, person to drive to my house to babysat two boys ages three and four.
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Office help needed 11:30-2, 38 WMF 41:30-5 T:TH. Must be a business major, be enrolled in at least 12 hrs, at KU have GAF o of at least 2 o and be a Kansas resident. Call 681-943-9, M-F.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Part time evening delivery person. Must have own car. Apply in person. Peking Restaurant 210a & lowb behind Hasting s.) Ph + 749-1000, after 2pm. Part-time Office Assistant needed 20 wk M/W.
PART TIME SUPERVIER: Mass Street Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smoketown. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start time 8 a.m., lunch time up to $6.25 hr. 20-30 a.m., week and evens. Aply at Schumann Food Company Business office Mast, upstairs at smokehouse M-9-49.
Pertime tarmac needeem Bedfordian Wool for sum exeepal
Pertime tarmac needeem Bedfordian Wool for sum exeepal
PHILIPHS 66 secs cashiers to work the following
shifts, 6am-12pm, 12am-1pm, 12am-6pm. Must be neat, clean and enjoy working with public. Apply in person to PHILIPHS 66 - 900 lowa.
Phoenix Cleaning is now hiring part-time cleaners. Must have transportation and phone Call 843-629-1250.
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for 3 positions. Spanish Teacher-must be native speaker. have experiencing working at 6-12 yrs old. Experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children require. Hrs. 3.5-10 M-Jun. Faxer-telephone: 20 hrs jbr Cal 844-8800
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No experience needed. Come by CTAS in 2000 E 23rd F St.
Read Books for Pay. Earn $100 per title. Free details. Rush Sell Address Stamp Envelope to address above or click on the envelope icon.
Reliable responsible person to drive to my house to meet me and three and seven. Call 877-6647 for an interview.
The Resident Assistant (RA) holds a 10-month, 40% live-in position with the KU Department of Human Resources and paraprofessional advising/ facilitating functions for the approximately 48-50 residents with whom the RA lives on the floor and for those who are employed in the vision of the Complex Director. Required. At least one year of residential group living experience and 3 or more credit hours. 1960-94 KU enrollment. A registered nurse is credited when the hall is officially open. The RA is eligible for staff tuition/free fees. In addition, a monthly stipend is paid through June 1. 1994 Howard Johnson University offers employment materials, contact the Department of Student Housing. 422 Wetlith 811. 918-8456 by Monday, September 6. 1985 EEO 918/8456 by Monday.
*prominently high motivated individual to work*
*in research groups at the University of Appleton.* Applies *in person*. University Photography
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
235 Typing Services
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Thinial Defense For free consultation call
Are you Makin' the Grade
WORD PROCESSING & LSER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the Grade at 865-2855
X
305 For Sale
INTERNATIONAL
ReadTrader
1-der Women Ward Processing. Former editor transforms scissors into accurate pages of letter
Hyundai 386SX RM 5Am HD SVG, mouse,
dial hopper 100, for Word Processing
and word processing.
19. 79 Toyota Corolla, 3-speed, very reliable. $285.00 or best offer. 842.371
1982 Mercury cougar, wagon. AT, PS, good shape
107.000 mls. 11600 lbs. 864-8653
Merchandise
trait compatible Computer 40MB 3.5 & \
board 14 inch board 14 inch ga-mm
Software 8043-642-249
Software 8043-642-249
1983 Rabbit L. Standard, Great condition, no rust,
new sticker. $1200, 1144.
GREAT RUG = `8 x 12` dark green w / pattern
Condition condition = `80` Linear tracking rug
1017 1/2 Massachusetts
Lawrence KS 66044
865-4181
BIC Suillebad and big $18. BIC Super快款 k$18
Monsieur Malbon and big $18. BIC Super快款 k$18
58 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 804-5269
[1984 Volkswagen Rabbit Wolfgang, dependable
less rules, large range, 8233388
Bianca Road bike, all camp equipment, over and under the handlebars. New condition n
14x70 mobile home. 3 bays. 2 baths. CA, Canned
Yard, & shed. Kitchen appliances. D/B, Call 911
659-7875.
1986 6000 Ninja, New tires, chain, bait., tune.
1980 842 7620
MSP JB (S/2017) *286* expanded to *m megabytes*
Hdc=desk 400 monitor VGA graphics Excel
text file
Bridgestone M14-M 3 Mountain Bike for sale. 15 mph
frame good. condition. Please call between 3 606
722-8888.
low miles price negotiable 412-338
miles per gallon
Like new 89-90 Fuji spirit $200 28" frame, red call Susan at 749-7421
. Wake-Your-Own-Jewelry STORE
1990 Schium Sierra min bikn 21 spd, 21 in $330
841-7532 Call Mark
FOR SALE. MOUNTAIN BIKE, RED TREK 329
w, all the extras. Brand new, was a gift
ribbon twice. Leave message, along with offer, goes
to highest holder. 492-9033.
Double bed with shell headboard 66. Color TV $23.
Stand B15. Love Seat B14. Cam $89-362
For Sale, more a 20 inch Railing Hanging 13 ap-touring ride. Good course. Good price. Great feature.
Gray contemporary love seat. Light gray
dark gray stripe. Very comfortable. 1994 Call
Louis Vuitton. $2,000-$3,500.
Nearly new two '19 i28 12 speed Fuji road like $186
to rent a base car. One week's weekday
euro车 $10, Call 843-222-9027 weekly.
For Sale 3 in 1906 Mille Road Bike Sihamu-
and Profile compartment. Enjoined to race
Compact Discs $5.95 each
5 or more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9-5;30
One-way ticket. K-C to Miami. Fly anytime.
One-way ticket. K-C to Miami. $150.兔跑车
Bicycle ride. 749-2472. 749-2472
Packard贝克 Best Data 2400 bdmp modems 85,
each. Courthouse IHS high speed modem, 828-606
Patrick Nagel limited edition framed prints for a showcase at 843-7528 leave a message if not there.
PC 286, 40 meg, 2 floppy drives, 490 Built internal
modem, VGA card, extra slots, software 650/ng.
Also, Gray carpet $20; sofa sleeper & lovest
seat 200, 749, 7313 alltime
Queen H20 Bed w raln, stn and & access $200 QM4
bed w raln, stn and & access. Smith Cutter
WB30 MJP-34143
Starbaird blue Westone (Spectrum) six-string guitar and four tenor saxophones, one center pickup Tremolo and finger pickup rate base and treble controls. Compares with a locking hard carry case and a Crane G-60 amplifier with a 12 celestian speaker $800 - 760-666 or 842-686. Four person dome $853 - 842-686. Four person dome $853 - 842-686.
Hard Rock Mountain bike 20", 1 yr, old, like
new. $200. 842-8489
340 Auto Sales
Reliable transportation 80 Ford Pinto $500/Best
call. Call Terry at 814-276-814
370 Want to Buy
$5 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave
message at 84.9699
Looking for a Klein mountain bike, good condition.
Call: 846-8016.
2 bth 2 bath apt for rent Campus Place Very close to campaion. Reasonable rent. Smoker please. Call
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Over the Edge
campus. Reasonable rent. Smoker 842-760-
Excellent location, close to KU, town 2 BR apartment in 4px, Alex, no pets, $330 at 1104 Tennessee Call 842-4242
3 BR, 2 bath apt for rent, Campus Place Close to
3BR, Reasonable rent. Smoker 142-6089
Naismith Halls services give students the competitive edge.
Naismith Halls'
MOVE IN MOVEX 1 bedroom w/. fridge in nice hous
$161/m. util. 2 beds Call 843-3521
Call 843-3521
Front door bus service
NICE 2 BR close to campus, off-street parking, no
parking. 749-219 or 843-907.
24 hr. computer center
DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS
1. Busperson $4.75/hr
2. Lime Cool $7.95
2. Lime Cook $7.28
3. Houwshowing $5.25
NICE 28, close to campus, off-street parking, no patrols 740-2919 or 842-9007
5. Engineer $9.00/hr
Fitness room
6. Dishwasher $5.25/hr
$ 5.25
5. Engineer $9.00/hr
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid service
8. Phone Operator $5.50/hr
9. On call Security $6.00/hr
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Renta
One meal provided per shift.
Renta
WASHER & DRYER
For Only $40 a Month
A
- No Deposit
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct., Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047
Delta Corporation
842-8428
Advance opportunity
Apply in person, M-F, 9-4 p.m.
10100 College Blvd.
Overland Park, KS
E. F. E.
- Free Maintenance
• GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty,
Large Capacity
3 quiets 2 bbr. New ($680) beds, spreads, plush carpeting. Graduate engineers preferred. No PWD W/贮留. If you want a seat to crash or fall, choose Carry. Call 741-1492 1492 bet. 6-tam and 6-lim. $195 person.
Remodeled 1 bd apartment available at Brush
building, water and are paid $295, 718-312-1088
Room(s) or house, rent or lease. Flexible rent.
Make offer. Renew lease. Furnished or
furnished. Phone (865) 387-3901.
430 Roommate Wanted
2 male, NS roommates needed to share 4 br house
no utilities + cable panel call
814. 649-808
3 bdr 2 bath hath for rent Campus Place, Close to
Reasons Reasonable. Smoker please 842
Female roommate needed ASAP for 2-bed apt,
near campus, week w/day, on bus route, $20/m
night.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female non-smoker to 2 BR App1 1k
from crossing newly) redemption $230 - v utilities
from crossing newly) redemption $230 - v utilities
Female, Non-Simkter for 2 BR Bath Double. Onl-
Apple iPhone to KU on Bus Route. $219/nm
How to schedule an ad:
Roommate to share house $250/mo + 1Utilities
Wash and Dryer, large yard, hard wood floor
Responsible female to deliver 3 bdr ap 1 minute
responsible female to incarnate $250 amo and uri
water pail. PCL #49-2211
Non-smoking female for female bed 1, bed duplex
for non-mortal of campus $160 + Utilities CAL
841-0072
Female roommate to share a two-bedroom with
his/her roommate, at least monthly; max
plus utilities 542-387-Ask for Julee
Roommate needed. Gas and water paid. On the KU bus route. Call after 8 p.m. 843-657-67
Responsible non-smoking female roommate need
alongside a 2 BH arm 180° / with Call: 561 741
safety for
Wanted: Roommates for 2 BR, pets, AC, cable CHEAP! WILL go fast Call FAST: 862-665-812v
Ads phone in may be listed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In **person:** 119 Staff Flint **Film**
Committee chairroom w/ bedroom at Dhali & 14th
Floor. Smoke-free. W/D (73) 659-8000.
$19 month rent. w/ Smokers welcome. Call 811
(73) 659-8000.
Stop by the Kansan 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.
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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 to publication.*
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When canceling a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for inused days. Refunds on cards ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
105 personal portals 148 lost & found 305 for sale
110 business portals 260 help wanted 340 auto sales
118 announcements 225 professional services 368 miscellaneous
118 entertainment 235 training services
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
© 1964 TEWORKS, INC. Illustrated by Universal Press Syndicate
"Whoa! Look at Zagar! ...He dressed to the twos!"
16
COURTESY OF THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY,THE LEGENDARY STUDENT POLITICAL GROUP DEDICATED TO ALL THINGS SILLY.
Tuesday, August 31, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WHEN STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN WENT TO CLASS ONE
Pink flamingos on campus.
University of Wisconsin
What are those strange plastic things
What are those strange plastic things all over campus?
They're COLLEGIATE FONCARDS from Sprint. At 9¢ a minute, the late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate they give you is certainly unusual. Not to mention the GREAT STUFF you get just for using your
MOONLIGHT MINDNESS
Sprint.
COLLEGIATE
FÖNCARD™
816 854 1138 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FÖNCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY,IT'S WEIRD.
talking to two friends in two different places at the same time? Strange, huh? That's PRIORITY PARTY CALL. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. We're working to MAKE COLLEGE LIFE EVEN EASIER. And that's the
calling card. Free goodies? That's weird. And how about
---
weirdest thing of all.
Sprint.
Be there now.
1. 800.795.5971
SIGN UP AT OUR BOOTH AND GET OUR SIX-CAN COOLER AND 30 MINUTES OF CALLS--ALL FOR FREE. HOW'S THAT FOR WEIRD? Today at Wescoe Beach, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. © 1993 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
MORNING, THEY WERE GREETED BY A SPECTACULAR SIGHT: OVER A THOUSAND PINK FLAMINGOS LOUNGING ON THE LAWN OF
BASCOM HILL. IT WAS ANOTHER VERY ELABORATE,VERY EXPENSIVE PRANK,